Penalty Abatement

Source: Internal Revenue Code § 6651 (failure to file/pay), § 6662 (accuracy-related penalties). IRS Internal Revenue Manual 20.1 (penalty handbook). First Time Abate policy: IRM 20.1.1.3.6.1.

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Written in plain language for general understanding. This is educational content, not legal advice. Based on federal statutes and official sources.

Federal Law

What is this right?

The IRS charges penalties for late filing, late payment, and accuracy issues — but you have the right to request that penalties be removed ("abated"). If you have a good reason for the failure, such as a serious illness, natural disaster, or bad advice from a tax professional, the IRS may remove the penalty entirely.

The IRS also offers First Time Penalty Abatement (FTA) — an administrative waiver for taxpayers with a clean compliance history.

When does it apply?

This right applies when:

  • The IRS assessed a penalty on your account (failure to file, failure to pay, estimated tax penalty, accuracy penalty)
  • You have a reasonable cause for the failure (illness, death in family, natural disaster, fire, IRS error, bad professional advice)
  • You have a clean compliance history (3 prior years of on-time filing and payment — qualifies for First Time Abatement)

Common misconceptions:

  • "IRS penalties are final" — No. You have the right to request abatement for any penalty, and the IRS grants them regularly.
  • "You need a lawyer to get penalties removed" — Not usually. Many penalty abatement requests can be handled with a phone call or a simple letter.
  • "First Time Abatement only works once" — Technically yes, but the 3-year lookback resets. If you stay compliant for another 3 years, you can qualify again.

What should you do?

Step 1: Identify the penalty. Review your IRS notice to understand which penalty was assessed and the amount.

Step 2: Check if you qualify for First Time Abatement (FTA). You qualify if you filed on time and paid on time for the 3 prior tax years. Call the IRS at 1-800-829-1040 and simply ask for FTA.

Step 3: If FTA doesn't apply, submit a reasonable cause request in writing. Use Form 843 or write a letter explaining why you failed to file/pay, what steps you took to comply, and attach supporting documentation.

Step 4: If the IRS denies your request, you can appeal to the IRS Office of Appeals. Use Form 12203 (Request for Appeals Review).

Step 5: Interest on underpayment generally cannot be abated unless caused by IRS error or delay. But removing the penalty also stops interest from accruing on the penalty amount.

What should you NOT do?

Don't accept the penalty without asking. Many taxpayers pay penalties they could have had removed simply by asking.

Don't make vague excuses. "I was busy" or "I forgot" generally don't qualify as reasonable cause. Be specific: doctor's notes, death certificates, FEMA disaster declarations, etc.

Don't pay the penalty and assume it's over. You can request abatement even after you've already paid. The IRS will refund the penalty amount if approved.

Don't ignore the deadline. Generally, you must request abatement within 3 years of the tax return filing date or 2 years from the date you paid the penalty.

New Jersey Law
NJ

How New Jersey differs from federal law

New Jersey Division of Taxation handles state penalty abatement:

  • Reasonable cause: NJ accepts reasonable cause requests for penalty abatement. Common grounds include illness, death in the family, fire, natural disaster, and reliance on professional advice.
  • Late filing/payment penalties: NJ imposes a 5% per month penalty for late filing (max 25%) and interest on late payments. Both can be abated for reasonable cause.
  • Voluntary Disclosure Program: NJ offers a VDA for taxpayers who have not previously filed. Benefits include waiver of penalties and limitation of look-back period.
  • Amnesty programs: NJ periodically offers tax amnesty programs with penalty waivers for taxpayers who come forward. These are time-limited opportunities.

Additional Steps in New Jersey

Submit a penalty abatement request to the NJ Division of Taxation at the address on your notice. Appeal denied requests to the NJ Tax Court. Contact the NJ Taxpayer Advocate at (609) 984-4073.

Relevant Law: N.J.S.A. 54A:9-6 (penalties), N.J.S.A. 54:49-11 (penalty abatement for reasonable cause)

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