IRS Audit Representation Fees
IRS Audit Attorney Cost: What to Expect
- Received an IRS audit notice and need to understand what representation will cost?
- Comparing audit defense attorneys and want to know what a fair fee looks like?
- Wondering whether the attorney fee is worth it given what the IRS is claiming?
IRS Audit Representation Fees: The Direct Answer
The short answer: IRS audit representation fees depend on the type of audit and what the IRS is examining. Most audits fall into one of three categories, each with a different cost profile.
Correspondence audits — the most common type — are handled by mail. The IRS flags one or two items (a charitable deduction, business expenses, a reported income discrepancy) and asks for documentation. These are typically the least expensive to defend: $3,500–$6,000 flat for most matters.
Office and field examinations are more involved. An agent is assigned to your case and will review records in person or conduct an interview. Business returns, complex personal returns with significant deductions, and multi-year audits typically fall into this category. Expect $10,000–$35,000 for a standard field exam.
Eggshell audits and fraud inquiries — examinations where the IRS has raised or is at risk of raising fraud issues — require a different level of care. Representation in these matters runs $25,000–$75,000+ because the exposure extends beyond the civil tax liability.
IRS Audit Defense Fee Ranges
| Matter Type | Scope | Typical Fee Range |
|---|---|---|
| Correspondence audit — simple | Single document issue, one year | $3,500–$6,000 |
| Correspondence audit — complex | Multiple issues or years | $5,000–$12,000 |
| Office examination | IRS interview, moderate complexity | $8,000–$20,000 |
| Field examination — personal | Itemized deductions, investments | $12,000–$30,000 |
| Field examination — business | Business returns, multi-year | $18,000–$50,000+ |
| Eggshell audit | Civil exam with criminal exposure | $25,000–$75,000+ |
| IRS Appeals after audit | Post-exam administrative appeal | $8,000–$25,000 |
| Tax Court — after Appeals | CDP hearing or regular case | $15,000–$75,000+ |
Ranges reflect Brotman Law’s typical fee structure. Your actual fee will be confirmed in writing before we begin.
What Drives Audit Defense Costs?
Not all audits are created equal. These are the factors that most directly affect what IRS audit defense costs.
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Number of years under examination
A single-year audit is meaningfully less work than a three-year examination. Each additional year adds document production, legal analysis, and negotiation time.
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Complexity of the tax position
Audits of straightforward W-2 income are different from audits of pass-through business returns, real estate transactions, or complex investment portfolios with foreign components.
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Whether criminal exposure exists
Any audit involving potential fraud, substantial understatements, or offshore accounts carries criminal risk that must be managed carefully. This materially increases the cost and complexity of representation.
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Whether the audit goes to Appeals or Tax Court
Most audits settle at the examination level. If you disagree with the agent’s findings and proceed to IRS Appeals — or further to Tax Court — the cost increases at each stage.
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The IRS agent’s approach
Some IRS agents are professional and efficient. Others take aggressive positions that require more pushback and documentation. This is unpredictable at the outset.
How We Structure Audit Defense Fees
We use flat fees for audit representation whenever the scope of the examination is definable. This is most audits — you know what years are under review, what the agent is focused on, and what documentation exists.
Flat Fee
- ✓Total cost is known before we begin
- ✓No incremental billing for every IRS letter or phone call
- ✓Flat fee covers document production, agent meetings, written responses, and conference prep
- ✓Adjustable if the IRS expands the scope mid-exam (we’ll tell you upfront)
Hourly / Other
- →Used for eggshell audits where criminal risk is active
- →Used when IRS expands scope to additional years after engagement begins
- →Used for Tax Court proceedings following a failed Appeals resolution
IRS Audit Attorney Cost — Frequently Asked Questions
How much does IRS audit representation cost?
IRS audit representation fees range from $3,500–$6,000 for straightforward correspondence audits (single-issue document requests) to $15,000–$50,000+ for complex field examinations covering multiple years. Most Brotman Law audit clients pay flat fees of $5,000–$25,000 depending on audit scope and complexity.
What is the difference between a correspondence audit and a field exam?
A correspondence audit is conducted by mail — the IRS identifies a specific item and asks for supporting documentation. A field exam involves an IRS agent visiting your home or business to review records in person. Field exams are substantially more involved, more invasive, and more expensive to defend than correspondence audits.
Do I need an attorney for an IRS audit?
You can represent yourself in an IRS audit. However, IRS agents are trained interviewers, and anything you say can be used in the audit and in any subsequent civil or criminal proceeding. For audits involving significant dollars, business deductions, or any conduct that could be characterized as fraudulent, an attorney is not a luxury — it is protection.
What is an eggshell audit?
An eggshell audit is a civil examination that contains criminal exposure — the IRS agent is conducting an audit, but the facts suggest potential fraud or willful tax evasion. These require specialized handling: a tax attorney can manage the civil exam to avoid feeding the criminal investigation. Eggshell audit defense fees typically range from $25,000–$75,000+.
Can a tax attorney reduce my audit bill?
Tax attorneys do not reduce audit bills directly — they represent you in disputing the IRS’s proposed adjustments. A competent audit defense often results in significantly lower final adjustments than the IRS initially proposed. In many cases, the attorney fee is less than the additional tax that would have been assessed without representation.
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