Before you read further — which describes you?
Quick Answer
IRS penalty abatement eligibility depends on the specific penalty and the defense raised. Three primary grounds apply: First-Time Abate (FTA), reasonable cause, and statutory exception. The short version is that FTA is nearly automatic for taxpayers with a clean three-year compliance history (available once every three years). Reasonable cause abatement is available when circumstances beyond the taxpayer’s control caused the failure — death, serious illness, records destruction, natural disaster, professional reliance. Statutory exceptions apply where specific Code provisions eliminate the penalty (e.g., substantial authority or adequate disclosure under IRC §6664(c) for accuracy-related penalties). Most abatement requests are filed on Form 843.1
Have IRS penalties and want them abated? A 15-minute consultation is free.
Penalty abatement is one of the highest-return collection moves a taxpayer can make. A clean First-Time Abate often eliminates thousands of dollars in penalty in a single submission. Reasonable cause abatement, well-documented, can eliminate larger penalties including accuracy-related and civil fraud. This chapter walks through the eligibility tests, the documentation required, and the submission path. For a comprehensive penalty framework, see IRS Penalties.
Our firm has obtained millions of dollars in abatement relief for clients across all penalty categories. The analysis below reflects what the IRS actually approves under IRM 20.1.1.
The Four Eligibility Paths for Penalty Abatement
| Path | Eligibility | Typical Use | Approval Rate2 |
|---|---|---|---|
| First-Time Abate | Three-year clean history | Failure-to-file / pay / deposit | ~95% |
| Reasonable Cause | Circumstances beyond taxpayer control | Medical, disaster, records, reliance | ~45% to 65% |
| Statutory Exception | Specific Code provision | Substantial authority, §6664 reliance | Variable |
| Administrative Waiver | Special IRS programs / guidance | Disaster zones, Covid programs | Program-specific |
Quick Reference
Jump to the path that fits: First-Time Abate, Reasonable Cause, Statutory Exception, or Administrative Waiver. For the penalty form lookup, see the abatement document reference. To scope your abatement, a 15-minute consultation is free.
1. First-Time Abate: The Near-Automatic Relief
First-Time Abate (FTA) is an IRS administrative relief program that waives failure-to-file, failure-to-pay, and failure-to-deposit penalties for taxpayers with a clean compliance history on the prior three tax years. FTA is the single highest-probability penalty abatement.3
If this is you: You have a new filing or payment penalty and the prior three years are clean (no penalty, all filings on time). FTA is nearly automatic. A phone call to ACS or a short letter typically obtains the abatement. Use it once every three years.
FTA requirements:
- Clean compliance for the prior three years. No penalty assessments (with minor exceptions).
- All required returns filed.
- Arrangements to pay any current liability.
- Penalty types covered: Failure-to-file (§6651(a)(1)), Failure-to-pay (§6651(a)(2)), Failure-to-deposit (§6656).
- One-time use. Available once every three years.
FTA Strategy
- Verify the three-year clean history. Pull transcripts.
- Confirm penalty type is FTA-eligible. Not accuracy or fraud.
- Call IRS or file Form 843. Phone is fastest for simple cases.
- Cite FTA specifically in the request.
- Reserve FTA for the largest penalty when multiple years apply.
2. Reasonable Cause: The Documented Defense
Reasonable cause abatement is available when circumstances beyond the taxpayer’s control prevented compliance. The IRM 20.1.1 lists specific grounds; the IRS applies them fact-by-fact. Documentation is dispositive.
If this is you: Your penalty arose from circumstances outside your control — medical emergency, disaster, records destruction, reliance on a qualified tax professional. Reasonable cause is the right path. The quality of the documentation drives the outcome.
Reasonable cause grounds recognized by the IRM:
- Death, serious illness, or unavoidable absence. Taxpayer or immediate family.
- Records destruction. Fire, natural disaster, theft.
- Reliance on a qualified tax professional. Under the Boyle standard for complex positions.
- Inability to obtain records. Despite ordinary business care.
- Erroneous IRS written advice.
- Changes in tax law. Without adequate notice.
- Financial hardship preventing timely compliance.
Reasonable Cause Procedure
- Identify the specific ground. One of the IRM-recognized categories.
- Gather contemporaneous documentation. Medical records, death certificates, disaster declarations, preparer correspondence.
- Draft a narrative statement. Facts, chronology, relationship to the penalty.
- File Form 843 with supporting exhibits.
- Prepare for Appeals if denied.
3. Statutory Exception: Code-Specific Defenses
Statutory exceptions are specific Code provisions that eliminate a penalty when the taxpayer meets the statutory requirements. Examples include IRC §6664(c) reasonable-cause-and-good-faith defense for §6662 accuracy penalty, substantial-authority defense for §6662(d) substantial understatement penalty, and safe-harbor provisions for estimated tax under §6654.4
If this is you: Your penalty is accuracy-related (§6662) or estimated tax (§6654). Statutory exceptions apply. The analysis is Code-specific: substantial authority for the position, adequate disclosure on Form 8275, or good-faith reliance on a tax professional.
Key statutory exceptions:
- IRC §6664(c) reasonable cause and good faith. Eliminates §6662 accuracy penalty when position was reasonable and in good faith.
- §6662(d)(2)(B) substantial authority. Eliminates substantial understatement penalty when authority supports the position.
- §6662(d)(2)(C) adequate disclosure. Form 8275 disclosure with reasonable basis eliminates the penalty.
- §6654(d) estimated tax safe harbors. Payment of 100% of prior-year tax (110% for high income) or 90% of current-year tax.
- Professional reliance under United States v. Boyle, 469 U.S. 241. Good-faith reliance on a qualified professional on a complex position.
4. Administrative Waiver: Special Programs
Administrative waivers are IRS-designated relief programs that apply to specific situations, geographic areas, or periods. Examples include disaster-zone relief, COVID-era programs, and specific tax act transition rules.
If this is you: Your situation aligns with a specific IRS administrative program — disaster declaration in your zip code, a COVID-related waiver period, or a published compliance-promotion program. Administrative waivers typically require reference to the specific IRS notice or pronouncement.
Facing accuracy-related or fraud penalties from an audit? These carry specific statutory defenses that must be preserved at Appeals or are typically waived. Book a consultation before the 30-Day Letter deadline runs.
Penalty Abatement Document Lookup
| Document | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Form 843 | Claim for Refund and Request for Abatement |
| Form 8275 | Disclosure Statement (eliminates §6662) |
| Form 2210 | Estimated Tax Penalty (§6654) |
| Form 2220 | Estimated Tax Penalty for Corporations (§6655) |
| Form 12153 | CDP Hearing (if levy threatens) |
| Form 9423 | Collection Appeal Request |
| IRM 20.1.1 | IRS Penalty Handbook |
| IRC §6664(c) | Reasonable cause and good faith defense |
| United States v. Boyle | Professional reliance standard |
| Publication 5 | Your Appeal Rights |
Found your letter or notice code? The next step is confirming your exact deadline and whether you need representation. A 15-minute call answers both. Book a free call →
Penalty Abatement and Statute
- Refund claim statute under §6511. 3 years from filing or 2 years from payment.
- Assessment statute under §6501. 3 years (or 6 for substantial omission; no limit for fraud).
- CSED under §6502. 10 years from assessment.
- Interest abatement under §6404(e). Separate statutory path for interest.
- FTA availability. Based on prior three years of compliance, not on refund statute.
Penalty Abatement Approval Rates
| Path | Approximate Approval |
|---|---|
| First-Time Abate (qualified) | ~95% |
| Reasonable cause (documented) | ~45% to 65% |
| Statutory exception (substantial authority / §6664) | Variable — position-dependent |
| Adequate disclosure (Form 8275) | High when filed timely with return |
| Administrative waiver (program) | Near 100% within the program scope |
| Appeal of denied abatement | ~40% to 55% at Appeals |
The Abatement Escalation Pathway
Initial Request
Form 843 or phone request reviewed by IRS penalty unit. Typical decision: 30 to 90 days. Phone FTA can be immediate.
Denial to Appeals
Denied abatement can be appealed to IRS Appeals via Form 9423 or in response to the denial letter. Appeals applies hazards-of-litigation analysis.
Appeals to Refund Suit
Appeals denial followed by payment and refund suit under IRC §7422 in Federal District Court or Court of Federal Claims within the refund statute.
The First 48 Hours on Penalty Abatement
- Pull transcripts and identify specific penalties.
- Check FTA eligibility. Three-year compliance history.
- Identify the applicable path. FTA, reasonable cause, statutory, or waiver.
- Gather documentation. Medical, disaster, preparer.
- File Form 843 with narrative.
- Follow up after 60 days if no response.
- Appeal denials promptly.
The ROI Question
FTA is essentially free money for qualifying taxpayers. A successful reasonable-cause abatement typically eliminates 3 to 10× the fee in penalty relief. Accuracy penalty reductions at Appeals can save six figures on audit-driven exposure.
When to Engage an Attorney for Penalty Abatement
- Accuracy or fraud penalties over $10,000. Statutory defenses.
- Multi-year penalty patterns. Strategic abatement sequencing.
- Prior abatement denied. Appeals strategy.
- Trust fund recovery penalty (§6672). Responsibility / willfulness defenses.
- International information-return penalties. Reasonable-cause specifics differ.
- Business penalties with ongoing operations.
- Civil fraud penalty reduction to accuracy.
Any of the above apply?
A 15-minute consultation is free. We identify the right path and scope the submission.
Frequently Asked Questions
Am I eligible for IRS penalty abatement?
Likely yes for at least one path. First-Time Abate is available to taxpayers with a clean prior three-year compliance history — once every three years. Reasonable cause is available when circumstances beyond your control caused the failure. Statutory exceptions apply to accuracy-related penalties. Most taxpayers with new penalties qualify for at least FTA.
What is the IRS First-Time Abate program?
An administrative relief program that waives failure-to-file, failure-to-pay, and failure-to-deposit penalties for taxpayers with clean prior-three-year compliance. It is available once every three years and is essentially automatic for qualified taxpayers. Request via phone or Form 843.
What qualifies as reasonable cause for IRS penalties?
IRM 20.1.1 recognized grounds include death, serious illness, unavoidable absence (of taxpayer or immediate family), records destruction (fire, disaster, theft), reliance on a qualified tax professional, inability to obtain records despite ordinary business care, erroneous IRS written advice, and tax law changes without adequate notice. Documentation is required.
How do I request penalty abatement?
Form 843 (Claim for Refund and Request for Abatement) is the standard vehicle. For simple FTA, a phone call to ACS or the address on the penalty notice typically works. Include identification, specific penalty, ground for abatement, and supporting documentation.
How long does penalty abatement take?
Simple FTA: often same-day by phone. Form 843 reasonable cause: 30 to 90 days for decision. Appeals if denied: 6 to 12 additional months. Complex accuracy-related defenses during audit: concurrent with the audit timeline.
Can I abate the entire IRS penalty?
Yes, when the abatement is approved. FTA and reasonable cause abatements are typically all-or-nothing for the specific penalty claimed. Statutory exceptions like §6664(c) eliminate the entire accuracy penalty. Partial abatement is less common but occurs in some reasonable-cause cases.
Does penalty abatement stop interest?
No. Interest abatement is a separate analysis under IRC §6404(e). Penalty abatement removes the penalty but the interest on the underlying tax and on the now-removed penalty remains unless separately abated.
Can I abate the IRS accuracy-related penalty?
Yes. The primary defenses are IRC §6664(c) reasonable cause and good faith, §6662(d)(2)(B) substantial authority, or §6662(d)(2)(C) adequate disclosure (Form 8275 filed with the return). Accuracy penalty defenses must be raised at Appeals or are typically waived.
What is professional reliance defense?
Under United States v. Boyle, 469 U.S. 241 (1985), good-faith reliance on a qualified tax professional on a complex substantive position can support reasonable cause. The rule requires a qualified advisor, adequate disclosure to the advisor, reliance on actual advice, and reasonableness. It does not cover routine filing or payment failures.
Can a tax attorney really get my IRS penalties removed?
Often yes, when the eligibility facts support abatement. Attorneys identify the right path, draft the substantive ground, document the support, and preserve defenses at Appeals. The actual abatement comes from the IRS, not the attorney; the attorney’s role is positioning the request for approval.
What happens if my abatement is denied?
Appeal to IRS Appeals via Form 9423 or in response to the denial letter. Appeals applies hazards-of-litigation analysis and frequently concedes where the initial reviewer did not. Beyond Appeals, refund suit after payment is the judicial path.
Does abatement of the penalty release an IRS lien?
Partially — the penalty portion of the balance is gone. If the entire balance (tax, penalty, interest) is satisfied after abatement, the lien is released under IRC §6325. If tax and interest remain, the lien continues on the remaining balance.
Can I get abatement of trust fund recovery penalty?
Trust fund recovery penalty (§6672) abatement is fact-dependent. The primary defenses are challenging responsibility (was the taxpayer a “responsible person”) and challenging willfulness (did they willfully fail to collect/pay). Reasonable cause is generally not available for §6672 because the penalty standard already incorporates willfulness.
If you have read this far, you have a notice and you are trying to understand it before doing anything that makes it worse. That instinct is correct.
The next right move is a 15-minute call. We will identify the audit type, confirm your deadline, and tell you honestly whether you need representation. There is no cost and no obligation.
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Next Steps in This Guide
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