Whether it's one missed year or a decade of unfiled returns, we prepare and file them correctly using your IRS transcripts when records are missing, so you know exactly where you stand before negotiating anything.
Unfiled tax returns are one of the only IRS problems that compounds purely from inaction. Penalties for not filing accrue separately from — and on top of — penalties for not paying, interest keeps building on both, and if you wait long enough the IRS will file a return for you using a Substitute for Return that almost always overstates what you actually owe.
None of that gets fixed by waiting. It gets fixed by filing accurate returns, which is usually more straightforward than people expect once someone walks through it with you.
Most people who haven't filed in years don't have a drawer full of old W-2s and 1099s sitting around — and they don't need one. With a signed Power of Attorney, we can pull your IRS wage and income transcripts directly, which show every W-2, 1099, and other reported income document the IRS already has on file for each missing year. That gives us what we need to prepare returns that are both accurate and defensible.
The IRS generally enforces filing for the last six years to be considered in good standing for collection alternatives like installment agreements or an Offer in Compromise. If returns go back further and the IRS hasn't already filed a Substitute for Return, we evaluate case by case whether filing those years helps or simply adds unnecessary balances.
That's normal, and it's not a dead end. We can pull your IRS wage and income transcripts, which show what employers and payers already reported to the IRS for each missing year, and use those to prepare accurate returns even without your original paperwork.
Failure to file is a civil matter in the vast majority of cases, resolved with penalties and interest — not criminal prosecution. Criminal charges are reserved for willful, deliberate tax evasion, typically involving large amounts and clear intent to defraud. Voluntarily filing past-due returns, rather than waiting for the IRS to come to you, is itself evidence of good faith.
If you don't file, the IRS can eventually file on your behalf using only the income data it has — with no deductions, no dependents, and no filing status optimization. The result is almost always a much higher balance than you'd actually owe on a properly prepared return. Filing your own accurate return, even after an SFR, can significantly reduce what you owe.
Yes — in fact it's required. The IRS won't seriously consider an installment agreement, Offer in Compromise, or Currently Not Collectible status until you're filing-compliant. Getting returns filed is almost always the first step toward any other resolution, not a separate project.
Refunds are only available if you file within three years of the original due date — after that, the refund is forfeited even if the IRS owes you money. If you have unfiled years where you might be due a refund, there's a real cost to waiting.
Tell us how many years are missing and we'll map out exactly what it takes to get filed and compliant.
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