Let’s talk about the failure to file (FTF) penalty.
Most of us must file an annual income tax return.
Unless one is an expat (that is, an American living overseas), the return is
due April 15. One can extend the return for six months (that is, until October
15), but the extension is for filing paperwork and not for payment of tax.
How is one supposed to estimate the tax if a
significant amount of information is unavailable? Many times, there are
estimates or informed guesses; the tax preparer will extend the return using
those. Sometimes there are no estimates and no informed guesses; one then does
their best. I doubt there isn’t a veteran tax preparer that hasn’t been blindsided
by a Schedule K-1.
Let’s continue.
You extend your return. Your K-1 comes in heavier than
expected. You owe $5,000 in tax with the return, which you file and pay on
October 15.
You will have something called the Failure to Pay
(FTP) penalty. The tax nerds know this as the Section 6651(a)(2) penalty. The
penalty is as follows:
One-half of 1% for each month or part of a month
To a maximum of 25%
Let’s use our $5,000 example.
I count seven months from April through October (remember: a part of a month counts as a month).
The FTP penalty would be $5,000 times .005 times 7 = $175. It stings, but it is not crushing.
Let’s say the return was filed on October 30.
Has something changed?
Yep.
The IRS is strict about filing deadlines. If the return is extended to October 15, then you have until October 15 to file the return (or at least put it in the mail or submit the electronic file). The 15th is not a suggestion.
What happens if you miss the deadline?
You then filed your return late.
Back to our example. You file the return on October 30. You are just 15 days late. How bad can 15 days be?
It is not intuitive. If you file the return on October 30, you have blown the extension, meaning it is like you never submitted an extension at all. Any penalty calculation starts on April 16.
So what? The FTP penalty is still the same: $5,000 times .005 times 7, right?
The difference is that you have just provoked FTP’s big brother: the Failure to File (FTF) penalty. The FTF is the gym-visiting, MMA-training, creatine supplementing and aggressive sibling to the FTP.
Start with the FTP penalty. Multiply it by 10. The tax nerds know the FTF as the Section 6651(a)(1) penalty.
Are we saying the FTF penalty
is $5,000 times .05 times 7?
Nope, this is tax. There is a loop-the-loop to the FTF calculation.
- The maximum (a)(1) and (a)(2) penalty is 5% per month or part of a month.
- The math stops when you get to 25% in total.
The first loop means that the FTP penalty comes in at .005 and the FTF penalty comes in at .045 per month (or part thereof), as the maximum cannot exceed .050 per month.
The second loop means that the math stops when you get to 25%.
How does a tax pro handle this?
Easy: multiply by 25%.
Let’s go back to the math: $5,000 times 25% = $1,250.
This could have stopped at $175 had you just filed the return on October 15. Nah, you thought to yourself. What’s another couple of weeks?
$1,075, that’s what ($1,250 - $175). That is an expensive two weeks.
So, what got me fired up about this topic?
I saw the following on a tax return this past week:
Go to the bottom where it reads “Interest Penalties.” Go across to “Failure to File.” You will see $3,619.
Someone has just thrown away over three-and-a half grand by dragging their feet on filing. There goes a vacation, new electronics for the house, an IRA contribution - anything better than sending it to the government.
The client has two years of this, BTW.
But CTG, you say, maybe they did not have the money to pay.
The FTF does not mean that one is unable to pay. Granted, in real life the two issues often go together. One rationalizes. I do not have any money; if I delay filing maybe I can also delay IRS dunning letters and collection activity.
Maybe, but practice tells me it is rarely worth it. You have to go over four years with an FTP penalty before you equal just five months of FTF penalty. That money is just too expensive.
Let’s go back to our example.
Say the $5,000 is for tax year 2021. The taxpayer filed the return on or before October 15, 2022 and only now can pay the tax. What have we got?
First, the FTF penalty goes away, as the return was filed on time.
Second, the FTP penalty would be: $5,000 times .005 times 16 = $400. (I am running the penalty from April 2022 to July 2023)
Third, there will be interest, of course, but let’s ignore that for now.
$400 versus $1,075. Seems clear to me.
What can be done if one cannot get numbers together by October 15?
Here’s a thought.
I have a client who owns a successful drywalling company. We extended his return several years ago, and sure enough – closing in on October 15 – he was out-of-town, relaxed and unconcerned about any looming doom. However, I knew that he had a good year, and that any tax due was going to be significant. An FTF penalty on significant tax due was also going to be significant. We decided to file his return with the best numbers available, intending to amend whenever we obtained more precise numbers.
Did I like doing that?
That is a No.
Did he avoid the FTF?
That is a Yes, but he delayed getting us more accurate numbers. That delay created its own problems. Problems which were … completely … avoidable.
What is our takeaway?
File your return. Extend if you must, but file by the extension date. File even if you cannot pay. Yes, the IRS will penalize you. The IRS is grumpy about not getting its money. The IRS is grumpier, however, about not getting the tax return in the first place.
Remember: when given the option, choose the lesser of IRS grumpiness.
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