Annually, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) sends millions of collection
notices to individual taxpayers to request payment of tax assessments and
the related penalty and interest assessments. IRS is to send additional
collection notices if payment has not been made. Some taxpayers have
complained to Congress that IRS sends collection notices for the same tax
assessment after the payment has been made. When IRS sends collection
notices after payments are made, IRS incurs greater costs and taxpayers
may incur greater burdens than necessary.
Because of your interest in minimizing unnecessary costs for IRS and
burdens for individual taxpayers, you asked us to provide information
about multiple collection notices. On the basis of discussions with your
office, our objectives were to determine (1) how many individual
taxpayers were sent multiple notices to collect the same tax assessment,
particularly after IRS received full payment of the assessment and (2) IRS’
reasons for sending collection notices after receiving full payment. To
fulfill these objectives, we analyzed transcripts containing information
from IRS’ Individual Masterfile (IMF) for a representative random sample
of taxpayers to whom IRS sent collection notices from January 1999
through November 1999. We also talked to responsible IRS officials to
obtain their views.
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