IRS releases fiscal year 2022 Data Book describing agency’s activities
WASHINGTON —The Internal Revenue Service today issued its annual Data Book
detailing the agency’s activities during fiscal year 2022 (Oct. 1, 2021
– Sept. 30, 2022), including revenue collected and tax returns
processed.
In many areas, the statistics in the 2022 Data Book
reflect the impact that past resource constraints had on the agency’s
ability to provide adequate taxpayer service and address compliance
issues, including audits of higher income taxpayers, partnerships and
large corporations.
For FY 2022, the gross collections of the
agency totaled more than $4.9 trillion, or about 96% of all government
funding. When compared against the cost to fund the IRS, the ratio of
agency costs to revenue was 29 cents per hundred dollars collected for
2022, the lowest cost to taxpayers in the history of the agency.
The
IRS issued $50.9 billion in payments to taxpayers during FY 2022 as a
result of legislation passed by Congress in response to the COVID-19
pandemic. Of this, $3.7 billion were classified as Economic Impact
Payments and $47.3 billion were considered Advance Child Tax Credits.
The
Comprehensive Taxpayer Attitude Survey has provided valuable insight to
the agency for more than two decades, and during 2022 it was expanded
to contact hard-to-reach populations. For 2022, the survey results
showed improvements in taxpayer interactions with IRS. After a dip in
satisfaction from 2019 to 2021, there was a significant increase in
satisfaction in 2022, rising to a score of 78%, up from 75% in 2021.
Returns processed
The
IRS processed more than 262.8 million federal tax returns during FY
2022, of which 160.6 million were the tax returns of individuals, and of
that total, 150.6 million were e-filed, or almost 94% of all individual
tax returns.
Taxpayer assistance
During
2022, the IRS assisted more than 71.3 million taxpayers through
correspondence, its enterprise-wide telephone helplines or at Taxpayer
Assistance Centers. Additionally, the agency provided self-assistance to
taxpayers through nearly 1.1 billion visits to IRS.gov, including 447.7
million inquiries to the “Where’s My Refund?” application, and almost
14.1 million active IRS2GO mobile app users. Taxpayers downloaded close
to 453.9 million files (such as tax forms and instruction documents)
from IRS.gov. The IRS issued 6.1 million Identity Protection Personal
Identification Numbers to taxpayers, an increase of 27% over the prior
year; of these, upwards of 1.3 million were issued through IRS.gov.
Through its Volunteer Income Tax Assistance and Tax Counseling for the
Elderly programs, the agency was involved in preparing more than 2.2
million returns with the aid of 57,420 volunteers.
Examination
For
the past decade, the IRS has seen an increase in the number of returns
filed paired with a decrease in resources available for examinations
particularly for the most complex tax returns of high-income and
high-wealth individuals, large corporations, and complex partnerships.
Going forward, as the IRS moves to implement the Strategic Operating Plan
released earlier this month, the agency is focused on pursuing
high-income and high-wealth individuals, complex partnerships and large
corporations that are not paying the taxes they owe. As a result, the
IRS has no plans to increase the audit rate for households making less
than $400,000.
The 2018 information is the most recent year we
have final audit rate data because it is the most recent tax year for
which the statutory period has closed, meaning in most cases no new
audits will be started and the audit coverage rates should be final.
Typically,
audit rates for higher-income categories increase over time as new
audits are opened during the statutory period. This means the audit
numbers for higher-income taxpayers listed in the 2022 Data Book Table
17 will increase over time for tax years within the statutory period;
the final exam rates for these taxpayers will be significantly higher in
future years.
The examination coverage rates presented in the
annual IRS Data Book, represent a “snapshot” as of the end of each
fiscal year, but the data will continue to change as open examinations
close and new ones are opened.
While IRS accepts most returns as
filed, some are selected for examination or audit. In FY 2022, the IRS
closed 708,309 tax return audits, which resulted in nearly $30.2 billion
in recommended additional tax.
Other IRS functions
In
addition to the work described above, overall, the IRS Data Book for FY
2022 comprises 33 tables describing the full variety of IRS activities
from returns processed, revenue collected and refunds issued to the
number of examinations conducted and the amount of additional tax
recommended, as well as budget and personnel information. The current
issue also provides an additional Appendix table about the types and
amount of COVID-19 employer credits claimed and processed through the
end of FY 2022 and those processed in prior fiscal years. The Data Book
provides point-in-time estimates of IRS activities as of September 2022.
IRS Statement on Data Book Examination Coverage Rates in the 2022 Data Book.
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