Common Question
It is the fear that keeps people from opening the envelope. The honest answer: simply owing taxes, or being unable to pay, is not a crime. Jail is reserved for willful fraud, and it is rare.
The short version. You do not go to jail for owing the IRS or for being unable to pay. That is a civil debt, handled with payment plans, settlements, and collection. Criminal charges exist only for willful acts, like deliberately evading tax you knew you owed or willfully refusing to file when you were able. Honest inability to pay is not that, and the vast majority of tax debt cases never go near criminal court.
The line is willfulness. Owing money is civil. Deliberate fraud is criminal. Most people are firmly on the civil side.
The fear of jail is exactly what keeps people from opening notices and dealing with the problem, and that silence is what lets a manageable civil debt grow into liens and levies. Engaging with the IRS is what keeps a case civil. Hiding is what creates real risk.
Treat it as the civil matter it almost certainly is, and use the tools built for it.
If the fear has kept you from acting, that is the thing to fix. Send your case in for a free review and we will tell you where you actually stand.
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These are the controlling Internal Revenue Code sections and Internal Revenue Manual parts. Links go to the live IRS.gov pages so you can confirm every point yourself.
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If fear has kept you from acting, send the short version and we will tell you where you actually stand, plainly.
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