Common Question
Two different problems with two different penalties. Not filing is treated more harshly than not paying, and both get worse over time. Here is the actual sequence.
The short version. Not filing and not paying are separate problems. The failure to file penalty is much steeper than the failure to pay penalty, which is why filing on time matters even when you cannot pay. From there the balance grows with penalties and interest, the IRS sends a sequence of notices, and eventually it can lien, levy, and in non filer cases build a return for you. Criminal charges only enter the picture for willful fraud, not honest inability.
The single most useful fact here: file on time even if you cannot pay, because the filing penalty is the bigger one.
After the penalties begin, the IRS works through a sequence of notices, from the first bill to the final notice of intent to levy. If you still do not respond, it can file a lien, levy wages and accounts, and for non filers prepare a substitute return that inflates the bill. Criminal charges are reserved for willful fraud, not for honest inability to pay.
The order that helps most: file, then deal with the balance.
Knowing what comes next takes the fear out of it. Send your case in for a free review and we will tell you where you are in the sequence and what to do.
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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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