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You Missed a Year. Or a Few. Here Is How to Get Back on Track.

  • Writer: Gregg Jaffe
    Gregg Jaffe
  • 2 days ago
  • 5 min read
Hands holding a bill stamped with "PAST DUE" in red. Papers and documents scattered on a white desk, suggesting financial concern.

Most people who have an unfiled return know they have one. They are not avoiding it because they do not care. They are avoiding it because they do not know where to start, and every month that passes makes starting feel harder.


Whether you missed one year a while back or have not filed in several years, the process is the same: get the returns filed, address what you owe, and put it behind you. The IRS is generally more willing to work with people who come forward than with people it has to chase.


The Unfiled Return Does Not Go Away

There is no statute of limitations on unfiled returns. A return that was due in 2018 is still legally open today. The IRS can pursue it at any point, and eventually many non-filers hear from the agency, sometimes years after the fact.


If you have income documents on file with the IRS, such as W-2s or 1099s, and you did not file a return for that year, the agency may prepare what is called a Substitute for Return on your behalf. An SFR uses only the income information the IRS has. It does not include your deductions, your filing status beyond single or married filing separately, your credits, or your business expenses. The result is almost always a higher tax bill than if you had filed yourself.

Filing your own return replaces the SFR and gives you credit for everything you are actually entitled to. In many cases that means a significantly lower balance. If an SFR has already been assessed, the process is more involved, but it is still worth doing.


How Far Back Do You Actually Need to Go?

The IRS operates under an internal guideline known as the six-year compliance rule, outlined in IRS Policy Statement 5-133. As a general rule, the IRS works from a six-year compliance standard when bringing non-filers back into the system. If you have not filed in ten years, filing the most recent six is typically what it takes to get current.


This is an administrative guideline, not a law, and there are exceptions. The IRS may require more than six years if there is significant unreported income, if fraud is suspected, or if a revenue officer has been assigned to the case. But for the large majority of individuals and small business owners who simply fell behind, six years is the standard the IRS works from.


One important limit runs the other direction. You only have three years from a return's original due date to claim a refund on that return. If you were owed money for a year outside that window, the refund is generally no longer available even if you file now. Filing for those years may still be necessary for compliance purposes, but the refund is gone.


What Happens to the Penalties?

Late-filed returns that show a balance due may trigger both failure-to-file and failure-to-pay penalties, along with interest. The failure-to-file penalty is generally 5% per month up to 25%, and the failure-to-pay penalty is generally 0.5% per month up to 25%, though when both apply in the same month the IRS coordinates them rather than stacking the full percentages. By the time a return that was due several years ago is finally filed, the penalties can be a meaningful portion of the total amount owed.


The penalties are not always the final number, though. The IRS offers penalty relief programs that can reduce or remove them in certain situations.


First Time Abatement is one option, but it comes with conditions. To qualify, the required returns must be filed and the taxpayer must otherwise be in compliance. In practice, the IRS may grant First Time Abate even if the tax has not yet been fully paid, although failure-to-pay penalties can continue until the balance is paid. FTA also requires no penalties assessed in the three prior tax years and applies to one tax period only. That means for someone catching up on several years at once, FTA is not available until compliance is fully restored — and even then, it addresses penalties for only a single year. Reasonable Cause relief is a separate path, available when circumstances beyond your control, such as a serious illness, a death in the family, or a natural disaster, prevented you from filing. That requires documentation and is reviewed on a case-by-case basis.


Neither is guaranteed, and neither removes interest on unpaid tax. But for taxpayers who qualify, abatement can meaningfully reduce what is owed.


When the Problem Is a Single Missed Year

A single missed year from the past is a different situation than several consecutive unfiled returns. If you filed before and after the gap year and are otherwise current, the IRS is typically easier to work with. The return can often be filed without triggering aggressive enforcement, particularly if the gap year shows a refund or a modest balance.

The bigger risk with a single missed year is the refund window. If more than three years have passed since that return was due, any refund you were owed has likely expired. If you owed tax that year, the penalties and interest are still on the table and the balance is still collectible.


Filing it now, even if it is late, is still the right move. Filing a late return can start important IRS limitation periods that do not begin while a required return remains unfiled.


The Document Problem Is Easier Than It Looks

Gathering documents for prior years is often the thing that stops people from starting. The IRS keeps wage and income transcripts going back several years, and those transcripts can be requested directly. They show what was reported to the IRS under your Social Security number, including W-2s, 1099s, and other income documents. That gives you a starting point even when your own records are incomplete.


The document problem is usually what paralyzes people longest. The assumption is that without complete records for a prior year, there is nothing to file. That is rarely true. The IRS maintains wage and income transcripts that show everything reported under your Social Security number — W-2s, 1099s, K-1s, brokerage proceeds — going back several years. A tax professional can pull those transcripts directly and use them as the foundation for the return. The income side is almost always recoverable.


The deduction side takes more work. Mortgage interest statements, property tax records, business expenses, and charitable contributions are not in the IRS transcript — those have to come from you, or be reconstructed from bank records, old statements, or whatever documentation still exists. Filing status and dependent information matters too, particularly for years where your household situation changed. None of this has to be perfect before you start. The goal is an accurate return, not a perfect one assembled from complete records. Most people have more to work with than they think.


Coming Forward Before the IRS Comes to You

The IRS consistently treats taxpayers who file voluntarily more favorably than those it has to pursue. Filing before you receive a notice or a revenue officer contact gives you more control over the outcome — more latitude on payment arrangements, stronger standing to request penalty abatement, and a cleaner resolution.


The longer unfiled returns sit, the more the penalties and interest accumulate. Coming forward before enforcement begins is almost always the better position to be in.


Get Current Before the IRS Acts First

If you have unfiled returns, the first step is understanding exactly where you stand. Gregg Jaffe Tax Services works with individuals and business owners across Plainview and Long Island who need to get current with the IRS. That means pulling transcripts, identifying which years need to be filed, preparing accurate returns, and addressing any balance or penalty relief options that apply.


Once you know exactly what years are open and what you owe, the situation is almost always more manageable than it looked when you were trying to figure it out alone.

Phone: 516-770-5305

 
 
 

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