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Consider this: In the course of preparing your federal income tax return, you are wondering whether a particular expense is deductible. You go to the IRS website and find a “Frequently Asked Question” (FAQ) that’s directly on point. Good news: The IRS says the expense is deductible. So you deduct it. The next year, the IRS audits your return. The examining agent informs you the IRS changed its position after you filed your return. The examining agent not only denies the deduction, but he imposes a 20 percent accuracy-related penalty as well. You go back to IRS.gov to try to find the FAQ you relied on, but it’s gone.
If the Taxpayer Bill of Rights is to be given meaning, this scenario violates “The Right to Informed” and “The Right to a Fair and Just Tax System.” It is neither fair nor reasonable for the government to impose a penalty against a taxpayer who follows information the government provides on its website.
As tax professionals know well, some forms of administrative guidance are more authoritative than others. Regulations are at the top of the hierarchy, because they go through a notice-and-comment process and are considered binding on the government and taxpayers alike. Other forms of guidance that are published in the Internal Revenue Bulletin (IRB) like revenue rulings, revenue procedures, and notices generally go through an extensive Treasury and IRS review process and are considered binding on the government (but not on taxpayers). According to a statement included in each IRB, “Rulings and procedures reported in the Bulletin do not have the force and effect of Treasury Department Regulations, but they may be used as precedents.” Below IRB guidance are IRS press releases, FAQs, and well-reasoned arguments, which may be found in Chief Counsel Advice and Private Letter Rulings that have been disclosed to the public.
Treasury Regulation § 1.6662-4 says that taxpayers may avoid the accuracy-related penalty for substantial understatements of income tax if there is “substantial authority” for a return position, and reliance on “Internal Revenue Service information or press releases” is considered to meet that standard. With some exceptions, FAQs are not published in the IRB, and the scope of the term “Internal Revenue Service information” is not defined in regulations. It may seem obvious that FAQs posted on the IRS website constitute “Internal Revenue Service information,” but the IRS has declined to concede that point. (See Internal Revenue Manual 4.10.7.2.4 (Jan. 10, 2018) (“FAQs that appear on IRS.gov but that have not been published in the Bulletin are not legal authority and should not be used to sustain a position unless the items (e.g., FAQs) explicitly indicate otherwise or the IRS indicates otherwise.”)
There is a legitimate reason why the IRS uses FAQs and doesn’t want them to be accorded the same level of authority as published IRB guidance. The agency seeks to strike a balance between precision and timeliness. The published guidance process is thorough and time-consuming. Treasury and the IRS don’t have the bandwidth to address all legal issues that arise through the published guidance process, and that process is not well-suited to providing guidance quickly. FAQs fill the timeliness gap.
The Coronavirus relief provisions provide a good example of the useful role of FAQs. There is no end to the questions that have arisen under the Families First Coronavirus Response Act, the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act, and the IRS’s People First Initiative. It would not have been feasible for the IRS to address most of those questions through published guidance, at least not quickly. By our count, the IRS has posted nearly 500 COVID-19-related FAQs on its website, including 94 on the employee retention credit, 93 on the Families First Coronavirus Response Act (via a link to the Department of Labor website), 69 on Economic Impact Payments, 67 on COVID 19-related tax credits, and 40 on filing and payment deadlines.
Because FAQs aren’t subject to thorough review, Treasury and the IRS may later decide some of them are wrong and change them. That is reasonable.
But what about taxpayers who followed an FAQ and now find that: (i) the IRS is taking the opposite position on audit; (ii) the IRS is imposing a penalty on the taxpayer for taking the position the FAQ had advised; and (iii) the taxpayer can’t locate the original FAQ because the IRS has changed it and removed the initial FAQ from its website?
On some FAQ pages, the IRS provides this or a similar disclaimer: “This FAQ is not included in the Internal Revenue Bulletin, and therefore may not be relied upon as legal authority. This means that the information cannot be used to support a legal argument in a court case.” On other FAQ pages, there is no such disclaimer. Either way, it is unreasonable to say taxpayers may not “rely” on FAQs. The sole purpose for posting FAQs and similar information on IRS.gov is to help taxpayers file accurate returns. Why should taxpayers even bother reading and following FAQs if they can’t rely on them and if the IRS can change its position at any time and assess both tax and penalties? At a minimum, the IRS should treat FAQs as “Internal Revenue Service information” for purposes of determining whether a taxpayer had “substantial authority” for taking a return position. The fact that the disclaimer itself refers to FAQs as providing “information” is revealing. When the “Internal Revenue Service” posts “information” on its website, it is hard to see why the information should be characterized as anything other than “Internal Revenue Service information.”
To protect the rights of taxpayers who follow FAQs, we make the following recommendations:
In sum, FAQs play a useful role in providing timely guidance to taxpayers and tax professionals, and this has been particularly true in connection with COVID-19 relief provisions. Because of the haste with which FAQs are sometimes posted, it is understandable that the IRS would want to ensure it can change FAQs without being permanently bound to the position it initially expressed. But taxpayers have the right to expect transparency and fair dealing from their government. If a taxpayer takes the time to visit a government website to locate information to help comply with tax obligations, the taxpayer should be rewarded for trying to do the right thing – not penalized.