Owe Payroll Taxes? IRC §6672 Civil Penalty, aka the "Trust Fund Recovery Penalty," explained — The Law Offices of O'Connor & Lyon (2024)

Background:

Many taxpayers assume that forming a business as a separate entity will shield them from personal liability from tax liabilities generated by the business. While this is true for many types of taxes that a business may incur, it is not the case when it comes to employment and income taxes that the business is required to collect and remit to the IRS on behalf of its employees. As the funds withheld from employees do not belong to the business but are rather being held in trust by the business prior to being deposited with the IRS, the IRS refers to these taxes as “trust fund taxes.” Because a failure to deposit these trust fund taxes involves the misappropriation of others’ funds, the IRS aggressively pursues the collections of these funds and has been granted special tools by Congress in order to do so.

If a business collects trust fund taxes from its employees but does not remit those taxes to the IRS, the IRS has the authority to assess a Civil Penalty under Section 6672 of the Internal Revenue Code against anyone at the business deemed to have been both responsible for the collection and remittance of the trust fund taxes and wilfully failed to carry out their duty to do so. This Civil Penalty is commonly referred to as the “Trust Fund Recovery Penalty,” or “TFRP.” Generally the amount assessed as a Civil Penalty under §6672 is equal to the amount of income tax withheld from employees but not remitted as well as the “employees’ portion” of Social Security and Medicare taxes withheld but not remitted, which typically represents half of the total amount of the employment taxes that the business is responsible for depositing.

Who Can Be Held Responsible for and for How Much?

The TFRP is assessed as a joint and several liability against any person involved in the business that the IRS believes meets the requisite levels of responsibility and willfulness. The IRS will conduct what is known as a 4180 interview with anyone at the company they suspect may be able to be held responsible for the TFRP. Responsibility usually rests with a determination regarding whether a particular person had the ability to exercise independent judgment with respect to the financial affairs of the business in question. The IRS will consider a number of factors in making this determination, such as a person’s title and role at the company and whether that person had check signing authority over the company’s bank accounts. To show willfulness, the IRS generally must demonstrate that a responsible person was aware, or should have been aware, of the outstanding taxes and either intentionally disregarded the law or was plainly indifferent to its requirements. Third-party contractors such as accountants or payroll providers, while not employees of the business in a strict sense, may nevertheless be assessed the TFRP for a business’s failure to deposit trust fund taxes if it can be shown that they meet the requisite levels of responsibility and wildfulness.

Because it is a joint and several liability, the full amount of the TFRP can be collected against any person against whom the assessment was made, however the IRS cannot collect more in aggregate than the total amount owed from any of the parties involved. It is helpful to think of the TFRP as a tool the IRS to expand the pool of persons from whom it can collect the business’s tax liability; it does not allow to the IRS to collect any additional taxes that the business does not already owe. In practice, what this means is that any payment that is made by any person responsible for the TFRP or by the business against the Trust Fund portion of the liability will reduce the amounts owed by the other parties involved.

Strategies for Trust Fund Tax Liabilities:

When businesses fail to deposit employment taxes, they typically fail to deposit both the employees’ portion and the portion for which the employer is solely responsible for paying. As only the employees’ portion can be assessed personally through the TFRP, this usually results in a situation where the TFRP assessed against responsible parties is less than the total employment tax liability owed by the business. For this reason, it is often advisable for a business that is making voluntary payments towards an employment tax liability to designate any voluntary payments made specifically towards the “Trust Fund Portion” of the tax. In doing so, they’re ensuring that every dollar that is sent towards the back taxes is reducing the amount that can be collected from those responsible for the TFRP.

If a business is still operating and cannot afford to quickly pay off its employment tax liability, it has a few options for attempting to resolve the balances with the IRS.

  1. In-Business Trust Fund Express Installment Agreement: If the business owes less than $25,000 and can agree to a payment plan that will provide for a full repayment of the liability in 24 months or less, they can request what’s known as an In-Business Trust Fund Express Installment Agreement (IBTFE IA) from the IRS. The primary benefits of an IBTFE IA are that the business is not required to completed a Collection Information Statement, and the IRS will generally hold off on making any TFRP assessments against responsible parties as long as the business meets the terms of the agreement.

  2. In-Business Trust Fund Installment Agreements: Business that owe over $25,000 in trust fund taxes will generally need to complete a Collection Information Statement (Form 433-B) in order to establish a formal installment agreement with the IRS. Depending on the size of the liability, the IRS may not have to review the financial disclosure provided the business can agree to repay the liabilities in 5 years or less. In addition, if the business can agree to repay the liability in full at least one year prior to the time period for the IRS to make a TFRP assessment, they will usually refrain from making a determination to assess the TFRP so long as the business complies with the terms of the agreement. While this usually means a rather aggressive repayment plan, a taxpayer can opt to consent to extend the assessment statute in order to avoid a TFRP assessment. Finally, even if the business cannot commit to paying off the trust fund tax liability prior to the expiration of the IRS’s time period to assess the TFRP, the IRS may agree to make the assessment of the TFRP but put collection efforts on hold while the business is paying of the liability through the installment agreement.

  3. Offer in Compromise: While a business can compromise its trust fund tax liability through the IRS Offer in Compromise program, the IRS is very reluctant to compromise a trust fund tax liability for an operating business is perhaps. The idea is that the IRS does not want to provide an incentive for companies to short-change their payroll taxes and in doing so gain an advantage on their competition in the expectation that they will be able to compromise the taxes at a later date. In addition, it is important to keep in mind that if the business’s OIC is not in an amount sufficient to fully satisfy the trust fund portion of the balance, the IRS can still pursue the collection of the remainder from those that have been assessed the TFRP. Many businesses that submit Offers for employment tax liabilities do so as periodic-payment offers, as this allows the installment payments submitted while the Offer is under consideration to be directed towards the trust fund portion of the balances, which provides a business with the ability to pay down the trust fund portion of the liability while pursuing a compromise of the remaining portion.

If you’ve been assessed the Trust Fund Recovery Penalty Personally, the tools available to you for resolving the liability are largely the same available to taxpayers looking to resolve income tax balances with the IRS. In fact, if you also have income tax liabilities, you’ll need to resolve both assessments concurrently under one agreement. There are a number of considerations that come into play when dealing with TFRP assessments that may not come into play when resolving most income tax balances however. For example, it’s quite likely that the IRS has made assessments against multiple responsible parties, so spreading out the repayment of the taxes may be in your best interest if it means the IRS will end up collecting more of the penalty against the other persons jointly responsible for the penalty. In addition, a TFRP assessment often results in a situation where one spouse is dealing with an assessment for which the other spouse is not liable. This can complicate matters considerable, especially when the spouses are jointly liable for income tax balances.

Conclusion:

Dealing with a trust fund tax liability often requires a multifaceted approach, as the IRS will be pursuing multiple angles of collection simultaneously. While it is relatively rare for the IRS to pursue a taxpayer criminally for failure to pay their taxes, because they view a failure to deposit trust fund taxes as paramount to theft from one’s employees, the rate of criminal prosecutions associated with trust fund tax liabilities far exceeds those for other tax types, especially when the IRS views a taxpayer as a pyramider or habitual under-depositor of payroll taxes. As a result, if you’re dealing with a trust fund tax liability, it is important to resolve the balance quickly and effectively, both on behalf of the business as well as any personal Civil Penalty associate with the business’s failure to deposit.

Owe Payroll Taxes? IRC §6672 Civil Penalty, aka the "Trust Fund Recovery Penalty," explained — The Law Offices of O'Connor & Lyon (2024)

FAQs

What is the IRC 6672 trust fund recovery penalty? ›

IRC 6672 is the authority for the TFRP. The TFRP is a penalty against any responsible person required to collect, account for, and pay over taxes held in trust who willfully fails to perform any of these activities.

What is the trust fund penalty for payroll taxes? ›

What is the Trust Fund Recovery Penalty (TFRP)? The Trust Fund Recovery Penalty is the penalty you face if you withhold income tax, Medicare, and Social Security payments from your employees' paychecks, but you don't send the money to the IRS. It is one of the largest penalties charged by the IRS.

What is an IRC penalty? ›

Failure to File a Return / Late Filing Penalty

Any taxpayer who is required to file a return, but fails to do so by the due date. 5% of the tax due, after allowing for timely payments, for every month that the return is late, up to a maximum of 25%. For fraud, substitute 15% and 75% for 5% and 25%, respectively.

What are the two factors the IRS considers for the trust fund recovery penalty? ›

The two factors the IRS considers for the trust fund recovery penalty are the total of the employees' withheld FICA taxes and the unpaid income taxes withheld. These combine to make the total unpaid withheld income taxes.

How long does the IRS have to collect trust fund recovery penalty? ›

Three years

What is the trust tax loophole? ›

The trust fund loophole refers to the “stepped-up basis rule” in U.S. tax law. The rule is a tax exemption that lets you use a trust to transfer appreciated assets to the trust's beneficiaries without paying the capital gains tax. Your “basis” in an asset is the price you paid for the asset.

What does IRS civil penalty mean? ›

IRS civil penalties are fees issued because of civil offenses, like failing to file your tax return on time or failing to pay the tax you owe. Six common civil penalties include: Penalty for underpayment of estimated tax. Failure to file/late filing penalty. Failure to pay/late payment penalty.

What is an IRC violation? ›

A violation of IRC can be a crime or a civil offense, depending on what kind of tax the taxpayer evades, and the amount of money involved. For example, if a taxpayer fails to pay taxes willfully, they can be fined not more than $10,000, or imprisoned not more than 5 years.

What does IRC mean legal? ›

Internal Revenue Code

The Constitution gives Congress the power to tax. Congress typically enacts Federal tax law in the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (IRC). The sections of the IRC can be found in Title 26 of the United States Code (26 USC).

Who is liable for unpaid payroll taxes? ›

Both Internal Revenue Code section 6672 and California Unemployment Insurance Code section 1735 provide that any individual who is required to collect, truthfully account for, and pay over payroll tax for an LLC or corporation who willfully fails to do so shall be personally liable for the amount due, which may also ...

Can the IRS go after a trust fund? ›

It has long been recognized that a trust settlor has the power to determine to whom they leave assets and under what terms. Based on that theory, absent any ill intent or other factors that would allow creditors (including the IRS) to access trust assets, those assets may be protected from a beneficiary's creditors.

What is the trust tax penalty? ›

If a trustee fails to pay the tax owed, the IRS may impose a penalty of 0.5% – 1% of the unpaid amount for each month that the tax remains unpaid.

What is the tax code 6672? ›

Any person required to collect, truthfully account for, and pay over any tax imposed by this title who willfully fails to collect such tax, or truthfully account for and pay over such tax, or willfully attempts in any manner to evade or defeat any such tax or the payment thereof, shall, in addition to other penalties ...

How much is a 6722 penalty? ›

In the case of any failure to furnish a payee statement on or before the required date, or any failure to include all of the information required to be shown on a payee statement or the inclusion of incorrect information, the person responsible for the failure may be subject to a penalty of $250 for each statement with ...

What is a trust fund recovery penalty offer in compromise? ›

Trust fund recovery penalty offer in compromise

An OIC for trust fund recovery penalty is just settling the trust fund recovery penalty. The business will try to settle for an amount at least equal to the trust fund recovery penalty, that way, no “responsible parties” will have to pay it. Rather, the business will.

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