Tax Relief Services
Penalty Abatement: Remove IRS Failure-to-File and Failure-to-Pay Penalties
First-time abatement and reasonable-cause relief can wipe out failure-to-file and failure-to-pay penalties — often the fastest, cleanest savings on a tax balance.
The short answer: penalty abatement is the IRS removing penalties it charged you — most commonly failure-to-file and failure-to-pay penalties. The two main paths are First-Time Abatement (a clean compliance history) and reasonable-cause relief (circumstances beyond your control, like serious illness or a disaster). Removing penalties also reduces the interest charged on them.
What penalty abatement is
Penalty abatement is the IRS agreeing to remove penalties it added to your account. Two penalties drive most balances. The failure-to-file penalty applies when a return is late — it's the steeper of the two, accruing at 5% of the unpaid tax per month up to 25%. The failure-to-pay penalty applies when the tax isn't paid on time, accruing more slowly but stacking up the longer a balance sits. On an older account, penalties and the interest on them can grow into a large share of what you owe — sometimes a meaningful chunk of the total. Abatement targets those penalties specifically; the underlying tax stays. The IRS's own rules for this are on the IRS penalty relief page.
First-Time Abatement vs. reasonable cause
There are two main routes to having penalties removed, and they ask for very different things:
- First-Time Abatement. A one-time administrative waiver for taxpayers with a clean track record. You generally qualify when you have a clean compliance history — no penalties for the prior three tax years, all required returns filed or properly extended, and any tax due paid or in an arrangement to be paid. You don't have to explain anything; you just have to meet the criteria.
- Reasonable cause. For when something beyond your control got in the way — a death in the family, a serious illness, a natural disaster, records destroyed by fire or flood, or other circumstances you couldn't reasonably plan around. The IRS also wants to see that you acted responsibly once the situation allowed. This route leans on facts and documentation rather than a clean history.
How Clarity helps
Penalty abatement is easy to ask for and easy to ask for badly. Here's where an experienced tax professional makes the difference:
- We check what you're actually eligible to remove. Before anything else, we pull your account and identify which penalties — and which routes — realistically apply to your situation.
- We request it the right way. The correct request, the correct grounds, and the right supporting documentation so the abatement holds up rather than getting a quick denial.
- We sequence it correctly. Penalty relief often works best paired with the rest of a case — we time it so it fits alongside filing, payment, or settlement steps instead of working against them.
- We handle the IRS. With power of attorney on file, the IRS deals with us, not you.
Think your penalties could be removed?
Get a free, confidential review. We'll check which penalties you may be eligible to have removed and the best way to request it — no pressure, no obligation.
Penalty abatement questions, answered
What is first-time penalty abatement?
First-Time Abatement is a one-time administrative waiver for taxpayers with a clean recent compliance history. You generally qualify when you have no penalties for the prior three tax years, you've filed all required returns (or filed a valid extension), and you've paid or arranged to pay any tax due. It's the simplest, fastest form of penalty relief because it doesn't require you to explain why the penalty happened.
Can the IRS really remove tax penalties?
Yes. The IRS can remove penalties through First-Time Abatement when you have a clean compliance history, or through reasonable-cause relief when circumstances beyond your control kept you from filing or paying on time. Abatement does not remove the underlying tax you owe, but it can remove the penalties charged on top of it — and the interest that accrued on those penalties.
What counts as reasonable cause?
Reasonable cause means circumstances beyond your control that kept you from filing or paying on time — such as serious illness, a death in the family, a natural disaster, or records destroyed by fire or flood. The IRS also wants to see that you acted responsibly: that you exercised ordinary business care and tried to comply once the situation allowed. Documentation matters.
Does penalty abatement remove the interest too?
Interest on the tax itself generally stays — the IRS charges interest on unpaid tax by law and rarely removes it. But removing a penalty also removes the interest that accrued on that penalty. So when penalties are a large share of your balance, abatement can still produce meaningful savings beyond the penalty amount alone.
Results vary based on individual facts and circumstances. Not all taxpayers qualify for First-Time Abatement, reasonable-cause relief, or other penalty-relief programs, and no specific outcome is guaranteed. This page is general information, not tax or legal advice.
Related services: Offer in Compromise · unfiled tax returns · IRS payment plans · or return to all tax relief services.