IRS PENALTY RELIEF
IRS COVID Penalty Abatement: What Is Reasonable Cause and Why Most Businesses Never Filed
Between 2020 and 2022, the IRS assessed billions of dollars in penalties on businesses that were navigating one of the most operationally disruptive periods in modern American business history. Many of those IRS COVID penalties were assessed on businesses that had entirely legitimate grounds to request abatement. The vast majority never did — and in most cases, they never knew the option existed.
The mechanism is called reasonable cause abatement. It has been part of the Internal Revenue Code for decades. A federal court ruling — Kwong v. United States — has recently changed the legal landscape for businesses pursuing it. This post explains what it is, who qualifies, and why the filing window is real.
What Is IRS Penalty Abatement?
The IRS is authorized to assess penalties for a range of taxpayer failures — failure to file on time, failure to pay on time, failure to deposit payroll taxes, and accuracy-related penalties, among them. Under IRC Section 6651 and related provisions, the IRS is also authorized to remove those penalties when a taxpayer demonstrates that the failure was due to reasonable cause and not willful neglect.
IRS penalty abatement is not about proving you tried hard enough. It is about demonstrating that a person of ordinary business judgment, in your specific situation, could not have done otherwise.
What COVID-Era Circumstances Mean for Your Abatement Claim
These circumstances form the factual foundation for COVID penalty abatement arguments that are more supportable than in any normal tax year. A business that failed to file or pay on time because operations were shut down by government order, key personnel were unavailable due to illness, or cash was frozen pending federal relief disbursements has a materially different factual record than a business that simply didn’t pay attention to its filing obligations.
TWO SEPARATE PATHWAYS
Kwong v. United States — Why This Ruling Matters
In Kwong v. United States, a federal court addressed the legal standard for reasonable cause abatement of IRS penalties in the COVID context. The ruling articulated a framework more favorable to taxpayers than the standard the IRS had been applying administratively — particularly on the reliance-on-advice and ordinary-prudence tests.
The significance of Kwong is not procedural. It is substantive. The decision gives the tax professionals handling your case a stronger legal foundation to build IRS COVID penalty recovery arguments that go beyond what the IRS’s internal administrative process had previously allowed. Applied correctly to your specific factual record, it changes the calculus on claims the IRS previously would have denied.
First Time Abatement: The Other Mechanism
Separate from reasonable cause, the IRS also provides First Time Abatement (FTA) — an administrative waiver available to taxpayers with a clean three-year compliance history who are assessed a qualifying penalty for the first time. FTA does not require demonstrating reasonable cause. It is available as a matter of IRS policy.
Which Penalty Types Qualify
| Penalty Type | Reasonable Cause | First Time Abatement |
|---|---|---|
| Failure to File (IRC §6651(a)(1)) | ✓Eligible | ✓Eligible |
| Failure to Pay (IRC §6651(a)(2)) | ✓Eligible | ✓Eligible |
| Failure to Deposit — Payroll (IRC §6656) | ✓Eligible | Conditional |
| Accuracy-Related Penalty (IRC §6662) | ✓Eligible | Not typically eligible |
| Information Return Penalty (IRC §6721) | ✓Eligible | Case-by-case |
Which Penalty Types Qualify
The pattern is consistent across businesses that left IRS COVID penalty relief on the table:
- They paid the penalty because they assumed they were penalty existed as an required to — they did not know abatement option
- Their CPA advised them to pay and move on — not because abatement was unavailable, but because the CPA did not practice in this area and didn't raise it
- They were aware of general abatement concepts but did not know about Kwong v. United States or how it applied to their situation
- They assumed the statute of limitations had closed — in many cases it has not
- They submitted an abatement request themselves and it was denied because it lacked the substantive legal argument required
Every one of these situations is potentially recoverable — but the window is not unlimited. IRS COVID penalty abatement requests have filing deadlines tied to the assessment date, and the IRS’s posture on COVID-era claims is evolving. Businesses that paid penalties and remain within the filing window have a real opportunity that narrows with each quarter that passes.
Who Qualifies for IRS COVID Penalty Relief
Reasonable cause abatement
First Time Abatement (FTA)
FILING DEADLINES ARE REAL
What the IRS COVID Penalty Recovery Process Looks Like
Opscale Exchange connects you to tax professionals who specialize in IRS penalty abatement — not general practitioners and not accountants submitting administrative requests. These are attorneys who understand Kwong v. United States, know the IRS’s current posture on COVID-era penalty recovery, and build arguments grounded in your specific factual record.
The process begins with a free eligibility review. You provide information about the penalties assessed, the tax years involved, and the circumstances that led to the noncompliance. The tax professionals Opscale Exchange connects you to will identify which IRS penalty relief pathways apply and give you a clear preliminary determination — including your filing window — before any fees are due.