IRS unveils option allowing online responses to 9 of its notices. ‘A step in the right direction,’ says tax pro

IRS unveils option allowing online responses to 9 of its notices. ‘A step in the right direction,’ says tax pro


Hoxton/Sam Edwards | Getty Images

After kicking off tax season with customer service and technology upgrades, the IRS this week unveiled a new option allowing taxpayers to respond more easily to certain agency notices. 

The new feature lets taxpayers and professionals respond to nine notices online by digitally uploading requested documents, rather than responding by mail, according to a news release from Thursday. 

“It’s definitely a step in the right direction,” said certified financial planner John Chichester Jr., founder and CEO of Chichester Financial Group in Phoenix. He is also a certified public accountant.

More from Smart Tax Planning:

Here’s a look at more tax-planning news.

Chichester said allowing taxpayers and professionals to respond to notices online will “save everyone time and energy.”

Currently, you can use the new upload feature for the following nine notices, including earned income tax credit and child tax credit recipients, that are received by more than 500,000 taxpayers per year:

  • CP04 – combat zone status
  • CP05A – information request for a refund
  • CP06 and CP06A – premium tax credit
  • CP08 – child tax credit
  • CP09, CP75 and CP75a – earned income tax credit
  • CP75d – earned income tax credit and others

The IRS plans to expand the upload capability for “dozens of other notices” in the future.

“This means people can have their issues resolved much faster, including getting refunds to affected taxpayers faster,” IRS acting Commissioner Doug O’Donnell said in a statement.

If you receive one of the nine notices, it will include a link and unique access code, according to the IRS. You can use any browser to open the link, enter the access code and add personal details before uploading the necessary documents.

IRS holds off on new rules for gig workers

Paper has been a key issue for the IRS

The document-upload feature comes during a critical time for the IRS, as the agency receives $80 billion in funding over the next decade as part of the Inflation Reduction Act.

Throughout 2022, the IRS grappled with a backlog of millions of unprocessed returns, and Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said clearing the pileup was one of the top priorities for IRS funding.

Paper returns and correspondence have been a key issue, according to National Taxpayer Advocate Erin Collins, who recently published her annual report to Congress.

“The IRS still depends on outdated manual practices and a human assembly line for its paper processing operations, and paper is its kryptonite,” she wrote in her report for 2022. 



Source

Inside the dealmaking that pushed Trump to reclassify pot, expand access
Business

Inside the dealmaking that pushed Trump to reclassify pot, expand access

President Donald Trump’s move Thursday to sign an executive order easing federal restrictions on marijuana — and clearing the way for a Medicare pilot program covering CBD — caps a coordinated, yearlong push by the cannabis industry that combined traditional lobbying, sizable political donations, data-driven messaging and direct outreach to the president’s inner circle, industry […]

Read More
Shoppers are focusing on quality, not deals, in the final days before Christmas
Business

Shoppers are focusing on quality, not deals, in the final days before Christmas

While discounts drive purchasing in the early days of the holiday shopping season, consumers are shifting into more thoughtful, quality gifts in the back half of the season as total spending growth slows. U.S. consumers had spent $187.3 billion so far online between Nov. 1 and Dec. 12, up 6.1% from the same stretch last […]

Read More
Classic-car market poised for strong 2026, says Hagerty CEO
Business

Classic-car market poised for strong 2026, says Hagerty CEO

A version of this article first appeared in CNBC’s Inside Wealth newsletter with Robert Frank, a weekly guide to the high-net-worth investor and consumer. Sign up to receive future editions, straight to your inbox. The strength in the classic-car market is expected to continue in 2026 as a new generation of collectors revs up demand, said the […]

Read More