An IRS audit doesn’t end with a conversation. It ends with a letter, usually a Form 4549, with a dollar amount you’re now expected to pay. If you read that letter and something feels off, maybe the auditor missed a receipt, maybe you never got the original notice, maybe the math is just wrong, you still have options.
The IRS calls this process audit reconsideration, and it exists specifically for situations like yours. It won’t undo a signed closing agreement or override a Tax Court ruling, but for a closed audit where new facts exist, it can lead to a lower bill or no bill at all.
Key Takeaways
- You can request audit reconsideration if you have new documentation, missed your original audit, or believe the IRS made a processing error.
- The tax from your audit must still be unpaid; if you already paid it in full, you need to file Form 1040-X instead.
- The IRS aims to respond within 30 days, but real cases often take longer, and collection action can resume if you miss a follow-up deadline.
What Is Audit Reconsideration, Exactly?
Audit reconsideration is an administrative process the IRS uses when a taxpayer disputes the outcome of a completed examination. According to IRS Publication 3598, the process applies whether the IRS audited a return you filed or created one for you under Internal Revenue Code Section 6020(b) because you never filed at all.
That second scenario, a Substitute for Return, is more common than most people realize. The IRS files an SFR using whatever third-party data it has, mainly W-2s and 1099s, and almost never applies deductions, dependents, or your correct filing status. The result is usually a tax bill much higher than what you’d owe on an accurate return.
Reconsideration is also available for Automated Underreporter notices, the CP2000 letters that flag mismatches between your return and third-party reporting, and for cases involving a straightforward IRS math or processing error.
This is not a formal appeal, and it is not a new audit. Think of it as asking the IRS to look again at a specific, closed case using information it didn’t have the first time around.
When the IRS Will (and Won’t) Reconsider Your Audit
The IRS is fairly specific about what qualifies. Publication 3598 lays out both sides plainly.
| The IRS Will Accept Your Request If… | The IRS Will Reject Your Request If… |
|---|---|
| You have information the auditor never reviewed | You signed a closing agreement, Form 906, accepting the result |
| You filed an actual return after the IRS filed an SFR for you | You signed Form 870-AD with the Appeals office |
| You believe the IRS made a computational or processing error | The tax results from a final TEFRA partnership adjustment |
| The assessed tax is unpaid, or claimed credits were denied | The U.S. Tax Court or another court already issued a final ruling on the liability |
The word “unpaid” matters more than most people expect. If you already paid the assessment in full, audit reconsideration is no longer the right tool. At that point you’d file Form 1040-X, an amended return, to claim a refund instead.
By the Numbers: How Often Audits (and Reconsiderations) Happen
Audits are rarer than most people assume, but they aren’t evenly distributed. The IRS’s 2024 Data Book, released in 2025, shows an overall audit rate of about 1 in 200 returns, or 0.5%. That number climbs quickly at higher income levels.
- Returns reporting $500,000 to $1 million in income: audit rate around 0.6%
- Returns reporting $1 million to $5 million: about 1.1%
- Returns reporting $5 million to $10 million: about 3.1%
- Returns reporting more than $10 million: about 4%
Most audits never involve a face-to-face meeting. In fiscal year 2024, 77.9% of audits were correspondence audits handled entirely by mail, while 22.1% were field audits with an in-person component.
Field audits are far less common but generate far more revenue: they produced about $23 billion in recommended additional tax in 2024, compared to roughly $6 billion from correspondence audits. Overall, the IRS closed more than 505,000 audits that year and recommended over $29 billion in additional tax.
The IRS doesn’t publish a separate count of audit reconsideration requests, but practitioners who handle these cases regularly will tell you the volume tracks closely with correspondence audit volume, since SFRs and CP2000 notices, the categories most likely to end up in reconsideration, are almost entirely handled by mail.
Reconsideration sits alongside other relief options the IRS reports on each year. In fiscal year 2024, the agency received about 33,600 Offers in Compromise and accepted roughly 7,200 of them, settling close to $163 million in tax debt for less than the full amount owed, a reminder that the IRS does adjust outcomes for taxpayers who make a documented case.
How to Request Audit Reconsideration: Step by Step
The process itself isn’t complicated, but it’s easy to get wrong if you skip a step or send incomplete documentation. Here’s the order the IRS actually expects.
1. Pull your examination report
Start with Form 4549, Report of Income Tax Examination Changes, or whatever letter closed your audit. Go line by line and identify exactly which adjustments you disagree with. Vague objections don’t move a case forward; specific, itemized disputes do.
2. Gather documentation the IRS hasn’t already seen
This is the part that decides whether your request succeeds. The IRS will not reconsider an issue based on the same documents and arguments it already reviewed. You need something new: receipts, bank statements, canceled checks, 1099s, mileage logs, or anything else that supports the specific item in dispute.
Make copies. Never send originals, since the IRS will not return them.
3. Write your letter or complete Form 12661
You don’t technically need a special form. A clear letter explaining each disputed item, with your new documentation attached, will work. That said, Form 12661, Disputed Issue Verification, gives the IRS a structured way to match your dispute to its records, and most practitioners use it because it reduces back-and-forth.
Include a copy of your Form 4549 if you have it, plus a daytime and evening phone number where you can be reached.
4. Submit through the right channel
The IRS recommends using its Document Upload Tool at irs.gov/examreply for correspondence exam reconsiderations. You can also mail your packet to the IRS campus listed on your original audit letter. If you don’t have that letter, call 866-897-0161 or 866-897-0177 to confirm the right address.
Use certified mail if you go the paper route, and keep a complete copy of everything you send.
5. Track your case and respond quickly to follow-ups
The IRS states it tries to respond within 30 days, though in practice many cases take longer, sometimes several months. If the IRS asks for more information, you generally have 30 calendar days to respond. Miss that window and the IRS can resume collection activity on the original balance.
If your records were incomplete to begin with, that’s a different problem, and a common one. Rebuilding a financial picture from scratch, especially for a self-employed taxpayer or a small business with years of disorganized books, isn’t something most people can do alone in a weekend.
A forensic audit support team can reconstruct income and expense records from bank statements, merchant processor data, and other sources when the original documentation simply wasn’t there.
What Happens After You Submit Your Request
Once your packet arrives, the IRS reviews each disputed item separately. You’ll typically hear back in one of three ways: full acceptance, where the assessment gets abated; partial acceptance, where some items get adjusted and others don’t; or denial, where your information didn’t change the outcome on any item.
Submitting a reconsideration request can pause collection activity while the IRS reviews your case, but that pause isn’t automatic or guaranteed, and it isn’t the same as a formal Collection Due Process hold. If you currently have an installment agreement in place, you’re expected to keep making those payments while reconsideration is pending.
The balance doesn’t freeze and stop accruing interest just because you filed a request. If your case sits well past the 30-day window with no response, the Taxpayer Advocate Service can step in.
It’s an independent organization within the IRS built to help taxpayers facing delays, backlogs, or financial hardship caused by an unresolved problem with the agency.
If the IRS Denies Your Request
A denial isn’t the end of the line. You have three paths from there.
- Request an Appeals Conference with the IRS Independent Office of Appeals.
- Pay the assessment in full and then file a formal claim for refund.
- Do nothing, in which case the IRS will bill you for the amount due and resume normal collection.
Appeals is usually the better move if you still believe the facts support your position. It’s a separate function from the examination division, staffed by officers who weigh the hazards of litigation rather than simply re-running the same audit logic.
Reconsideration vs. Appeals vs. an Amended Return: Which One Fits
People mix these up constantly, and picking the wrong one can waste months.
| Situation | Right Tool |
|---|---|
| Audit is closed, tax is unpaid, and you have new evidence | Audit Reconsideration |
| Audit is closed, tax is unpaid, and you disagree with the legal conclusion but have no new evidence | Appeals Conference |
| You already paid the assessed tax in full | Amended return, Form 1040-X |
| You missed the 90-day window to petition Tax Court after a Notice of Deficiency | Audit Reconsideration, since the Tax Court door is closed |
| A court already ruled on your liability | Neither; reconsideration and most appeals are no longer available |
Common Mistakes That Sink a Reconsideration Request
A lot of requests fail for reasons that have nothing to do with the underlying facts.
- Resubmitting the same documents the auditor already reviewed instead of locating genuinely new evidence.
- Sending a vague letter that says “I disagree” without identifying which specific line items are wrong.
- Ignoring an installment agreement while reconsideration is pending, which can trigger a separate default on that agreement.
- Mailing original documents instead of copies, then having no backup when the IRS can’t locate them.
- Letting a 30-day follow-up deadline pass and assuming the case is still on hold.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is there a deadline to request audit reconsideration?
Not a fixed one. You can request reconsideration any time after the IRS assesses tax against you, as long as that tax remains unpaid. That said, waiting too long makes it harder to track down old records and lets interest and penalties keep piling up on the balance.
Will requesting reconsideration stop the IRS from garnishing my wages?
It may pause collection while your documentation is under review, but that’s not guaranteed, and it isn’t the same as a formal levy release. If you’re already facing a wage garnishment or bank levy, that usually has to be addressed as its own action alongside the reconsideration request.
Can I request reconsideration for a Substitute for Return?
Yes, and this is one of the most common and most successful reconsideration scenarios. Filing the actual return you should have filed originally, with real deductions and your correct filing status, almost always produces a lower number than the SFR the IRS generated using only third-party reporting.
What if I never received the original audit notice?
That’s specifically listed by the IRS as a valid reason for reconsideration. If you moved and the notice went to an old address, or you simply never got it, say so in your request so the disputed issues can be reviewed as though the original audit were happening for the first time.
Do I need a tax professional to file a reconsideration request?
No, it isn’t required. The IRS designed the process to be usable without representation.
In practice, though, cases involving multiple disputed items, business income, or a large dollar amount tend to go more smoothly with someone who has worked with the campus correspondence units before and knows what documentation actually moves a case forward.
When It’s Time to Bring in Help
If your case involves one missing receipt, you can probably handle reconsideration yourself. If it involves multiple tax years, an SFR, a business return, or a six-figure balance, the math changes. Every disputed item gets reviewed separately, and a packet organized the way an examiner expects to see it moves faster than one that isn’t.
A team built around IRS audit resolution can review your original examination report, identify exactly which items have a real shot at reversal, and assemble the documentation in a format that doesn’t bounce back with a request for more information.
Conclusion
An IRS audit that ended badly doesn’t have to be the final word, as long as the tax is still unpaid and you have something new to show the IRS.
Whether that’s a missing receipt, a return you never got the chance to file, or proof the IRS made a processing error, audit reconsideration is the formal path back to a number that actually reflects your situation.

