IRS Audit Rates by Income Level (2024-2026 Data)
The IRS does not audit everyone equally. Your income level is the single largest determinant of audit risk. For tax year 2024 returns filed in 2025, the audit rates by income bracket were: Under $25,000: 0.4% (higher if claiming EITC). $25,000-$50,000: 0.2%. $50,000-$100,000: 0.2%. $100,000-$200,000: 0.3%. $200,000-$500,000: 0.5%. $500,000-$1,000,000: 0.8%. Over $1,000,000: 1.1%. Over $10,000,000: 8.2%.
The IRS received $80 billion in additional funding through the Inflation Reduction Act, and much of that is going toward hiring auditors focused on high-income taxpayers (above $400,000). The IRS has publicly stated it will not increase audit rates for taxpayers earning under $400,000.
However, these are averages. A high-income taxpayer with straightforward W-2 income may never be audited, while a moderate-income taxpayer with complex business deductions and cash income might face much higher odds. The specific items on your return matter more than your income alone.
Red Flag 1-3: Income Reporting Mismatches
1. Unreported income on 1099s and W-2s. The IRS receives copies of every W-2, 1099-NEC, 1099-INT, 1099-DIV, 1099-B, and 1099-K you receive. Their Automated Underreporter system (AUR) matches these against your return. If there is a discrepancy, you will receive a CP2000 notice. This is not technically an audit, but it is the most common way the IRS catches underreported income.
2. Cash-heavy businesses. If you operate a business that deals primarily in cash (restaurants, salons, retail), the IRS uses statistical models to estimate expected income based on your industry, location, and expenses. If your reported income is significantly below these benchmarks, it raises a flag.
3. Large fluctuations in income year over year. If your income drops 50% or spikes 200% with no apparent explanation (like a job loss or business sale), the IRS algorithms may flag it for review. Consistent patterns are seen as lower risk than volatile ones.
Red Flag 4-6: Deduction Red Flags
4. Home office deduction. This deduction is legitimate for qualifying taxpayers, but it has historically been one of the most abused deductions. The space must be used regularly and exclusively for business. If you claim 40% of your home as office space on a $500,000 house, expect scrutiny. The simplified method ($5 per square foot, up to 300 sq ft) raises fewer flags than the actual expense method.
5. Charitable donations disproportionate to income. The IRS has benchmarks for charitable giving by income level. Donating 30% or more of your income to charity when the average for your income bracket is 3-5% will likely trigger a review. Non-cash donations over $5,000 require a qualified appraisal (Form 8283). Clothing and household items are frequent audit targets.
6. Business meals and travel deductions. Large business meal deductions, especially relative to revenue, are a classic red flag. First-class travel, luxury hotels, and entertainment expenses attract attention. Keep detailed records: who was present, what business was discussed, and receipts for every expense over $75.
Red Flag 7-9: Business and Self-Employment Triggers
7. Schedule C losses year after year. If your business reports losses for 3 or more of the last 5 years, the IRS may classify it as a hobby rather than a business under IRC 183. Hobby losses cannot offset other income. This is especially scrutinized for activities like horse farming, art dealing, and writing.
8. Round number deductions. Reporting expenses in exact round numbers ($5,000 for supplies, $10,000 for travel) signals estimation rather than actual record-keeping. Real expenses are rarely round numbers. A deduction of $4,847 looks documented; $5,000 looks guessed.
9. High vehicle deductions. Claiming 100% business use of a vehicle is a major red flag unless you have a separate personal vehicle. The IRS knows most people use their car for some personal driving. Keep a mileage log with dates, destinations, business purpose, and miles for every trip.
Red Flag 10-12: Cryptocurrency, Foreign Accounts, and Credits
10. Cryptocurrency transactions. The IRS has made crypto enforcement a top priority. Every major exchange now reports transactions via Form 1099-DA (starting 2026). If you sold, traded, or received crypto and did not report it, the IRS likely already has the data. The question on page 1 of Form 1040 asking about virtual currency transactions is not optional.
11. Foreign accounts and assets. Having foreign bank accounts over $10,000 (FBAR requirement) or foreign financial assets over $50,000 (Form 8938) significantly increases scrutiny. The IRS receives data from foreign banks through FATCA agreements with over 100 countries. Failure to report carries penalties of $10,000 or more per account per year.
12. Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) claims. Returns claiming EITC are audited at approximately 1.1%, nearly three times the average rate. This is due to the high error rate on EITC claims (about 25% of EITC payments are improper according to IRS estimates). If you claim EITC, ensure you meet all qualifying child and income requirements.
How the IRS Selects Returns for Audit
The IRS uses three primary methods to select returns. First: Discriminant Index Function (DIF) scoring, a statistical model that assigns a score based on the probability of a change in tax liability. Higher DIF scores mean higher audit priority. The exact formula is a closely guarded secret, but it fundamentally compares your deductions and income ratios to norms for your filing category.
Second: document matching through the Automated Underreporter Program (AUR). This computer system matches information returns (W-2, 1099) against what you reported. Mismatches generate CP2000 notices automatically, without a human ever looking at your return.
Third: related examinations. If your business partner, employer, or someone you transacted with is being audited, your return may be pulled for examination as well. This is common in partnership audits, where all partners' individual returns may be reviewed.
Check Your Audit Risk Score
Your specific combination of income, deductions, filing status, and return characteristics determines your actual audit risk. Some factors (like high income and cash business) compound each other, significantly increasing the odds.
Our free audit risk calculator analyzes your return against known IRS audit selection criteria and gives you a risk score with specific recommendations to reduce your exposure. It takes less than 2 minutes and could save you the stress and expense of an audit.