We sometimes have discussions about the cost of penalites & interest on unpaid taxes when clients are thinking about a payment arangement, and it happened that I had an opportunity to run some numbers on an actual situation this morning.
The taxpayer filed an extension on Apr 15 2009 and filed the return on Oct 15, 2009. Both the extension and the return were accompanied by small token payments, but here is the overall result. I'm lumping penalties & interest together for the sake of simplicity and because there's really no difference between the two since neither is deductible - it's all just an expense of using someone else's money.
Balance due on the return filed Oct 15 was $ 4,427 and the first IRS notice called for a balance due of $4,738 by Dec 15. The $311 diffrerence works out to the equivalent of a 10.44% APR since that is what the taxpayer would pay for the use of the money for 8 months.
The taxpayer called IRS yesterday and arranged to pay off the balance by March 8, 2010. There was no fee or other charge for this short-term arrangement The payoff figure for that date is $4,904, so the additional $166 difference works out to the equivalent of a 14% APR for the use of the money for 3 more months.
I'm fairly sure that the 14% will hold constant for any length of time beyond the initial filing period. So I think it's safe to say that setting up a payment arrangement is roughly the equivalent of borrowing money at 14% (not counting the relatively small fee to set up the payment arrangement itself), Certainly not a bargain interest rate, but when compared to using credit cards or unsecured debt of any kind, I'd say it's close to a wash.
The taxpayer filed an extension on Apr 15 2009 and filed the return on Oct 15, 2009. Both the extension and the return were accompanied by small token payments, but here is the overall result. I'm lumping penalties & interest together for the sake of simplicity and because there's really no difference between the two since neither is deductible - it's all just an expense of using someone else's money.
Balance due on the return filed Oct 15 was $ 4,427 and the first IRS notice called for a balance due of $4,738 by Dec 15. The $311 diffrerence works out to the equivalent of a 10.44% APR since that is what the taxpayer would pay for the use of the money for 8 months.
The taxpayer called IRS yesterday and arranged to pay off the balance by March 8, 2010. There was no fee or other charge for this short-term arrangement The payoff figure for that date is $4,904, so the additional $166 difference works out to the equivalent of a 14% APR for the use of the money for 3 more months.
I'm fairly sure that the 14% will hold constant for any length of time beyond the initial filing period. So I think it's safe to say that setting up a payment arrangement is roughly the equivalent of borrowing money at 14% (not counting the relatively small fee to set up the payment arrangement itself), Certainly not a bargain interest rate, but when compared to using credit cards or unsecured debt of any kind, I'd say it's close to a wash.
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