The original due date may fall inside the COVID relief window
The key question is whether the filing, payment, or other tax deadline was legally due between January 20, 2020 and July 10, 2023.
IRS penalty claim check
If you paid or still owe an IRS penalty or interest charge tied to an original due date between January 20, 2020 and July 10, 2023, this tool helps you decide whether the issue may be worth preserving before the claim window closes.
Main question
Should you preserve a possible IRS penalty claim before the deadline?
Review window
Original due dates from Jan. 20, 2020 to July 10, 2023
Claim deadline
July 10, 2026
Typical paths
DIY, CPA, or specialist review
Start here if you paid or still owe a federal penalty or interest charge and need to decide whether the issue is worth preserving before the deadline. The original due date matters more than the notice date.
The key question is whether the filing, payment, or other tax deadline was legally due between January 20, 2020 and July 10, 2023.
Common examples include late-filing, late-payment, estimated-tax, payroll, or related interest charges tied to missed deadlines.
A claim may still be worth reviewing whether the charge was paid already, remains open, or was bundled into a later resolution path.
This check helps you decide whether to gather records, ask your CPA, stay on the DIY path, or review the optional expert-help route.
Self-assessment
We ask about the taxpayer, penalty type, original due date, form or tax period, and current status so you can quickly see whether the issue looks worth preserving now, worth researching further, or probably outside the main window.
This is an educational tool, not legal or tax advice. The appeal posture and administrative guidance may still change.
Your answers look mixed across personal and business paths. Start by gathering records for the issue you care about most first, then use the notes to organize the rest.
We can email your assessment summary, a records-to-pull checklist, and meaningful updates if the litigation or administrative posture changes.
Pull your IRS notice or transcript, confirm the form and original due date, then decide whether to preserve the issue yourself or hand it to your CPA.
If you do not want to handle the next steps alone, review the optional expert-help path and decide whether a specialist review makes sense for your situation.
Review expert help1
We focus on penalty type, original due date, tax form or period, current status, and complexity flags instead of making you decode the whole issue up front.
2
You land in a practical category such as review now, gather records, probably out, or complex case so you know whether to move now or gather more facts first.
3
Save your notes by email, stay on the DIY / CPA path, or review the optional expert-help route if you do not want to handle the next steps alone.
The live question is usually not “do I definitely get money back?” It is “should I preserve a possible claim before July 10, 2026 while the issue is still being litigated?”
A notice can arrive later, but the more important test is what filing, payment, or tax obligation deadline the penalty or interest was tied to in the first place.
For many people the best starting records are the IRS notice, account transcript, return copy, and proof of payment so you can identify the form, tax period, charge type, and payment status.
No. It is a triage tool that helps you decide whether the issue may be worth preserving and what records or filing path to look at next.
No. You can start without documents, then use the result to decide whether you should pull the IRS notice, account transcript, return copy, or payment proof next.
No. The shared logic is designed to cover individuals, pass-throughs, corporations, trusts, nonprofits, and closed businesses, with segment pages providing tailored framing.
That usually means you should still gather the core facts, but you may want a CPA or specialist to review the issue sooner rather than trying to resolve every edge case yourself.