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1/23/2024

FACT SHEET: IRS Launches Simple Notice Initiative | U.S. Department of the Treasury

FACT SHEET: IRS Launches Simple Notice Initiative
January 23, 2024

Around 170 million notices sent to individual taxpayers annually
The IRS sends around 170 million notices to individual taxpayers every year to help them claim
the credits and deductions they are eligible for and meet their tax obligations. These notices
are o en long—with extraneous inserts—and di icult for taxpayers to understand. They are
filled with complex legal jargon. And they do not clearly and concisely communicate the next
steps a taxpayer must take.
As part of ongoing modernization e orts made possible by the Inflation Reduction Act, the
IRS is launching the Simple Notice Initiative to review, redesign, and deploy hundreds of
notices, with an immediate focus on the most common notices that individual taxpayers
receive.
This initiative builds on the Paperless Processing initiative announced in August 2023 to
advance the goal of providing world-class customer service to taxpayers. With these
initiatives, taxpayers have the option to go paperless and conveniently submit necessary
responses online, and taxpayers will receive clearer and more concise notices from the IRS, so
they better understand the actions they need to take.

F ILING SEASON 2024: IRS REVIEW ED, REDESIGNED, AND
DEPLOYED 31 NOT ICES
During the last year, the IRS reviewed, redesigned, and deployed 31 notices in time for
this yearʼs tax season. The IRS sent around 20 million of these notices in the 2022 calendar
year.
These include notices to taxpayers who served in combat zones that may be eligible for
tax deferment, notices that remind a taxpayer that they may have unfiled returns, and
notices that remind a taxpayer about their balance due and where they can go for
assistance.

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1/23/2024

FACT SHEET: IRS Launches Simple Notice Initiative | U.S. Department of the Treasury

F ILING SEASON 2025: IRS W ILL REVIEW, REDESIGN, AND
DEPLOY T HE MOST COMMON NOT ICES SENT TO
INDIVIDUAL TAXPAYERS
By Filing Season 2025, the IRS will review, redesign, and deploy the most common notices
that individual taxpayers receive. The IRS will focus on up to 200 notices that make up
about 90% of total notice volume sent to individual taxpayers. This represents about 150
million notices sent to individual taxpayers in 2022.
These include notices to propose adjustments to a taxpayerʼs income, payments, credits,
and/or deductions, notices to correct mistakes on a taxpayerʼs tax return, and notices to
remind a taxpayer of taxes owed.
The IRS is actively engaging with taxpayers and the tax professional community to gather
feedback on how these notices should be redesigned.

F ILING SEASON 2026 AND B EY OND: IRS W ILL REVIEW,
REDESIGN AND DEPLOY NOT ICES SENT TO B USINESSES
TAXPAYERS AS W ELL AS LESS COMMON NOT ICES SENT TO
INDIVIDUAL TAXPAYERS
The IRS sends more than 40 million notices to business taxpayers every year. In future
filing seasons, the IRS will review, redesign, and deploy notices sent to business
taxpayers.
The IRS will also review, redesign and deploy less common notices sent to individual
taxpayers. Additional detail on the plan to redesign these notices will be shared in future
updates.

RECENT NOT ICE PILOT SHOW S HOW REDESIGNED
NOT ICES IMPROVE TAXPAYER EXPERIENCE, W HILE
REDUCING CALL VOLUME
The IRS is committed to delivering a better taxpayer experience through notices, over the
phone, online and in-person. While taxpayers will always have the option to call, the IRS also
wants to make it easier for taxpayers to resolve issues without having to pick up the phone.
Plain language notices can help the IRS achieve this goal.

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FACT SHEET: IRS Launches Simple Notice Initiative | U.S. Department of the Treasury

For example, the IRS recently conducted a pilot that sent redesigned versions of Notice 5071C
to a subset of taxpayers. The Notice 5071C asks taxpayers to verify their identity and tax
return online or over the phone to prevent the processing of fraudulent tax returns. As part of
the redesign, the IRS shortened the 5071C notice from seven pages to two pages. The IRS
improved readability of the notice by updating the font and adding visual enhancements such
as headers, icons, and step-by-step instructions. The IRS also clarified instructions and added
a QR code that directs taxpayers to the IRS webpage where they can respond to the notice
online instead of responding over the phone. See below for an overview of improvements that
were made.
Graphical user interface, text, application, WordDescription automatically
generated
The IRS sent the redesigned Notice 5071C to 60,000 taxpayers. Compared to taxpayers who
received the original notice, there was a 16% reduction in taxpayers who called the IRS as
their first action, and a 6% increase in taxpayers who used the online option. The IRS will apply
lessons learned from this pilot, among others, to the Simple Notice Initiative. These changes
to this notice will be put in place during coming months.
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