The information you want may already be available. Check these sources first:
If you already submitted a FOIA request, don’t submit a second one.
It’s important to submit your request in the right way to avoid delays.
Personal taxpayer information is protected under the Privacy Act of 1974, 5 U.S. Code Section 552a. Find details in the IRS Privacy Policy.
Submit FOIA request to the IRS at the FOIA Public Access Portal or by fax. Don’t submit the same request more than once.
You should submit requests for copies of the following records with these forms instead of submitting a FOIA request:
If you can’t submit a request with the FOIA Public Access Portal or via fax, mail your request to us. If you’ve already submitted a request with FOIA.gov or via fax, don’t mail the same request.
Internal Revenue Service
GLDS Support Services
Stop 93A
Post Office Box 621506
Atlanta, GA 30362
Internal Revenue Service
GLDS Support Services
Stop 211
PO Box 621506
Atlanta, GA 30362-3006
The Freedom of Information Act, 5 U.S.C. 552, provides any person the right to request access to federal agency records. The FOIA applies to records either created or obtained by an agency and under agency control at the time of the FOIA request. Agencies within the executive branch of the federal government, including the Executive Office of the President and independent regulatory agencies are subject to the FOIA. State governments, municipal corporations, the courts, Congress and private citizens are not subject to the FOIA.
The FOIA does not require the IRS to release all documents that are subject to FOIA requests. The IRS may withhold information pursuant to nine exemptions and two of three exclusions contained in the FOIA.
While the Freedom of Information Act is an option in some cases, records that should be processed routinely in accordance with procedures identified in 26 CFR 601.702(d) should be requested using the methods described at the top of the page.
Background
The FOIA requires that federal agencies automatically disclose certain categories of information.
Section (a)(1) of the FOIA requires disclosure through publication in the Federal Register of information such as:
Section (a)(2) of the FOIA requires that the IRS make the following materials available for public inspection in an electronic format:
Documents listed under section (a)(2) of the FOIA created on or after Nov. 1, 1996, must be made available electronically. The IRS maintains a FOIA Library in compliance with section (a)(2).
Section (a)(3) of the FOIA requires any request for records which (i) reasonably describes such records and (ii) is made in accordance with published rules stating the time, place, fees (if any) and procedures to be followed, shall be made promptly available to a requester.
For example, a request for all tax records pertaining to the requester does not clearly define the records needed. As a result, the request will be returned without processing or the requester will be contacted to rescope the request. It is better to narrow the request to ask for specific documents. For example: “my examination file for tax year 2019.”
The FOIA only applies to existing records and does not require the IRS to collect information not available, or to research or analyze data in response to a request. The IRS is not obligated to create a new record to comply with a FOIA request.
The form in which IRS maintains a record does not affect its availability. A requester may seek a printed or typed document, map, photograph, computer printout, computer disk or a similar item. The IRS must provide the requested record in any form or format requested by the person if the record is readily reproducible by the agency in that form or format and make reasonable efforts to maintain its records in forms or formats that are reproducible for such purposes.
See the Department of Justice Office of Information Policy (OIP) website for additional information on the FOIA.
The request must be sent to GLDS Support Services (GSS) using one of the three methods listed at the top of the page to be considered “received” by the IRS for purposes of FOIA processing. In accordance with the complete regulatory requirements for FOIA requests filed with the IRS, which are available Treasury Regulation 601.702, a proper FOIA request submitted to the IRS must contain the following items:
Note: If the request involves the tax records of an individual or business, the requester must also include a copy of the requester’s driver’s license or a sworn or notarized statement swearing to or affirming their identity. In this case, the authority of the requester to receive such records must be established or the records pertaining to the taxpayer may be withheld in full.
Optional FOIA items
Several optional items may be included in a FOIA request:
The requester must certify that the statements of compelling need for expedited requests are true and correct to the best of their knowledge and belief.
Failure to include specific details related to the compelling need and/or failure to certify the statements as true and correct may result in a denial of the request for expedited processing.
You must show proof of identity and demonstrate your right to access information to receive copies of documents protected under the Privacy Act or Internal Revenue Code section 6103. Failure to do so may result in a full denial of access to any records protected by these statutes. You can establish your identity by submitting a request with at least one of the following items:
"I declare (or certify, verify or state) under penalty of perjury that the foregoing is true and correct. Executed on (date). (Signature)"
If the declaration is sworn outside the United States, the sworn statement must include the following language:
FOIA requesters may be required to pay fees to cover some, or all, of the costs of processing their requests.
Please do not submit an advance payment with your request. If a fee is estimated to be more than the maximum fees you are willing to pay, you will be notified and may withdraw or modify your request.
IRS sets charges for duplication, search, and review based on its own costs and sets its own threshold for minimum charges. FOIA establishes three types of fees that may be charged:
See the IRS FOIA fee schedule for information on what fees apply to each type of FOIA requester: News Media, Education or Noncommercial Scientific Institutions, Commercial Users, and Other requesters.
The FOIA prevents agencies from charging fees if the cost of collecting the fee would exceed the amount collected. This limitation applies to all requests, including those seeking documents for commercial use. Thus, if the allowable charges for any FOIA request are less than $25.00, no fees are imposed.
Do not submit an advance payment with your request. If a fee is estimated to be more than the maximum fees you are willing to pay or if the expected fees exceed $250, you will be notified and you may withdraw or modify your request.
Minimum charge: No fee charged if total charges are $25 or less.
The FOIA requires that IRS waive or reduce fees if disclosure of the information is in the public interest because it is likely to contribute significantly to public understanding of the operations or activities of the government and is not primarily in the commercial interest of the requester.
The request for fee waiver must specifically describe how disclosure would contribute significantly to public understanding of the operations or activities of the IRS. Failure to do so may result in a denial of the fee waiver if fees are found to be applicable to the processing of the request.
Any requester may ask for a fee waiver. Some will find it easier to qualify than others. For example, a news reporter who is only charged duplication costs may still ask that the charges be waived because of the public benefits that will result from disclosure. A representative of the news media, a scholar, or a public interest group is more likely to qualify for a waiver of fees, whereas a commercial user may find it difficult to qualify for a waiver because the request cannot be primarily in the commercial interest of the requester.
Key elements in qualifying for a fee waiver is the relationship of the information to public understanding of the operations or activities of IRS and the ability of the requester to convey that information to other interested members of the public.
Because the focus of FOIA is based on the benefit derived by the public, and not any personal benefit to the requester or their financial situation, a requester is not eligible for a fee waiver solely because of indigence or inability to pay.
Fee category determinations are separate and distinct from fee waiver determinations. For example, a requester determined to be a news reporter will only be charged duplication fees. However, the requester is not automatically entitled to a waiver of those fees upon request. A reporter who seeks a fee waiver must demonstrate that the request also meets the standards for waivers. The issue of a fee waiver typically arises only after a requester’s fee category has been determined. Any requester who seeks a fee waiver should ask for a waiver in the original request letter. However, a request for a waiver can be m
Your name or your company's name
Your address or your company's address
Your phone number (optional)
Dear Disclosure Manager:
This is a request under the Freedom of Information Act/Privacy Act.
I request that a copy of the following documents (identify the documents or information as specifically as possible) be provided to me. I do not wish to inspect the documents first. In order to determine my status for the applicability of fees, you should know that I am (insert a suitable description of the requester and the purpose of the request).
[Sample requester descriptions (please choose only one if applicable):
A media requester: a representative of the news media affiliated with the XXXX newspaper (magazine, television station, etc.), and this request is made as part of newsgathering and not for a commercial use.
An educational institution requester or a non-commercial scientific institution requester affiliated with an educational or noncommercial scientific institution, and this request is made for a scholarly or scientific purpose and not for a commercial use.
A commercial-use requester, seeking records for a use or purpose that furthers the commercial, trade, or profit interests of the requester or the person on whose behalf the request is being made.
An “other” requester seeking information for personal or non-commercial use.
As proof of identity I am including a photocopy of my driver’s license, notarized declaration, sworn statement, etc. (See Establishing proof of identity and right to access)
I am willing to pay fees for this request up to a maximum of $XX. If you estimate that the fees will exceed this limit, please inform me first.
Thank you for your consideration of this request.
Practitioner or company name
Practitioner or company address
Phone number (optional)
Dear Disclosure Manager:
This is a request under the Freedom of Information Act. I request that a copy of the CAF Representative/Client Listing be provided to me. I do not wish to inspect the documents first.
In order to determine my status for the applicability of fees, you should know that I am an “Other” requester seeking information for non-commercial or personal use. I am a tax professional and my CAF number is XXXXXXX. (This is not your Enrolled Agent Number)
I am including a valid photo identification which includes my signature as proof of identity.
Send listing as a paper document. I am willing to pay copying fees for this request up to a maximum of $XX (fill in amount). If you estimate that the fees will exceed this limit, please contact me prior to completing my request. (There is no charge for the first 100 pages and $.20 per page thereafter).
Send listing on CD as a text file using Windows NotePad.
Thank you for your consideration of this request.
The IRS is required to determine within 20 days (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal public holidays) after the date of receipt of a request whether to comply with the request under the FOIA. The IRS must provide the requester reasons if the request is denied in whole or in part. IRS must provide information about the right to appeal any adverse determination to the head of the IRS or his or her designee under section (a)(6)(A)(i) of the FOIA.
The FOIA permits the IRS to extend the 20-day statutory time limit by 10 additional days in unusual circumstances as set forth in the FOIA and Treasury Regulation 601.702(c)(11)(i)(A)(1)-(4). These circumstances include the need to collect records from field locations, review large numbers of records, and consult with other agencies. The IRS must notify requesters of any statutory extensions.
IRS may also make a showing of exceptional circumstances based on the amount of material withheld, on the resources devoted to review, or on the number of requests for records by courts or administrative tribunals. Courts may also consider a requester's unwillingness to reasonably limit the scope of his or her request or to agree upon a processing timeframe prior to seeking judicial review.
A delay that results from a predictable IRS workload of requests is not an “unusual circumstance” unless the IRS demonstrates reasonable progress in reducing its backlog of pending requests. Any statutory extension of time for unusual circumstances may not exceed 10 days (excluding Saturdays, Sundays and legal public holidays). If additional time is needed to process the request, the IRS will notify the requester and provide the requester an opportunity to limit the scope of the request or arrange for an alternative time frame for processing the request.
If the IRS fails to comply with the time limitations set forth in Treasury Regulation 601.702 (c)(9), (10) or (11)(i), any person making a request for records having satisfied the requirements of Treasury Regulation 601.702 (c)(4)(i)(A) through (I) of this section shall be deemed to have exhausted administrative remedies with respect to such request. A person may initiate suit in Federal District Court when the IRS has failed to comply with these time limits.
FOIA exemptions
The exemptions protect against the disclosure of information that would harm: national security, the privacy of individuals, the proprietary interests of business, the functioning of the government, and other important recognized interests.
An entire record is not necessarily exempt when a record contains some information that qualifies as exempt. Instead, the FOIA specifically provides that any reasonably segregable portions of a record must be provided to a requester after exempt portions are deleted. FOIA requires the IRS to identify the location of deletions in the released portion of the record and, where technologically feasible, to show the deletion at the place on the record where the deletion was made, unless including that indication would harm an interest protected by an exemption.
Exemption 1. Classified documents pertaining to national defense and foreign policy
The first FOIA exemption permits the withholding of matters specifically authorized under criteria established by an Executive order to be kept secret in the interest of national defense or foreign policy and which are in fact properly classified under such executive order. IRS does not generally deal with these types of matters; thus, this exemption is rarely used.
Exemption 2. Internal personnel rules and practices
The second exemption covers matters related solely to IRS’s internal personnel rules and practices.
Exemption 3. Information exempt under other laws
The third exemption incorporates into the FOIA other laws that restrict the availability of information. A statute must require that matters be withheld from the public in such a manner as to leave no discretion on the issue to qualify under this exemption. Information may also be exempt if the other law establishes criteria for withholding or refers to particular types of matters to be withheld. Internal Revenue Code (IRC) Section 6103, which governs the disclosure of tax returns and return information, provides an example of a qualifying statute. By law, tax records may not be disclosed to any individual unless authorized by IRC Section 6103.
Exemption 4. Trade secrets and confidential commercial or financial information
The fourth exemption protects from public disclosure two types of information: Trade secrets and confidential commercial or financial information. A trade secret has been narrowly defined by the courts under the FOIA as a commercially valuable plan, formula, process, or device that is used for making, preparing, compounding or processing trade commodities and that can be said to be the end product of either innovation or substantial effort. Protected data is also commercial or financial information obtained from a person that is privileged or confidential.
Exemption 5. Inter-agency or intra-agency memorandums or letters
The fifth exemption applies to inter-agency or intra-agency memorandums or letters which would not be available by law to a party other than an agency in litigation with the agency. An example may be a letter from one IRS office to another about a decision that has not yet been adopted by the agency. One purpose of this exemption is to safeguard the deliberative policymaking process of government (the deliberative process privilege). The exemption encourages frank discussion of policy matters between IRS officials by allowing certain pre-decisional, deliberative documents to be withheld from public disclosure. The exemption also protects against premature disclosure of deliberations before final adoption of an agency policy or position. While the policy behind the deliberative process privilege is well accepted, the application of the exemption is complicated. For example, the exemption protects the policymaking process, but does not generally protect purely factual information related to the policy process, which is protected under the deliberative process privilege. The deliberative process privilege distinguishes between documents that are pre-decisional and post-decisional. The public has a greater interest in knowing the basis for the decision once a policy is adopted. Therefore, the deliberative process privilege does not ordinarily apply to post-decisional documents. The exemption also incorporates other privileges that apply in litigation involving the government, including the attorney client and work product privileges. For example, certain documents prepared by IRS's lawyers may be withheld in the same way that documents prepared by private lawyers for clients are not available through discovery in civil litigation.
Exemption 6. Personal privacy
The sixth exemption applies to personnel, medical, and similar files the disclosure of which would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy. This exemption protects the privacy interests of individuals by allowing IRS to withhold personal data kept in its files where there is an expectation of privacy. Only individuals have privacy interests. Corporations and business associations have no privacy rights under exemption six, except for closely held corporations or similar business entities. Once it has been determined that a personal privacy interest is threatened by a requested disclosure, the exemption requires agencies to strike a balance between an individual's privacy interest and the public's interest in disclosure. The Privacy Act of 1974 also regulates the disclosure of personal information about an individual. The IRS will automatically consider a request for personal information under both the FOIA and the Privacy Act and will rely on the statute that provides the greater access.
Exemption 7. Law enforcement
The seventh exemption allows agencies to withhold records or information compiled for law enforcement purposes, but only to the extent that the production of such records would cause one of the following harms described below:
Exemption 8. Financial institutions
The eighth exemption protects information that is contained in or related to examination, operating, or condition reports prepared by, on behalf of, or for the use of an agency responsible for the regulation or supervision of financial institutions (such as FDIC, the Federal Reserve, or similar agencies).
Exemption 9. Geological information
The ninth exemption protects geological and geophysical information, data, and maps, concerning wells.
FOIA exclusions
The FOIA also contains three special protection provisions that expressly authorize federal law enforcement.
Agencies under certain specified circumstances, to treat especially sensitive records as not subject to the FOIA. IRS may not be required to confirm the existence of these categories of records. If these records are requested, IRS may respond that there are no records responsive to the request. However, these exclusions do not broaden the authority of the IRS to withhold documents from the public. The exclusions are only applicable to information that is otherwise exempt from disclosure.
Exclusion 1
The first exclusion may be used when a request seeks information described in the FOIA, subsection (b)(7)(A), and meets the following requirements:
Exclusion 2
Informant records maintained by IRS criminal law enforcement filed under the informant's name or personal identifier are covered by Exclusion 2. IRS is not required to confirm the existence of these records unless the informant's status has been officially confirmed. This exclusion helps agencies to protect the identity of confidential informants.
Exclusion 3
The third exclusion only applies to records maintained by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, which pertain to foreign intelligence, counterintelligence, or international terrorism. When the existence of these types of records is classified, the FBI may treat the records as not subject to the requirements of FOIA.
Requesters who believe that records were improperly withheld because of the exclusions can seek judicial review by filing suit in federal district court.
The IRS must inform the requester of their right to appeal the following determinations to the head of the agency:
A requester may also appeal because they believe the IRS failed to conduct an adequate search for the documents requested. However, a requester may not file an administrative appeal for the lack of a timely response.
A person may administratively appeal any portion of a record denied when their request is granted in part and denied in part. An administrative appeal does not affect any records the IRS has released.
There is no charge for filing an administrative appeal. More information about the procedural requirements for filing an appeal are found at Treasury Regulation 31 CFR Part 1 §1.6. An appeal may be filed by sending a letter to:
IRS Independent Office of Appeals
Attn: FOIA Appeals
3211 S. Northpointe Drive
M/S 55205
Fresno, CA 93725
To ensure proper receipt and processing of a FOIA appeal, requesters should ensure the following:
The FOIA regulations require that an appeal be postmarked within 90 days after the date of the letter denying access to the information as described in Treasury Regulation 31 CFR Part 1 §1.6.
Exception: An administrative appeal for denial of a request for expedited processing must be made by letter postmarked within 10 days after the date of the response letter denying expedited processing.
IRS is required to decide on an appeal within 20 days (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays) after the date of receipt of the appeal unless extended pursuant to Treasury Regulation 31 CFR Part 1 §1.6. It is possible for IRS to extend the time limits by an additional 10 days under unusual circumstances (see Treasury Regulation 31 CFR Part 1 §1.6).
The FOIA requester shall be deemed to have exhausted administrative remedies and may proceed with a judicial appeal in a Federal District Court if the IRS fails to comply with the time limitations to respond to a FOIA request.
The essential feature of both FOIA and the Privacy Act is that they make government agencies, including the IRS, accountable for information disclosure policies and practices. While neither law grants an absolute right to examine government documents, both laws establish the right to request records and to receive a response to the request. The requester is entitled to the reason for the denial if a record is not released. The requester has a right to administratively appeal the denial of access under the FOIA and, if necessary, to challenge it in court.
IRS FOIA Regulation 601.702(c)(13) sets forth the circumstances under which a FOIA requester may proceed with a judicial appeal. For example, a requester has the right to challenge the denial of an administrative appeal in court. The burden of justifying the withholding of documents falls to IRS when a requester goes to court. Anyone considering filing a FOIA lawsuit should begin by reading the provisions of IRS FOIA Regulation 601.702(c)(13).