IRS Changes Notice Requirement for Listed Transactions – Houston Tax Attorneys


When a taxpayer files a tax return reporting their income, the IRS gains insight into their earnings and can compare this information with similarly situated taxpayers. One might expect that this regular reporting would be sufficient for tax administration purposes. The IRS could simply identify and audit returns showing unusual drops in reported tax. This is true even in cases involving large gains offset by tax attributes that would be visible on the tax return.

However, the tax return process has become so cumbersome and complex that just filing a tax return alone is not enough. Taxpayers may have to file numerous different information reports, statements, etc. This includes information returns that are not treated as tax returns, but encompass a significant amount of information. The reportable information can include everything from foreign account balances, to amounts paid to contractors and employees, to bartering transactions.

This is also not enough. The tax reporting rules also require the reporting to highlight specific transactions that the IRS says that it is interested in. There are special rules and forms for this purpose–many of which are so nuanced that taxpayers often fail to file them or file them correctly. These transactions are referred to as “reportable transactions.” The reportable transaction reporting regime has recently faced legal challenges recently.

In the past few years

In the past few years, courts have ruled that the IRS’s process for designating these transactions that require additional information does not comply with administrative law requirements. In response, the IRS has now issued Action on Decision 2024-01, largely accepting these court decisions, even though it has largely rejected the outcome of these court cases for some time now.

Reportable Transactions vs. Listed Transactions

A reportable transaction is a type of tax transaction that the IRS requires taxpayers and their advisors to disclose. The rationale is that the transaction has characteristics that the IRS believes may indicate tax avoidance. Think of it as a transaction that raises certain red flags that the IRS wants to know about.

A listed transaction is a type of reportable transaction. It is more narrow. It is one that the IRS has explicitly identified as a tax avoidance scheme. The IRS has basically labeled these transactions as likely to be abusive and has formally “listed” them published guidance. When the IRS designates something as a listed transaction, it’s essentially saying “we’ve seen this specific scheme before, we consider it problematic, and we want to know if anyone is doing it.”

To give you a concrete example: If a company engages in a complex transaction that generates significant tax losses without corresponding economic losses, that might be a reportable transaction because it has characteristics that suggest potential tax avoidance. If that specific type of transaction matches one that the IRS has previously identified and published as problematic in their guidance, it would be a listed transaction.

Types of Reportable and Listed Transactions

To understand the difference, it is helpful to pause to describe the types of transactions that the IRS has designated as reportable transactions and listed transactions.

Reportable transactions the IRS has not designated as listed transactions are generally defined by their characteristics rather than their structure. They are broader rather than focused on targeted transactions.

Reportable transactions that aren’t listed generally fall into five distinct categories:

  1. Confidential transactions involve tax advice given under secrecy conditions with restricted disclosure rights.
  2. Transactions with contractual protection have fees contingent on achieving tax benefits or include refund rights if the tax treatment fails.
  3. Loss transactions generate significant tax losses above specified thresholds (these amounts vary by taxpayer type, e.g., $10 million for corporations and $2 million for individuals in a single year).
  4. Transactions of interest occupy a middle ground between regular reportable transactions and listed transactions. These are transactions that the IRS has identified as potentially abusive and is actively investigating, but hasn’t yet made a final determination. Think of it as a watchlist – these transactions might eventually become listed transactions, or the IRS might determine they’re acceptable after further study.

Compare this to the listed transactions that the IRS has designated. These transactions involve particular tax transactions. They are more specific. The transactions that the IRS has identified as listed transactions generally are:

  • Are multi-step and highly engineered
  • Often involve multiple entity types (corporations, partnerships, trusts)
  • Frequently use pass-through entities as key components
  • Usually aim to create artificial losses, shift income, or accelerate deductions
  • Often involve timing mismatches or basis manipulation
  • Frequently cross between corporate and individual taxation

The conservation easement noted in this Action on Decisio…

The conservation easement noted in this Action on Decision is an example. A syndicated conservation easement is listed because it takes a legitimate conservation tax benefit and runts it through a partnership structure where investors buy into land at market price, obtain inflated appraisals far above the purchase price, place conservation restrictions on the property, and claim charitable deductions typically worth 4-5x their investment.

The capital outlay is much smaller than the tax benefit that is derived. This is accomplished by rapid value inflation, year-end timing, and marketing focused on multiplying tax deductions. One can see why the IRS would be interested in this transaction and want to know who is engaging in these transactions, as the tax benefit is high and the IRS needs to examine them to determine which ones are legitimate and which ones are not.

Material Advisors & Their Obligations

The reporting rules don’t just affect taxpayers. They also apply to so-called “material advisors.” Material advisors are professionals who provide assistance with the reportable transactions.

Material advisors must report all categories of reportable transactions, including listed transactions and transactions of interest. Who qualifies as a material advisor depends on fee thresholds and type of client, but not on transaction type. The threshold is $50,000 in fees for transactions where all advisees are individuals, and $250,000 for transactions involving any other type of advisee (like corporations or partnerships). A tax professional who exceeds these thresholds becomes a material advisor and must comply with the reporting requirements.

Material advisors have to file their own disclosure forms (Form 8918) and maintain lists of advisees who participated in these transactions. These requirements are in addition to any reporting the taxpayer has to do. If the IRS requests these lists, the material advisor must provide them within 20 business days.

This means that both the taxpayer and their advisors must independently report the same transaction. The IRS can then cross-reference these filings to identify unreported transactions. The dual reporting system helps explain why the penalties discussed below are imposed on both taxpayers and material advisors.

Why Does It Matter?

The consequences of failing to disclose reportable transactions can be severe. The IRS has a number of penalties and sanctions that it can apply when it comes to these transactions.

For reportable transactions that are not listed transactions, the penalty is $50,000 per failure to disclose. So-called “material advisors” could also get a $50,000 penalty. This is a per year and per transaction penalty.

For listed transactions, the penalty jumps to $200,000 per failure to disclose. So four times higher than a reportable transaction. Material advisors could also get a penalty equal to $200,000 or 50% of the gross income they received from the transaction advice. This is separate from the IRS’s ability to ask a court to order that the advisor pay over 100% of the fees they earned from the transaction.

Suffice it to say that there is also a greater likelihood of criminal investigation and prosecution in cases involving listed transactions.

There is also a statute of limitations issue. Absent fraud or an unfilled tax return, the rules enacted by Congress generally do not give the IRS unlimited time to evaluate transactions. The IRS only has so long to look for and at issues. With listed transactions, the statute of limitations may be suspended until proper disclosure is made.

How Does the IRS List a Transaction?

The IRS designates a transaction as “listed” through a formal process of issuing published guidance. This typically happens in one of these ways:

  1. Through a Notice: The IRS issues a formal Notice describing the transaction and declaring it as listed. For example, IRS Notice 2017-10 listed certain syndicated conservation easement transactions.
  2. Through Revenue Rulings: The IRS can issue a Revenue Ruling that identifies and describes a transaction as listed.
  3. Through Regulations: The IRS may incorporate listed transactions into Treasury Regulations.

The process typically involves:

  • The IRS identifying a pattern of transactions they believe are being used for tax avoidance
  • Internal analysis and review of the transaction structure
  • Development of detailed technical description of the transaction
  • Publication of the formal guidance that:
  • Describes the transaction in detail
  • Explains why it’s considered abusive
  • Specifies which variations of the transaction are covered
  • States when the listing is effective
  • Outlines disclosure requirements

Once published, all taxpayers and material advisors are on notice that the transaction is listed and must be disclosed if they engage in it or substantially similar transactions.

The IRS even maintains a list of listed transactions on its website.

This brings us to the current Action on Decision and the court cases that the IRS has adamantly contested and now says that it will follow. The question is whether the IRS’s listing process has complied with the Administrative Procedure Act (“APA”).

The APA establishes requirements federal agencies, including the IRS, have to follow to conduct rulemaking. Under the APA, agencies must generally provide notice of proposed rules and give the public an opportunity to comment before rules become final. This “notice-and-comment” process is fundamental to administrative law. It ensures transparency and public participation in agency rulemaking. This is important to our system of justice as administrative agencies are not staffed by individuals elected by the public–they are often career civil servants who may have agendas or views that differ from the law and from what most Americans would expect.

This guidance is in response to Green Rock LLC v. Commissioner, 104 F.4th 220 (11th Cir. 2024), but it addresses several other court cases that preceded Green Rock that held that the IRS’s notice process did not comply with the APA. The first is Mann Construction v. United States, in which the Sixth Circuit considered the IRS’s designation of transactions as “listed” via Notices that did not follow any APA notice-and-comment procedures.

The court held that IRS Notices identifying listed transa…

The court held that IRS Notices identifying listed transactions are legislative rules subject to the APA’s notice-and-comment requirements and that they are not interpretive rules exempt from these procedures. The court basis was that these Notices create new legal obligations (disclosure requirements) and impose significant penalties for non-compliance, hallmarks of legislative rules. This makes it a legislative rule.

Following Mann and similar decisions in other courts

Following Mann and similar decisions in other courts, such as the Green Rock case, the IRS has now acknowledged in this Action on Decision that it will treat its listed transaction designations as subject to APA notice-and-comment requirements. This is a significant shift in how the IRS will designate listed transactions going forward. Rather than immediately implementing listed transaction designations through Notices posted on the IRS.gov website, the IRS will need to first propose the designation, allow for public comment, and then issue a final rule.

For those who failed to report a transaction and were assessed penalties, it may be time to revisit the penalties. This includes cases where the statute of limitations was extended for failing to file the disclosure forms. As noted in the IRS guidance, taxpayers may be able to avoid penalties for these already existing cases.

The Takeaway

The IRS’s acceptance of notice-and-comment requirements for listed transaction designations is a significant shift in tax administration. The notice-and-comment process could benefit both the IRS and taxpayers by fostering dialogue with stakeholders, potentially resulting in more precise and effective guidance that better targets truly abusive transactions. This collaborative approach may help the IRS focus its limited resources on the most concerning transactions while providing clearer boundaries for legitimate tax planning. Those who have been assessed these penalties or who have pending penalties may also benefit by being able to avoid the penalties altogether given this guidance.

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The courts have taken an expansive view as to what counts as fraud for tax matters. Some courts have even said taxpayers can be held accountable for fraud committed by their tax return preparers.

When considering fraud, there is a question as to what activities are considered. Take for example the civil tax fraud penalty. This civil penalty applies to understatements of tax. This means that the relevant timeframe would seem to be the time leading up to and culminating with the filing of the tax return. Once the tax return is filed, the fraudulent has been completed.

What about additional actions by the taxpayer to further the fraud? For example, submitting false or altered documents to the IRS auditor who is examining the fraudulent tax return? Can those actions be considered evidence of fraud for the understatement of tax? The court recently answered this question Chopra v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2025-2.

Facts & Procedural History

The taxpayer in this case is a healthcare consultant. She has several advanced college degrees.

The case involves her 2019 individual income tax return. The taxpayer filed her tax return and reported substantial business expense deductions and itemized deductions. This included more than $68,000 in medical expenses and nearly $90,000 in business expenses.

The IRS pulled her tax return for audit and requested documentation to substantiate the claimed deductions. The IRS auditor proposed adjustments for the larger items on the tax return and also proposed a civil fraud penalty.

The civil fraud penalty was due to the taxpayer’s failure to cooperate. This continued during the litigation in the tax court. The court described the conduct by the taxpayer as follows:

  • She provided only partial credit card statements to the IRS auditor (5 months out of 12)
  • She refused to produce partnership tax returns and agreements for the flow through income
  • She made false representations to the court about discussing matters with opposing counsel
  • She provided documents that appeared to be digitally altered
  • She offered implausible explanations when questioned about inconsistencies

The tax court ultimately upheld both the underlying tax deficiency and a civil fraud penalty. This article focuses on the fraud penalty.

Traditional Badges of Fraud vs. Procedural Conduct

The civil tax fraud penalty is found in Section 6663 of the tax code. It is a very short statute that just says that the taxpayer can be liable for a 75 percent penalty for any underpayment of tax that is attributable to fraud.

The IRS has the burden to prove that there was tax fraud. To do this, the IRS has to show that the taxpayer engaged in conduct with the intent to evade taxes that he knew or believed to be owing. The IRS also has to prove that the understatement of tax was due to the fraud.

There are several prerequisites implicit in these rules. For example, the taxpayer has to actually file a tax return. This provides one “out” for this penalty. For example, a document that is filed that does not qualify as a “tax return” cannot trigger this penalty. The tax return may not have to be signed for there to be fraud, but it does have to be intended to be a valid tax return and it has to be filed. Those who file a frivolous tax return or those do not file a tax return cannot be subject to this penalty.

As a separate note, it is often advisable to file a tax return, even if the tax return is being filed late, to get the statute of limitations for the IRS to audit and make an assessment. However, the tax return has to be an honest and truthful return to avoid for this to work and to avoid the fraud penalty. The taxpayer then has to contend with the late filing penalty.

Also, those who do not believe that intentionally file a false return under a genuine belief that they are complying with the law do not trigger this penalty. These concepts are not set out in the tax code. They are found in various court cases involving this penalty.

The Badges of Fraud

Section 6663 also does not provide a definition for the term “fraud.” The courts have developed factors that are used to establish fraud. These so-called “badges of fraud” typically focus on the taxpayer’s conduct at or before the time of filing of the tax return, such as:

  • Maintaining false books and records
  • Creating fictitious documents
  • Concealing income or assets
  • Making false statements to investigators
  • Dealing extensively in cash
  • Filing false documents

There are quite a few court cases that apply factors like these. The courts have largely said that no one factor is determinative, and then they essentially pick the set of factors that are relevant to the case. In many cases there is one fact triggers several of these factors, such as in cases where a fictitious business is reported on a tax return for a tax loss. The business is reported on the return, but the taxpayer may maintain false books and records or create false or fictitious documents to support it–as the court suggested that the taxpayer did in this case.

The tax court cases that address fraud penalties are largely sustained in the IRS’s favor. Even in those cases where the taxpayers prevail on the fraud penalty, the tax court still usually imposes the lesser 20 percent accuracy or negligence penalty.

Conduct After the Tax Return is Filed

This brings us to the question posed by this article. Can conduct after the tax return is filed be considered as one of the “badges of fraud” for the understatement of tax on the tax return?

The understatement of tax happened at the time the tax return was filed. By the time the IRS audits the tax return, several years have usually passed. By the time the case gets to tax court, several more years have passed.

This Chopra case is a prime example. It is a tax court case with an opinion issued in 2025 for a 2019 income tax return. The court in Chopra did in fact find that the taxpayer’s post-tax return filing conduct supports a finding of fraud for the civil tax fraud penalty.

The tax court specifically identified several aspects of the taxpayer’s procedural conduct as badges of fraud:

  • Failure to cooperate with tax authorities
  • Providing implausible or inconsistent explanations
  • Offering testimony lacking credibility
  • Refusing to produce relevant documents
  • Making false representations to the court

The tax court even noted that the taxpayer’s “duplicitous and obstructive behavior throughout this [court] case is a badge of fraud” for the Section 6663 penalty.

The court made this ruling even though it has its own separate penalty for fraudulent conduct during tax litigation which is found in Section 6673. The Section 6673 penalty is limited to $25,000, which the Section 6663 fraud penalty is not. The opinion does not address the Section 6673 penalty so, presumably, the court did not impose this additional penalty.

The Takeaway

This case shows that conduct during tax audit and litigation matters as it can be additional evidence of fraudulent intent for any understatement on the tax return. Producing fraudulent documents to the IRS auditors and making false statements to the court can be evidence of fraudulent intent. While taxpayers retain their rights to challenge IRS positions and limit document production, they should exercise these rights in a way that doesn’t create additional evidence of fraud.

Watch Our Free On-Demand Webinar

In 40 minutes, we’ll teach you how to survive an IRS audit.

We’ll explain how the IRS conducts audits and how to manage and close the audit.  



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