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Tax Help, Tax Resolution, Tax Strategies, And Tax Planning

—COVID-Era IRS Tax Penalty Refunds—

The IRS Charged Penalties During COVID.
You May Be Eligible For A Refund.

Did you pay IRS penalties during the tax years 2019–2022?
Two federal courts ruled the IRS unlawfully and improperly charged penalties during COVID disaster relief. 

You may be entitled to a penalty refund.
However, they won’t refund it automatically.

Claims must be filed by the deadline, July 10, 2026
Or the opportunity will be gone for good.

⚠ Deadline: July 10, 2026

How Much Could the IRS
Owe You from COVID?

Answer a few questions and get an instant refund estimate — based on real IRS penalty rates. No personal information required.

1
Taxpayer
2
Balance
3
Years
4
Penalties
5
Results
Who is filing?
Choose the option that best fits your situation.
⚠ Please make a selection to continue.
What was the tax balance owed?
Approximate total taxes owed or paid late during 2020–2023. IRS penalties are calculated as a percentage of this amount.
$25,000
$1,000$500,000+
S‑Corps, Partnerships, and LLCs are assessed under IRC §6698/§6699 — a flat penalty per partner or shareholder per month late, regardless of tax balance owed.
Approximate flat penalty = partners × $210–$220 × months late
⚠ Please make a selection to continue.
Which tax years were affected?
Select every year you received an IRS penalty or paid late. Each additional year increases your estimate.
Tax Year 2019 Return due April 2020 — only penalties accrued before July 10, 2023 qualify ⚠ We estimate only the portion inside the COVID window; transcripts confirm the exact eligible amount
Tax Year 2020 Most commonly affected — penalties and interest fully within the COVID window
Tax Year 2021 Penalties assessed during the active COVID disaster declaration
Tax Year 2022 Late‑filed returns and payments assessed through mid‑2023 — fully within the window
Tax Year 2023 (Partial) Fiscal‑year filers and late 2022 returns assessed before July 10, 2023 may qualify ⚠ We only count penalties assessed before July 10, 2023; transcripts confirm the exact cutoff
⚠ Select at least one tax year.
What penalties were charged?
Select the statements that best match your IRS notices. Not sure? Choose the last option and we’ll use a typical penalty mix.
I filed the return late Failure‑to‑File penalty (about 5% per month, up to 25%) When both filing and payment penalties apply, the IRS caps the combined monthly rate at about 5%.
I paid the tax late or had a balance due Failure‑to‑Pay penalty (about 0.5% per month, up to 25%)
The IRS added interest on the balance Interest on unpaid taxes and penalties — roughly 3–7% during 2020–2023
Payroll / employment tax penalties Failure‑to‑deposit or similar issues on Forms 941/940
Not sure / don’t remember We’ll assume a standard penalty mix and show a conservative range
⚠ Select at least one option to continue.
Get a full review by a tax professional.
Before the July 10 deadline.
Optional. The following estimate is based on only your inputs; leave your contact here and a representative will reach out to qualify your case and, if eligible, schedule a consultation with a licensed tax professional to help you recover the full amount you're owed.
You Likely Qualify
Based on your inputs, here is a realistic range of what you may be owed under the Abdo and Kwong court rulings.
Strong eligibility signal
Estimated Refund / Abatement Range
to
Based on IRS penalty rules during the COVID disaster period applied to your balance and years. Actual amount is confirmed by full transcript review and the outcome of the Kwong case.
How we calculated this

Your estimate suggests a qualifying case. Badran Tax can help you recover this. Get started below to find out exactly what you're owed.

— Call us directly —
(732) 937-9797

Your estimate is in range. Transcript reviews often reveal more than a self-assessment. Let our team take a closer look. No cost to find out where you stand.

— Call us directly —
(732) 937-9797

Based on your inputs, your penalties may be below the $4,000 level where full representation is cost‑effective. If you're unsure, call us, transcripts often show more than expected.

Call to confirm your eligibility
(732) 937-9797
This estimate is for informational purposes only and does not constitute tax advice or guarantee a refund. Actual amounts depend on your full IRS transcript history, payment timing, and case specifics. The Kwong ruling is currently on appeal; filing a protective claim now preserves your rights if the Supreme Court upholds taxpayer relief. Consult a licensed tax professional before taking action. Badran Tax LLC is not affiliated with the IRS.
🔒 Your data is never sold or shared ⚖️ Based on IRS penalty rules and COVID disaster periods 📋 Free consultation, no commitment
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Act Now.
Before It's Too Late

Deadline: July 10, 2026

Time Left To File Your Refund Claim

Days
Hours
The IRS Deadline is here, you may no longer qualify. Reach out for further assistance.

Learn More From A Tax Professional

Amro Badran Explains COVID IRS Penalty Refunds

40+ Years IRS Experience Licensed EAs, CPAs & Tax Attorneys Nationwide Representation ASTPS Award Winner 100+ Verified Reviews
Licensed & Authorized Tax Professionals
Enrolled Agent Certified Public Accountant IRS Representation Authorized IRS e-File Authorized ASTPS Member NATP Member
Badran Tax BBB Business Review
Check eligibility for a free consultation with a tax professional.
No upfront cost  ·  Individuals & businesses, nationwide
Pricing only discussed after we review your case
Transcripts will be requested for review.
Prefer to call? (732) 937-9797
Mon–Sat, 9AM–5PM
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Amro Badran is the Founder and Managing Partner of Badran Tax, a firm focused on IRS representation, tax resolution, and compliance services for individuals and businesses nationwide.

As a federally licensed Enrolled Agent, he is authorized to represent taxpayers directly before the IRS in matters including audits, back taxes, penalties, liens, levies, and compliance issues. With over 40 years of experience in tax and accounting, he has been involved in resolving thousands of complex IRS and state tax cases.

Amro holds an Accounting degree from Rutgers University and is a member of the National Association of Enrolled Agents and the American Society of Tax Problem Solvers (ASTPS), where he has been recognized for IRS audit representation expertise. He has also been acknowledged within taxpayer advocacy circles for his work supporting taxpayer rights and IRS resolution strategy.

Under his leadership, Badran Tax combines experienced representation with a team-based approach, delivering structured guidance, direct IRS communication, and strategic resolution planning tailored to each client’s situation.

IRS e-file authorized tax filing for secure and accurate submissions.

What the Courts Ruled

And What It Means For You

The Court Ruling

Federal courts ruled the IRS was legally required to suspend all penalties and extend all tax deadlines for the entire COVID period (Jan 20, 2019 – July 10, 2022). They didn't.

What You're Owed

Failure-to-file penalties, failure-to-pay penalties, and any interest charged on those penalties may all be refundable, for individuals and businesses alike.

The Deadline

Act Now. The IRS will not send refunds automatically. A formal claim (Form 843) must be filed on paper and postmarked by July 10, 2026. After that date, the refund window closes permanently.

Resolving Tax Problems for Over 40 Years

You May Qualify For A Refund

If Any of These Apply

This applies to individuals (Form 1040) and businesses (1120, 1120-S, 1065, 941, 940).

Business claims often recover
$10,000 – $100,000+.

You received an IRS penalty notice between January 2019 and July 2022

You filed a federal tax return late during the pandemic years

You were charged IRS interest on a late payment during COVID

Your business (S-Corp, LLC, Partnership) received IRS penalties during that period

You still owe IRS penalties or interest from 2019, 2020, 2021, or 2022

You set up a payment plan with the IRS during COVID

Client Testimonial Video Thumbnail
"Highest Rating"
Satisfied Attorney Client
Video thumbnail
Telling Client His
Million-Dollar Tax Lien Is Gone
Video thumbnail
Surprising the Client with
$50K in Tax Saving
Video thumbnail
Telling My Client
He No Longer Owes the IRS $275K
Video thumbnail
We Reduced A Massive Tax Bill
Down To $15K
Video thumbnail
$140K in IRS Penalties
GONE

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Get clear answers to common questions about working with BadranTax, our process, and how we help resolve IRS and state tax problems, nationwide.

You speak with a licensed tax professional who reviews your situation and gives you an honest estimate of what your claim may recover. We may ask about your filing history, the years involved, and your entity type. If you qualify and want to move forward, we explain what’s next and what it costs. If you don’t qualify, we tell you that too.

Yes. Two federal courts ruled in 2024 and 2025 that the IRS lacked the authority to charge penalties during the COVID disaster period. The IRS has already processed over $1.2 billion in related refunds. The Wall Street Journal, Forbes, and the National Taxpayer Advocate have all covered it.

No. The IRS has been clear: refunds will not go out automatically. You have to file a formal written claim by July 10, 2026. Without a filed claim, you get nothing regardless of what the courts decide.

Anyone charged IRS failure-to-file or failure-to-pay penalties, or underpayment interest, for tax obligations due between January 20, 2020 and July 10, 2023. This covers individuals (Form 1040) and businesses — S-Corps, LLCs, partnerships, C-Corps, and employers with payroll tax penalties (Forms 941 and 940). If you received a penalty notice during that period, had a payment plan with the IRS, or still owe penalties from those years, it’s worth checking your eligibility.

July 10, 2026. This is a statute of limitations cutoff — after that date, the IRS has no obligation to honor refund claims for the COVID period, regardless of how the appeal plays out. Missing the deadline means permanently losing your refund. Given that IRS processing typically takes three to six months after filing, the earlier you file, the better.

Possibly yes. The IRS provided limited relief during and after the pandemic — including the Failure to File penalty suspension in 2022 and First Time Abatement for some taxpayers. However, most of that relief did not cover the full range of penalties and interest addressed by the Kwong ruling, and many taxpayers only received partial relief. Your claim would be for any amounts not already refunded or abated. During your free assessment, we pull your full IRS account transcripts to identify exactly what you received, what you paid, and what may still be recoverable. You may be surprised how much is still on the table.

The primary categories covered by the rulings include: failure-to-file penalties (charged when a return is filed late), failure-to-pay penalties (charged when taxes owed are paid late), underpayment penalties (for estimated tax shortfalls), and interest charged on any of those penalties. For businesses, this also includes employment tax penalties (Forms 941/940) and partnership/S-Corp filing penalties. It’s important to note that these must be charges that accrued during the COVID disaster window — January 20, 2020 through July 10, 2023. We analyze your complete transcript history to identify every qualifying charge.

Typically one to two weeks from engagement to mailing. We prepare a separate Form 843 per qualifying tax year, with proper legal language, and send everything via certified mail. IRS processing after that takes three to six months on average.

Absolutely. We are authorized to work with clients across all 50 states using phone, video meetings, and secure digital tools. All documents, updates, and communication are managed through your secure client portal, making the process convenient and fully remote.

We respond for you. As your Power of Attorney representative, we’re authorized to handle IRS correspondence and file appeals on your behalf. A denial is not the end. It’s the start of a process we’ve been navigating for over 40 years.

Automated platforms file a form and collect a percentage. They have no licensed professionals reviewing your case and no ability to respond if the IRS disputes the claim. Your accountant may be excellent at tax preparation but IRS penalty abatement under contested court rulings is a different discipline. We’re an IRS representation firm. This is what we do.

Yes. We use secure, industry-standard systems to protect your information at every stage. All documents are handled through our TaxDome secure client portal, built on SOC 2–aligned infrastructure with encryption and access controls. We also utilize encrypted, healthcare-grade fax transmission when required and PCI-DSS compliant payment processing. Our processes follow IRS data protection standards, including IRC §7216, with strict internal access controls and confidentiality practices.

You Will Not Automatically Receive This Refund.

If You Qualify, Action Is Required Before the Deadline.

Thousands of taxpayers will miss out simply because no one told them to act.

Your specific tax situation will determine the outcome, and we cannot guarantee specific results. Penalties and interest continue until your tax controversy is settled with the IRS.

By submitting your contact information, you consent to receiving calls, texts, emails and service updates. Your information will NEVER be sold or distributed to third parties, this does not include vetted third parties we work closely with for our business operations. Learn more in our Privacy Policy.

We cannot guarantee outcomes with the IRS. Realistic expectations and strong effort are key. BadranTax is an independent firm, unaffiliated with and not endorsed by any government agency. Learn more in our Disclaimer Policy.