Can You Discharge Tax Debt in Bankruptcy? The Three Rules Most People Miss | Wynn Tax Solutions

Can You Discharge Tax Debt in Bankruptcy? The Three Rules Most People Miss

Can You Discharge Tax Debt in Bankruptcy? The Three Rules Most People Miss

Quick note: This article explains the technical rules for discharging federal income tax debt in bankruptcy. It is educational only and not legal advice. Bankruptcy and tax law intersect in complex ways; consult a qualified bankruptcy attorney or tax professional before filing.

Why Most Taxpayers Get This Wrong

Ask most people whether you can discharge tax debt in bankruptcy, and you'll get a flat "no." Ask a debtor's attorney, and you'll often hear "maybe." The truth is that some income tax debt is absolutely dischargeable under Chapter 7 or Chapter 13 bankruptcy—but only if you satisfy a precise set of timing rules, procedural requirements, and conduct tests that trip up the majority of filers. Miss any one of them, and the IRS will object to discharge, leaving you stuck with the full balance after your bankruptcy closes.

The rules come from 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(1), which creates an exception to discharge for certain tax debts, and the courts have interpreted these provisions narrowly. If you're considering bankruptcy as a way to deal with back taxes, understanding these three core timing rules—and the additional traps hiding in the footnotes—can mean the difference between a fresh start and years of continued collection pressure.

The Three-Year Rule: Tax Due Date Must Be More Than Three Years Before Filing

The first hurdle is the three-year rule. For income tax debt to be dischargeable, the tax return's original due date (including any automatic extensions) must be more than three years before the date you file your bankruptcy petition. This is often called the "three-year lookback."

Here's how it works in practice. Suppose your 2020 Form 1040 was due on April 15, 2021. If you file for bankruptcy on April 16, 2024, you've crossed the three-year threshold for that tax year. But if you file on April 10, 2024, you haven't—and the 2020 tax debt remains non-dischargeable, even if it's only a few days short.

Two important nuances complicate this rule:

    • Extensions count. If you filed an extension and your return was due on October 15 instead of April 15, the clock starts on October 15, not April 15.
    • Tolling events pause the clock. Certain events—like a prior bankruptcy, an Offer in Compromise under consideration, or a Collection Due Process (CDP) hearing request—can suspend the three-year period. The IRS tracks these tolling periods carefully, and many taxpayers discover too late that what they thought was a three-year gap was actually only two years and change.

The IRS publication on bankruptcy and taxes does not provide tolling calculations; those are governed by case law and IRM 5.9.2, the IRS chapter on bankruptcy procedures. If you've had any prior bankruptcy filings or formal settlement negotiations, ask your attorney to calculate tolling explicitly.

The Two-Year Rule: Return Must Be Filed More Than Two Years Before Bankruptcy

Even if the tax is old enough under the three-year rule, the return itself must have been filed more than two years before your bankruptcy petition date. This is the two-year rule, and it's where late filers get burned.

If you filed your 2019 return on September 1, 2022, you cannot discharge that tax debt in bankruptcy until September 2, 2024—no matter when the original due date was. And here's the critical trap: if the IRS filed a substitute for return (SFR) on your behalf because you never filed, that SFR does not count as a "return" under bankruptcy law. Courts have consistently held that a taxpayer-filed return is required; an SFR prepared by the IRS under IRC § 6020(b) will not satisfy the two-year rule, and the debt remains non-dischargeable.

This means if you have unfiled returns, you must file them yourself—and then wait two full years—before bankruptcy can touch that tax debt. Many practitioners recommend filing all delinquent returns, waiting out the two-year period, and only then filing bankruptcy if discharge is the goal.

The 240-Day Rule: Assessment Must Be More Than 240 Days Old

The third timing requirement is the 240-day rule. The IRS must have assessed the tax more than 240 days before you file bankruptcy. "Assessment" is a formal IRS action, recorded on your account transcript as Transaction Code 150 or 300, depending on whether it's a self-reported liability or an IRS adjustment.

For most taxpayers who file their own returns, assessment happens within a few weeks of filing. But if you're dealing with an audit adjustment, amended return, or disputed liability, the assessment date can be much later than the filing date. Check your IRS Account Transcript (available at IRS.gov) to confirm the exact assessment date before counting days.

Like the three-year rule, the 240-day period is subject to tolling. If you submitted an Offer in Compromise, the time the offer was pending—plus 30 days—does not count toward the 240 days. If you requested a Collection Due Process hearing, that time is also excluded. The IRS maintains detailed records of these tolling events, and they will produce a timeline if you (or your bankruptcy attorney) request it during an adversary proceeding.

The Conduct Tests: No Fraud, No Willful Evasion, and a Valid Return

Even if all three timing rules align, discharge is still barred if the IRS can prove any of the following:

    • Fraudulent return or willful attempt to evade tax. If you filed a false return with the intent to defraud, or engaged in affirmative acts to evade payment (hiding assets, using nominees, etc.), the debt is permanently non-dischargeable under 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(1)(C).
    • The return was not filed. As noted above, if the IRS prepared an SFR and you never filed your own 1040, courts will not treat that as a "return" for bankruptcy purposes. You must file an honest, complete return signed under penalty of perjury.
    • The return was filed, but it was late and fraudulent. Even a late-filed return can support discharge—unless it was filed with fraudulent intent.

The burden of proof for fraud is on the IRS, and the standard is higher than in a civil tax case. But the Service does pursue these objections, especially in high-dollar cases or where the taxpayer's history shows a pattern of evasion.

What Cannot Be Discharged: Trust Fund Taxes and Recent Liabilities

Certain categories of tax debt are categorically non-dischargeable, regardless of timing:

    • Trust fund recovery penalty (TFRP). If you were a responsible person for a business and the IRS assessed the trust fund recovery penalty under IRC § 6672 for unpaid payroll withholding, that liability is treated as a trust fund tax and cannot be discharged in bankruptcy. Courts have consistently held that these penalties are excepted from discharge under 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(1)(A) because they represent taxes "held in trust" for employees.
    • Recent income tax debt. If a tax year fails any one of the three timing tests, it remains non-dischargeable. For example, your 2022 tax debt, due April 15, 2023, will not meet the three-year rule until April 16, 2026 at the earliest—and only if you filed on time and no tolling events occurred.
    • Payroll taxes (employer's share). While the trust fund portion (employee withholding) is always non-dischargeable, the employer's matching share of Social Security and Medicare can sometimes be discharged if the timing and conduct tests are met. But because these are often assessed together with trust fund penalties, discharge is rare in practice.
    • Penalties on non-dischargeable taxes. If the underlying tax is non-dischargeable, penalties related to that tax are also non-dischargeable. However, if the underlying tax is dischargeable, associated penalties assessed more than three years before filing may also be discharged, depending on the circuit.

The takeaway: bankruptcy works only for old individual income tax debt. It does not work for payroll taxes, trust fund penalties, or recent liabilities.

Chapter 7 vs. Chapter 13: How Discharge Works Differently

Both Chapter 7 and Chapter 13 can discharge qualifying tax debt, but the mechanics differ. In Chapter 7, if the debt meets all the tests, it's wiped out at discharge—typically four to six months after filing. You walk away owing nothing.

In Chapter 13, you propose a repayment plan lasting three to five years. Dischargeable tax debt is treated as a general unsecured claim and often receives only pennies on the dollar, depending on your disposable income and asset equity. Non-dischargeable "priority" tax debt must be paid in full through the plan. At the end of the plan, any remaining balance on dischargeable tax debt is eliminated.

Chapter 13 can also stop IRS collection (liens, levies, wage garnishments) during the plan period, which gives you breathing room even if some of the debt isn't dischargeable. But the plan must be feasible, and the court will scrutinize your budget carefully.

Liens Survive Discharge: The Post-Bankruptcy Trap

Here's a critical point that surprises many filers: even if your personal liability for a tax debt is discharged, a filed Notice of Federal Tax Lien survives bankruptcy and remains attached to any property you owned on the petition date. Discharge eliminates the IRS's ability to pursue you personally—no more levies or wage garnishments—but it does not remove the lien from your home, car, or other assets.

If the IRS recorded a lien before you filed bankruptcy, you'll need to deal with that lien separately, either by paying it off, negotiating a lien release or subordination, or waiting for the collection statute to expire (generally ten years from assessment under IRC § 6502). Some bankruptcy attorneys file an adversary proceeding to avoid junior liens in Chapter 13 under 11 U.S.C. § 506, but that strategy has limits and depends on your equity position.

When Bankruptcy Makes Sense—and When It Doesn't

Bankruptcy is a powerful tool, but it's not the right move for everyone with tax debt. It makes the most sense when:

    • You have old income tax debt (three-plus years since the due date) that you filed on time or at least two years ago.
    • You have other dischargeable debts (credit cards, medical bills, personal loans) that justify the cost and credit impact of bankruptcy.
    • You've calculated tolling correctly and confirmed all three timing rules are satisfied.
    • You have no trust fund penalties, recent taxes, or fraud issues that would block discharge.

Bankruptcy is usually not the best path if:

    • Your tax debt is recent or you haven't filed returns yet.
    • You owe trust fund penalties or payroll taxes.
    • The IRS has already filed a lien and you have significant equity in your home—the lien will survive and you'll still need to settle it later.
    • You qualify for an installment agreement or Offer in Compromise that resolves the debt without the credit and legal consequences of bankruptcy.

In many cases, Wynn Tax Solutions evaluates whether a client is better served by a non-bankruptcy resolution—Currently Not Collectible status, a payment plan, or an Offer in Compromise—before resorting to bankruptcy. The goal is always the most efficient, least disruptive path to compliance and relief.

How to Verify Your Tax Debt Is Dischargeable

If you're serious about discharging tax debt in bankruptcy, take these steps before you file:

    • Order your IRS Account Transcripts. Go to IRS.gov and request transcripts for every year you owe. Look for Transaction Code 150 (original assessment) and note the date.
    • Identify the return due date. Confirm whether you filed an extension. The due date determines the start of the three-year clock.
    • Confirm you filed the return yourself. If the transcript shows a Substitute for Return (SFR) code 150 with no subsequent taxpayer-filed return, you'll need to file a delinquent return and restart the two-year clock.
    • Calculate tolling. If you've had a prior bankruptcy, OIC, or CDP hearing in the past few years, work with a professional to calculate how much time was tolled. The IRS can provide a tolling statement on request.
    • Check for fraud markers. If your case involved a criminal investigation, civil fraud penalty, or referral to IRS Criminal Investigation, consult both a tax attorney and a bankruptcy attorney before filing.
    • Run the numbers on all three rules. Only if the tax passes the three-year, two-year, and 240-day tests—and you meet the conduct requirements—should you proceed with bankruptcy as a discharge strategy.

Most bankruptcy attorneys will request these transcripts as part of their intake process, but it's wise to gather them early so you understand your position before paying a retainer.

Working with Wynn Tax Solutions Before or After Bankruptcy

If you're exploring bankruptcy, Wynn Tax Solutions can help you understand which debts are dischargeable and whether a non-bankruptcy resolution might be simpler and faster. We order transcripts, calculate the three timing rules, identify tolling events, and coordinate with your bankruptcy counsel to ensure the IRS doesn't object to discharge on technical grounds.

If you've already filed or received a discharge and still have tax issues—unfiled returns, non-dischargeable years, surviving liens—we step in to negotiate installment agreements, lien subordinations, or Offers in Compromise on the remaining balance. Bankruptcy solves part of the problem; we handle the rest.

Bottom line: Bankruptcy can absolutely discharge old income tax debt—but only if the tax was due more than three years ago, you filed the return more than two years ago, it was assessed more than 240 days ago, and you meet the conduct tests. Miss any one rule, or owe trust fund penalties or recent taxes, and discharge is off the table. Before you file, verify every timing requirement, confirm there's no SFR or fraud issue, and understand that liens survive even when liability is wiped out. Done correctly, bankruptcy is one of the most powerful tools in tax resolution; done wrong, it's an expensive detour that leaves the debt intact.