Artificial intelligence is changing how the IRS identifies tax issues, but not in the simplistic way many headlines suggest. The most important shift is not that a computer is “replacing” auditors. It is that the IRS is becoming better at sorting through large volumes of tax data, identifying patterns, and deciding where human enforcement resources should be focused.
That matters for business owners, high-income taxpayers, and people with complex filings because the IRS has openly stated that expanded enforcement resources are being directed toward complex partnerships, large corporations, and high-dollar noncompliance.
AI Is Changing Audit Selection, Not the Tax Law
Artificial intelligence does not change what is taxable, what is deductible, or what documentation is required. It changes how quickly the IRS may be able to identify returns, entities, or reporting patterns that deserve closer review.
The Government Accountability Office reported that the IRS uses AI in several areas, including audit selection, fraud detection, taxpayer service, and broader operations.
That distinction is important. AI may help identify a return for review, but the underlying dispute still depends on the tax law, the facts, the documents, and the taxpayer’s ability to explain the position taken.
For a business owner, the practical concern is not whether an algorithm “understands” the business. The concern is whether the return, the books, the payroll records, the information returns, and the prior-year filings tell a consistent story.
The IRS Is Looking for Patterns
The IRS has long used data to identify compliance risks, but newer tools allow the agency to compare more information across more returns and more years. The IRS Strategic Operating Plan says the agency intends to use enhanced data and analytics to assist in selecting compliance cases based on the highest risk of noncompliance.
That means isolated mistakes may matter less than patterns that repeat or grow over time.
A single reporting difference may not lead to a major enforcement issue. But repeated discrepancies, inconsistent income reporting, unexplained payroll tax balances, unusual partnership allocations, or large year-to-year changes may draw more attention when viewed together.
This is especially important for businesses that have grown quickly, changed accountants, added related entities, adjusted owner compensation, or shifted how income and expenses are reported from year to year.
Complex Filings Are a Priority
The IRS has specifically identified complex partnerships, large corporations, and high-income taxpayers as enforcement priorities.
The agency also announced that it was ramping up audits of some of the largest partnerships while leveraging artificial intelligence.
That focus is not accidental. Partnership filings can involve multiple entities, tiers of ownership, special allocations, related-party transactions, and complicated reporting that is difficult to evaluate manually.
IRS data shows that partnerships filed more than 4.5 million returns for tax year 2023 and represented more than 30.2 million partners.
For higher-income business owners, this means the structure around the income may matter almost as much as the income itself. The IRS is not only looking at one return in isolation. It may be looking at how the business, the owner, related entities, payroll filings, K-1s, and information returns fit together.
Third-Party Reporting Gives the IRS More to Compare
AI becomes more powerful when the IRS has more data to compare. Employers, banks, brokerage firms, payment processors, partnerships, corporations, and other businesses all send information to the IRS through forms such as W-2s, 1099s, K-1s, and other filings.
The IRS launched a high-income non-filer initiative involving more than 125,000 cases where the agency had third-party information indicating financial activity but no corresponding tax return.
That example is important because it shows how enforcement is increasingly built around matching and comparison. When the IRS already has information from outside sources, the question becomes whether the taxpayer’s filings align with what the agency already sees.
For business owners, this can create problems even when there was no intent to underreport income. A payment processor may issue a form that does not match the company’s books. A partnership may issue a K-1 late or incorrectly. A payroll provider may make an error. A prior-year adjustment may not be carried forward properly.
Those situations can still create IRS questions, especially if the mismatch is large, repeated, or connected to other reporting issues.
AI May Make Older Problems Easier to See
Many business tax problems do not begin as large problems. They begin with a small discrepancy, an unresolved notice, a payroll tax shortfall, or a reporting method that continues from year to year without being reviewed.
As IRS systems become more data-driven, older issues may become easier to identify because the agency can compare multiple filing periods more efficiently. The IRS Strategic Operating Plan describes a future in which data-driven decision-making becomes central to agency operations and compliance work.
This is why consistency matters. If a business has several years of filings that do not align with payroll records, bank activity, K-1s, or prior-year positions, the issue may not stay buried simply because no one questioned it immediately.
The risk is not only the original mistake. The risk is that the mistake becomes part of a larger pattern.
AI Does Not Remove Human Judgment
It is also important not to overstate what AI can do. AI can identify possible issues, but it cannot fully understand business context on its own.
The GAO reported that the IRS had 126 active AI use cases as of June 2025, but also found gaps involving skills, information quality, and strategic management.
That matters because tax enforcement still requires human review. A legitimate business change may look unusual in the data. A large deduction may be appropriate. A sharp revenue change may have a clear business explanation. A reporting discrepancy may be caused by a third-party form rather than the taxpayer’s own records.
AI may help the IRS decide where to look, but the taxpayer still needs facts, records, and legal arguments to explain what happened.
What This Means for Business Owners
For business owners and high-income taxpayers, the lesson is not to fear AI. The lesson is to assume that disconnected reporting is becoming harder to ignore.
If your business has changed entities, added owners, shifted compensation, accumulated payroll balances, received IRS notices, or had inconsistent reporting across several years, those issues may deserve closer review before they become harder to resolve.
Questions about underreporting of income often require looking at more than one return, especially when the issue involves third-party reporting, business receipts, K-1s, or prior-year discrepancies.
If an IRS tax audit raises questions about business income, deductions, payroll, or entity reporting, the response often depends on understanding the broader filing history rather than answering one notice in isolation.
Payroll tax issues that develop over time often require addressing the accumulated balance itself, rather than simply correcting one return or filing.
Contact an Attorney
If you have received an IRS notice, been selected for an IRS tax audit, or discovered that past business filings may not match your records, the issue may require more than a quick correction. Questions involving underreporting of income often depend on how several filings, records, and third-party reports fit together.
That is especially true when the issue has developed over time. A payroll balance, repeated reporting discrepancy, or missed filing can become harder to resolve once penalties, interest, and multiple tax years are involved. If you are dealing with unpaid employment taxes, payroll tax debt relief may require reviewing the full history of the account, not just the most recent notice. If prior returns were never filed, unfiled tax returns can also become part of the larger resolution strategy.
AI may change how the IRS identifies tax issues, but it does not change what matters once the IRS begins asking questions: the facts, the records, the legal position, and the response. Delia Law works with business owners and individuals with complex tax matters to review IRS correspondence, understand how the issue developed, and determine the next steps.
If you are concerned about how your business or personal tax history may be viewed by the IRS, contact Delia Law to discuss your situation confidentially.



