
A: Yes — and it’s a benefit most taxpayers rarely hear about: filing on time starts the IRS audit clock.
The IRS only has a limited amount of time to review and challenge a tax return. Filing your return promptly helps ensure that this clock begins running as early as possible!
Here are the key rules:
• The standard audit window is three years. The IRS generally has three years to assess additional tax related to a return.
• The clock starts from the later of the filing date or the filing deadline. If you file early, the three-year period usually begins on the April 15 filing deadline, not the earlier filing date.
• Example: If you file your 2025 tax return in February 2026, the audit window generally runs until April 15, 2029.
• Large income omissions extend the window. If a return omits 25% or more of gross income, the statute of limitations extends to six years.
• Fraud removes the time limit entirely. If the IRS finds evidence of willful evasion, fraud, or intentional tax schemes, there is no statute of limitations — meaning the return could be audited at any time.
Bottom Line:
Filing on time doesn’t just avoid penalties — it also starts the IRS audit clock. The sooner that clock begins, the sooner that tax year can be permanently closed.













