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IRS DataMay 29, 2026·6 min read

IRS FY2024 Data Book: Over 14.9 Million Americans Carry Delinquent Tax Debt

The IRS Fiscal Year 2024 Data Book reveals a record-level backlog of unpaid tax debt — nearly 15 million accounts and $208.4 billion outstanding. Here's what the numbers mean, where they come from, and what options exist for taxpayers caught in that pool.

14,901,508
Delinquent taxpayer accounts
IRS Data Book FY2024, Table 27
$208.4B
Total outstanding delinquent balance
IRS Data Book FY2024, Table 27
9,630,933
New delinquent accounts added in FY2024
IRS Data Book FY2024, Table 27

Where the Numbers Come From

Each year, the IRS releases its Data Book— a detailed accounting of its operations, enforcement activities, and collection results. Table 27 of the FY2024 edition tracks “Delinquent Collection Activities,” covering every account with an unpaid balance that has passed the initial notice stage and entered active collections.

For fiscal year 2024 (October 2023 – September 2024), the ending inventory stood at 14,901,508 accounts carrying a combined balance of $208,410,722 thousand — approximately $208.4 billion in assessed, unpaid federal taxes. During the same year, 9,630,933 new accounts were added to the delinquent inventory.

What Happens to Delinquent Accounts

Once an account enters delinquent status, the IRS pursues collections through automated notices, installment agreements, levies on wages and bank accounts, federal tax liens, and — in some cases — referral to the IRS's private debt collection program. The IRS resolved a portion of the inventory through payments, offers in compromise, currently non-collectible status designations, and write-offs in FY2024.

Accounts that cannot be collected — due to expired statute of limitations, hardship determinations, or inability to locate assets — are eventually classified as “Currently Non-Collectible” (CNC) or written off. However, the inventory grows faster than the IRS can resolve it: FY2024's new account additions (9.6M) significantly exceeded the number of accounts closed through any resolution channel.

What This Means for Taxpayers

Nearly 15 million people are in the same position. The IRS has statutory time limits to collect (generally 10 years from assessment), and it prioritizes high-balance, high-risk accounts. Taxpayers with smaller balances who respond proactively — by entering an installment agreement, qualifying for CNC status, or submitting an Offer in Compromise — often resolve their situation on more favorable terms than those who wait for enforcement.

Source

IRS Data Book, Fiscal Year 2024. Table 27: Delinquent Collection Activities. Published by the Internal Revenue Service, Statistics of Income Division. irs.gov/statistics/soi-tax-stats-irs-data-book

More Articles
IRS ProgramsMay 12, 2026·5 min read

What Does "Currently Non-Collectible" Status Actually Mean for Taxpayers?

When the IRS places an account in Currently Non-Collectible (CNC) status, active collection stops — no levies, no garnishments, no seizures. It doesn't erase your debt, but it buys time. Here's how it works and who qualifies.

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Tax ReliefApril 30, 2026·7 min read

IRS Offer in Compromise: What the Acceptance Rate Really Tells You

In FY2024, the IRS accepted roughly 1 in 3 Offers in Compromise submitted. That headline number hides important context: most rejections come from improperly prepared filings. We break down the actual qualification math.

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IRS EnforcementApril 15, 2026·4 min read

Wage Garnishments on the Rise: IRS Collection Actions in 2025–2026

After pausing automated collections during COVID, the IRS has resumed full enforcement. Wage garnishments and bank levies have returned to — and in some metrics exceeded — pre-pandemic levels.

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Tax IssuesMarch 22, 2026·5 min read

Tax Liens vs. Tax Levies: What's the Difference and Why It Matters

A tax lien is a legal claim against your property. A tax levy is the actual seizure of it. Understanding the difference — and the timeline between them — can determine whether you still have options.

Read More →

Data Sources: Statistics on this page are drawn from the IRS Data Book, Fiscal Year 2024, published by the Internal Revenue Service, Statistics of Income Division. Table 27 covers delinquent collection activities. All figures reflect IRS fiscal year operations (October 2023 – September 2024). Dollar amounts expressed in thousands in the source document have been converted to billions for readability.

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