Extending the Statute of Limitations for Disallowed ERC Claims: An Analysis of the New IRS Procedures
“IRS announces new option for certain taxpayers to request more time after ERC claim disallowance,” IR-2026-58, April 27, 2026
As tax professionals are well aware, when the Internal Revenue Service disallows an Employee Retention Credit (ERC) claim, the taxpayer receives either a Letter 105-C for a full disallowance or a Letter 106-C for a partial disallowance. Upon receipt of these legal notices, affected taxpayers "generally have two years from the date of that letter to resolve their claim administratively or to file a refund suit in Federal court if they disagree with the IRS's decision". However, practitioners must caution their clients that electing to protest the disallowance with the IRS Independent Office of Appeals "does not extend this statutory two-year deadline". By statute, the Service notes that it "can't issue a refund or allow a credit after the two-year period unless you file suit during that period". Consequently, the IRS emphasizes that "If you do not file suit within the 2-year period, or do not enter into a written extension agreement before it expires the IRS cannot issue a refund or credit, even if Appeals later issues a favorable decision". Without a formal extension, the taxpayer's only recourse to preserve their claim is to "File suit with the U.S. District Court that has jurisdiction or with the U.S. Court of Federal Claims".
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