How long should you keep your tax records? The answer depends on what type of records and your situation. Here are the IRS rules and best practices for keeping tax documents.
The General Rule: 3 Years
Basic Retention Period
IRS General Rule: Keep records for 3 years from the date you file your return (or due date, whichever is later)
Why 3 Years:
- Standard audit period
- IRS has 3 years to audit most returns
- Covers most situations
- Minimum retention period
What This Covers
3 Years Is Enough For:
- Most simple returns
- Standard deduction filers
- No business income
- No complex investments
- Low audit risk
Example:
- File 2026 return: April 15, 2027
- Keep until: April 15, 2030 (3 years)
- Can shred after: April 15, 2030
The Safe Rule: 7 Years
Recommended Retention
Better Safe Than Sorry: Keep records for 7 years
Why 7 Years:
- Covers extended audit periods
- 6 years if underreported income by 25%+
- Safety margin
- Recommended retention period
Extended Audit Periods
IRS Can Audit Longer If:
- Underreported income by 25%+ (6 years)
- Fraud suspected (no limit)
- Didn't file return (no limit)
- Filed fraudulent return (no limit)
7 Years Covers:
- Standard 3-year period
- Extended 6-year period
- Safety margin
- Most scenarios
What This Covers
7 Years Is Best For:
- All tax returns
- Supporting documents
- Receipts for deductions
- W-2s and 1099s
- Bank statements
- Investment statements
- Business records (if applicable)
Example:
- File 2026 return: April 15, 2027
- Keep until: April 15, 2034 (7 years)
- Can shred after: April 15, 2034
The Forever Rule: Some Documents
Keep Forever
Some Documents Should Be Kept Forever:
1. Tax Returns Themselves:
- Keep all tax returns forever (if space allows)
- Or at least 7 years
- Why: Reference, proof of filing, historical record
2. Major Asset Purchases:
- Real estate purchase documents
- Home improvement receipts
- Vehicle purchase (if business use)
- Major investment purchases
- Why: Need for basis calculation when you sell
3. Retirement Account Records:
- Traditional IRA contributions (if deducted)
- Roth IRA contributions (for basis)
- 401(k) contribution records
- Why: Need for distributions, basis calculation
4. Important Life Events:
- Marriage certificates
- Divorce decrees
- Birth certificates (for dependents)
- Why: Affect filing status, dependents, estate matters
5. Business Formation Documents (if applicable):
- LLC formation
- Corporation formation
- Partnership agreements
- Why: May need for business tax issues
Why Keep Forever
Basis Calculation:
- When you sell assets, need original cost
- Can't calculate gain/loss without basis
- May need documents decades later
Estate Matters:
- Heirs may need documents
- Estate tax calculations
- Basis step-up issues
Historical Reference:
- May need to reference old returns
- For current year filing
- For consistency
IRS Statute of Limitations
Standard Period: 3 Years
IRS Has 3 Years To:
- Audit your return
- Assess additional tax
- From date you file (or due date, whichever later)
Example:
- File 2026 return: April 15, 2027
- IRS can audit until: April 15, 2030
- Keep records until: At least April 15, 2030
Extended Period: 6 Years
IRS Has 6 Years If:
- You underreported income by 25% or more
- From date you file (or due date)
Example:
- File 2026 return: April 15, 2027
- Underreported income by 30%
- IRS can audit until: April 15, 2033
- Keep records until: At least April 15, 2033
No Limit: Fraud or No Filing
IRS Has No Limit If:
- You committed fraud
- You didn't file a return
- You filed a fraudulent return
Keep Records: Forever (or until resolved)
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What to Keep and How Long
Tax Returns
Keep: Forever (or at least 7 years)
Includes:
- Form 1040
- All schedules
- Supporting forms
- Why: Proof of filing, reference
W-2s and 1099s
Keep: 7 years
Includes:
- W-2 (wages)
- 1099-INT (interest)
- 1099-DIV (dividends)
- 1099-NEC (non-employee compensation)
- 1099-MISC (miscellaneous)
- 1099-B (broker transactions)
- All other 1099s
- Why: Proof of income, audit protection
Receipts for Deductions
Keep: 7 years
Includes:
- Charitable contribution receipts
- Medical expense receipts
- Business expense receipts (if applicable)
- Other deduction receipts
- Why: Proof of deductions, audit protection
Bank Statements
Keep: 7 years (or 3 years if simple)
Includes:
- Checking account statements
- Savings account statements
- Why: May need for income/expense verification
Investment Statements
Keep: 7 years (or forever for purchase records)
Includes:
- Brokerage statements
- Purchase confirmations (keep forever)
- Sale confirmations (7 years)
- Why: Basis calculation, transaction records
Business Records (If Self-Employed)
Keep: 7 years
Includes:
- Income records
- Expense receipts
- Mileage logs
- Business bank statements
- Why: Business audits, longer statute possible
Property Records
Keep: Forever
Includes:
- Purchase documents
- Closing statements
- Improvement receipts
- Property tax records
- Why: Basis calculation when you sell
Retirement Account Records
Keep: Forever
Includes:
- Contribution records
- Distribution records
- Basis information
- Why: Need for distributions, basis calculation
When to Shred Documents
After Retention Period
Safe to Shred After:
- 7 years for most documents
- 3 years minimum (but 7 years safer)
- After audit period expires
- Why: Reduce clutter, protect privacy
What to Shred
After 7 Years (if no longer needed):
- Old receipts (if not for major assets)
- Old bank statements (if not needed)
- Old pay stubs (if have W-2s)
- Old utility bills (if not deductions)
- Why: Reduce clutter
How to Shred
Safely:
- Use cross-cut shredder
- Shred anything with personal information
- Don't just throw away
- Why: Protect from identity theft
Never Shred
Keep Forever:
- Tax returns
- Major asset purchase documents
- Retirement account records
- Important life event documents
- Why: May need forever
How to Store Records
Digital Storage
Advantages:
- Saves space
- Easy to search
- Can backup
- Accessible anywhere
How:
- Scan documents
- Organize by year
- Backup regularly
- Cloud storage or external drive
Best For: Receipts, statements, returns (PDF)
Paper Storage
Advantages:
- Original documents
- No technology needed
- Some prefer physical
How:
- File cabinet or box
- Organize by year
- Label clearly
- Fireproof safe for important
Best For: Original important documents
Hybrid Approach
Best of Both:
- Keep originals (paper)
- Scan important (digital)
- Digital for easy access
- Paper for backup
Special Situations
If You're Audited
Keep Until Audit Resolved:
- Don't shred during audit
- Keep all related documents
- May need for appeal
- Why: Need for audit defense
If You Have Business
Keep Longer:
- 7 years minimum
- May need longer
- More complex audits
- Why: Business audits can be longer
If You Have Investments
Keep Purchase Records Forever:
- Need for basis calculation
- May sell decades later
- Can't calculate gain without basis
- Why: Critical for capital gains
If You Own Property
Keep Forever:
- Purchase documents
- Improvement receipts
- Need for basis when you sell
- Why: Can't calculate gain without basis
If You Have Retirement Accounts
Keep Forever:
- Contribution records
- Basis information
- Need for distributions
- Why: Critical for tax on distributions
Bottom Line
How long to keep tax records:
- Minimum: 3 years - Standard audit period
- Recommended: 7 years - Covers extended periods, safety margin
- Forever: Some documents - Major assets, returns, retirement records
Key Takeaways:
- General rule: 3 years - Minimum retention
- Safe rule: 7 years - Recommended, covers most scenarios
- Forever: Major assets - Real estate, investments, retirement accounts
- Organize by year - Easy to find and manage
- Shred safely - After retention period, protect privacy
- Digital or paper - Choose what works for you
Action Steps:
- Understand retention rules (3 years minimum, 7 years recommended)
- Keep major asset documents forever
- Organize by year for easy management
- Review annually (shred old, organize new)
- Shred safely after retention period
- Backup important documents
- Keep returns forever (or at least 7 years)
Remember: When in doubt, keep it longer. It's better to have a document you don't need than to need a document you don't have. Seven years is a good rule of thumb for most documents, but keep major asset and retirement records forever.