Latest Updates on Underreported Income Notices for Illinois Taxpayers

IRS Underreported Income Notices in Illinois: Causes & Fixes

Person counting cash with a notebook and pen on a desk, symbolizing financial management and planning for IRS installment agreements.

Thousands of Illinois taxpayers — especially in Naperville, Aurora, Plainfield, Bolingbrook, Lisle, Wheaton, and the western Chicago suburbs — receive IRS notices every year claiming they underreported income. These notices may arrive as CP2000s, “proposed changes,” or letters explaining that the IRS’s records do not match the income reported on the tax return. The language can sound alarming, but the reason these notices appear so frequently in Illinois has more to do with mismatches than misconduct.

In a region with a large mix of W-2 jobs, side gigs, suburban consulting work, manufacturing roles, technology companies, medical professionals, and extensive commuting between Chicago and the suburbs, the IRS’s automated systems often struggle to accurately interpret all the data. A single missing or corrected form can trigger a notice.

Taxx Resolution sees these situations every day and helps taxpayers throughout Illinois resolve discrepancies before they turn into larger IRS problems.

What the IRS Means When It Says You Underreported Income

Underreporting does not automatically mean the IRS thinks you hid income. The IRS receives information from employers, payment processors, investment firms, banks, and state agencies — and its system tries to match these numbers with those on your tax return.

The IRS receives automatic copies of:

  • W-2s
  • 1099s of all types
  • 1099-Ks
  • 1099-Bs for investments
  • 1099-Rs for retirement income
  • Pension statements
  • Gambling winnings
  • Unemployment records

If even one of these forms is missing, wrong, late, or corrected, the IRS system marks your return as inaccurate.

This is extremely common in Illinois due to the state’s diverse, multi-income workforce.

Why Underreporting Notices Are Especially Common in the Chicago Suburbs

The western suburbs of Chicago, including Naperville and the surrounding areas, have a unique employment landscape. It’s common for people in this region to hold multiple jobs, switch employers mid-year, freelance, receive employer stock compensation, or have side businesses.

Each of these creates opportunities for mismatches.

Commuters with multiple income sources

Plenty of suburban residents commute into Chicago for work while also holding part-time or remote jobs. Multi-employer income means multiple tax forms.

Technology, engineering, and corporate roles

Many companies headquartered in the suburbs — and in Chicago proper — issue stock grants, bonuses, corrected W-2s, and supplemental pay. These forms often cause mismatches.

Healthcare and education

Naperville and nearby areas employ thousands of workers in hospitals, clinics, and schools. Many earn overtime, stipends, or seasonal pay that generates unexpected documents.

Gig and side-job income

Popular side earnings include:

  • Rideshare driving
  • Delivery services
  • Home repair or handyman work
  • Tutoring
  • Photography
  • Fitness training
  • Freelance consulting

Most gig platforms issue digital 1099s that taxpayers miss.

High prevalence of investment activity

Investment income is common in DuPage and Will County households. Brokerage statements, RSU sales, and retirement distributions often trigger mismatches.

1099-K confusion

Selling used items online or receiving reimbursements through payment apps generates forms that look like business income unless explained.

Unemployment or temporary work

Illinois’s economy fluctuates, and people often move between roles or receive unemployment benefits. One mis-coded form triggers an IRS notice.

Families supporting families

Bank transfers between relatives — common in multi-generational households — can be mistaken for income when reviewed by automated systems.

Illinois’ tax environment creates mismatches that the IRS notices first — and understands later.

The CP2000: The Most Common IRS Notice in Illinois

The CP2000 is the IRS’s primary underreporting notice. It compares:

  • What you reported
  • What the IRS believes you earned
  • Proposed taxes and penalties

The CP2000 is not a bill. It is simply the IRS’s preliminary view based on automated matching.

Taxx Resolution frequently overturns or reduces CP2000 assessments by providing the IRS with accurate documentation and explanations.

Common Illinois Scenarios That Trigger Underreporting Notices

A commuter receives corrected W-2s

Chicago employers often send corrected forms mid-year. If one is missed, a mismatch occurs.

A gig worker overlooks a 1099

Digital 1099s from delivery or rideshare platforms often go unnoticed.

A retiree withdraws from multiple accounts

Pensions, IRAs, and annuities each issue separate forms. Missing one is easy.

A taxpayer sells stock

If cost basis isn’t reported, the IRS assumes the full sale amount is taxable.

A teacher or healthcare worker receives extra pay

Stipends, bonuses, and supplemental pay generate extra documents.

Payment app activity is misinterpreted

Selling personal goods at a loss can look like profit.

A family member transfers funds

Support payments or reimbursements must be distinguished from income.

These are everyday situations in Naperville and the Chicago suburbs — and all are solvable with the right approach.

How Taxx Resolution Fixes Underreporting Problems

Reviewing IRS transcripts

The first step is retrieving your IRS Wage & Income Transcript. This shows every income document the IRS has on file — including ones you may never have received.

Comparing your real income to IRS records

We review W-2s, 1099s, investment statements, pension distributions, gig income, and bank activity. This determines whether the IRS’s assumptions are accurate or based on incomplete information.

Identifying deposits that aren’t income

Transfers from family, reimbursements, selling items online, or shared expenses may be mistaken for income unless explained clearly.

Preparing corrections or an amended return

If your return needs adjustments, Taxx Resolution prepares them. If the IRS is wrong, we prepare a dispute showing the accurate information.

Sending a full IRS response package

This includes:

  • A clear explanation
  • Supporting documents
  • Reconciliations
  • Any required amended forms

A well-organized response greatly increases the likelihood of success.

Protecting you from escalation

If the IRS begins collection activity, Taxx Resolution requests a hold while the issue is resolved — preventing wage garnishments or bank levies.

Why Responding Alone Often Makes the Situation Worse

Many taxpayers unintentionally worsen the problem by:

  • Agreeing to the IRS’s numbers even when wrong
  • Providing unnecessary or overly detailed information
  • Missing key documents
  • Triggering additional IRS questions
  • Waiting too long to respond

A professional response ensures the IRS receives the right information — no more and no less.

Final Thoughts

Underreporting notices are extremely common in Naperville and the surrounding Chicago suburbs due to the region’s multi-income households, gig economy, investment activity, corporate stock compensation, and shifting employment patterns. But these notices are also highly fixable with the right documentation and strategy.

Taxx Resolution helps Illinois taxpayers resolve underreporting notices, correct IRS mismatches, and prevent issues from escalating into enforcement.

Taxx Resolution Inc. can help!

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