I didnt file a tax return in 2003. Should I now, and what if I dont?

See a tax attorney.

For a 1040 EZ where he had no liability? :dubious: Now, talking to a tax pro, sure. But that’s a couple hundred not a couple thousand.

I’m 99% sure that you can only be charged with failure to file if you actually owe something. (And as a criminal matter it has to be a significant amount; the IRS has civil options available to them for lesser amounts.)

In any case, the IRS always tries to remedy things via Strongly Worded Letters before going as far as prosecuting a criminal case.

  1. It’s too late to file. The posters who have mentioned the three year limit are correct.

  2. You would have to have the tax forms from that year TO file. The amount of personal exemption and standard deduction changes every year, and the amount of tax versus your taxable income also changes every year

  3. Either way, it’s immaterial–if you are certain you would have gotten a refund if you HAD filed.

This is not true. Where are you getting this information? The three year rule applies to claiming a refund. It’s too late for the OP to claim a refund. It is never too late to file. The three years also applies to the time the IRS has to audit you, but the clock starts ticking from the day you file, not from the calendar year of the tax return.

Old tax forms and tax tables aren’t very hard to get. You can download them now straight from the IRS. Back in the dark ages, you had to go to a public library, and sometimes even talk to the librarians.

You have a legal obligation to file taxes even if you don’t owe anything. Having not owed anything and not having filed taxes is a little like going 3 miles over the speed limit - chances are pretty good you aren’t going to get into trouble for it, but you ARE breaking the law and therefore ARE taking the risk that at some point in the future someone will be a jerk about it.

Both true. Note that again, in the case of Drug Lords, Mafia Dons or Tax Protestor leaders, they might prosecute even if the tax issue appears to be minor.

Dangerosa is correct. Might as well file, and her analogy with the speed limit is about right.

All the information is available on the IRS website. I don’t know how far back forms are available, but 2003 is definitely there. I filed my 2003 taxes this past November (I was very bad about such things for a while, the IRS caught up to me. I would recommend avoiding that situation. Unlike the OP, I owed tons of money. The OP should have far less hassle than I had for that reason.)

I found it easier to use Google with “site:irs.gov” to find the forms I needed than to search the IRS website directly. The instructions booklets and tax tables are all there.

I filed a Tax Return a couple years late once–same sort of situation, a small refund was due–and they just sent me a check. Absolutely no hassle–it was like no one even noticed it was late. But it must have been less than 2 years.

Dumb foreigner question: If you are just a regular employee, with no other source of income, do you still have to file a tax return?

Yes. Mostly you want to, to get a refund. But you still have to, even though as we have discussed here- the likelyhood of penalties are very very small.

If you have very low income, you dont have to file. For most single taxpayers, that means under $8500 or so. It varies year to year a little.