Unexpected IRS letter

Hi all. It’s… uh, been a while. How’s it going?

(Mods, move this where appropriate. It’s been so long that last time I was here the forum was called General Questions - I don’t know if this one has a factual answer, so into IMHO it goes, IMHO.)

A couple weeks ago I got two identical copies of a letter from the IRS. One addressed to my name, and one addressed to “PTC CUST BENEFICIARY IRA”. It claims that in the past year, either me or someone in my family didn’t have health insurance. The letter is just a reminder that healthcare.gov exists. But neither I nor my family (just my parents) have gone without health insurance. (I presume BENEFICIARY IRA means that they are looking at my retirement account beneficiaries - again, my parents.)

I would chalk this up to a simple error - but a simple error at the intersection of the IRS, at least one of my retirement accounts, and somebody’s health insurance… seems like something to check out. A search for the IRS letter’s code (“Letter 6534”), brings up an IRS web site that essentially says, “We can’t help you with this one.”

Any advice here? Leave it alone? Or dive deeper… and starting with who?

Welcome back! 14 years?! The IRS has been sending us odd letters recently, too. One said that they were investigating our questions and would get back to us (we never asked them any questions). The most recent contained something relevant to us, along with some papers that should have gone to somebody in Kansas. Not sure what’s going on with them, but in the past we’ve learned to just not interact with them if it can be avoided.

They are severely understaffed for what they are trying to do. Probably not worth digging into something that doesn’t come with a penalty.

I called my Bro, who worked as a IRS Agent for 20 years. He said this is nothing to worry about.

Much appreciated everyone!

While this is a factual error on their part, for broader context recall that there was originally a “tax” that applied if you didn’t have health insurance. This was rescinded under the Trump administration, so now all the IRS can do is go “hey, don’t you want to sign up?”

I remember you. Welcome home!

Stay a while.

Wouldn’t the OP (or whoever allegedly did not have healthcare) have a 1095C to prove they really had it? Or is it only some people with insurance get it?

There is no longer a Federal mandate requiring everyone have health insurance. That ceased in January 2019. There may be individual state requirements, YMMV.

Yeah, I’m sure I and my folks have all that. I’m wasn’t worried one of us didn’t have insurance, more that someone out there in the system thought one of us didn’t.

I just got an unexpected IRS letter, too. Scared the shit out of me a second, but it was nothing.

The clients I work with have to file IRS paperwork via mail, as the forms we have to fill out are one of the last holdouts that the IRS still refuses to make electronic. Because the mail system at the IRS is apparently so utterly fucked, we get reports of clients getting penalty notices for forms they filed on time up to 4 years ago. They are so woefully understaffed it’s frightening, and their computer system is just as bad, as it just randomly sends out these penalty notices. I wonder how many heart attacks they’ve inadvertently caused?

Welcome back, @drewbert !

“Sit down young stranger, and tell us how you been!”

I got a letter from the IRS yesterday that said I was to get a $1,000+ refund. There was a separate envelope from them which held the check. I hadn’t properly calculated the taxing of my Social Security income, again.