IRS Organizational Structure and Leadership
The Internal Revenue Service operates through a formal hierarchy that divides administrative, enforcement, and taxpayer-service functions across distinct operating divisions and functional offices. Understanding this structure clarifies which part of the agency handles specific tax matters, how leadership accountability flows, and why different taxpayers interact with different IRS units. This page covers the agency's leadership chain, its four major operating divisions, and the functional offices that support or oversee core operations.
Definition and scope
The IRS is a bureau of the U.S. Department of the Treasury, operating under statutory authority granted by the Internal Revenue Code (26 U.S.C. § 7801), which vests administrative authority over the Code in the Secretary of the Treasury. Day-to-day administration is delegated to the IRS Commissioner, a presidentially appointed, Senate-confirmed officer who serves a 5-year term under IRC § 7803(a)(1).
The scope of this structure is national, covering all federal tax administration functions: collection, examination, criminal investigation, taxpayer services, and appeals. The IRS employs roughly 80,000 full-time equivalent employees (IRS FY 2023 Data Book) and processes more than 260 million tax returns and other forms annually. The organizational model adopted after the IRS Restructuring and Reform Act of 1998 (Public Law 105-206) replaced the prior geographic structure with one organized around taxpayer segments — a fundamental shift that still defines the agency's architecture.
For a broader orientation to IRS operations, the IRS Authority reference index consolidates the major topic areas covered across this resource.
How it works
The Leadership Chain
The IRS Commissioner chairs agency-wide policy and reports to the Secretary of the Treasury and, through that channel, to Congress. Directly beneath the Commissioner sits the Deputy Commissioner, a role typically divided between two principal positions: Deputy Commissioner for Services and Enforcement, and Deputy Commissioner for Operations Support. Each Deputy Commissioner oversees distinct clusters of operating divisions and functional offices.
The Four Operating Divisions
The 1998 reform law established the current division model. Each division serves a defined taxpayer population:
- Wage and Investment (W&I) — Serves approximately 122 million individual filers who report income primarily from wages, salaries, and investment income. W&I operates most retail taxpayer-service channels, including the Free File program addressed at IRS Free File Program.
- Small Business/Self-Employed (SB/SE) — Covers roughly 57 million self-employed individuals and small business owners. SB/SE also administers the majority of field examination and collection activity affecting individual and small-entity taxpayers.
- Large Business and International (LB&I) — Handles corporations and partnerships with assets exceeding $10 million, as well as international tax compliance issues including foreign account reporting obligations discussed at Foreign Account Reporting (FBAR).
- Tax Exempt and Government Entities (TE/GE) — Administers tax-exempt organizations, employee retirement plans, and governmental entities. TE/GE reviews applications for exempt status and monitors ongoing nonprofit compliance with IRS rules.
Functional and Independent Offices
Layered across the four divisions are offices with cross-cutting authority:
- IRS Criminal Investigation (CI) — The sole federal law enforcement agency with jurisdiction over federal tax crimes. CI carries statutory arrest authority and operates independently from the civil examination and collection divisions, as detailed at IRS Criminal Investigation Division.
- Independent Office of Appeals — Administratively independent from the compliance and collection functions under IRC § 7803(e), Appeals reviews disputed tax determinations without the case having to proceed to court, a process covered at IRS Appeals Process.
- Taxpayer Advocate Service (TAS) — Headed by the National Taxpayer Advocate, a presidentially appointed officer who reports directly to the Commissioner and is prohibited by statute from reporting through the Commissioner on matters involving TAS recommendations (IRC § 7803(c)). TAS addresses systemic problems and individual hardship cases, as described at Taxpayer Advocate Service.
- Chief Counsel — The IRS's legal division, jointly reporting to the IRS Commissioner and the Treasury General Counsel, and responsible for issuing formal legal guidance including revenue rulings and private letter rulings.
Common scenarios
The division structure determines which IRS unit a taxpayer typically encounters:
- An individual W-2 filer receiving a correspondence audit is handled within W&I's examination function. The mechanics of that process are covered at IRS Correspondence Audits.
- A sole proprietor with payroll tax obligations falls under SB/SE for both examination and collection. Payroll obligations are outlined at Payroll Tax Requirements.
The contrast between W&I and SB/SE is particularly important: W&I handles simpler, higher-volume filings; SB/SE handles more complex compliance issues with more intensive field presence, including the IRS field audit process that involves in-person examination of books and records.
Decision boundaries
The organizational structure creates clear jurisdictional lines that affect how disputes escalate and where authority rests:
- Examination authority sits within the operating divisions; a Revenue Agent's Report (RAR) originates there.
- Appeals jurisdiction is triggered when a taxpayer formally protests an examination finding, at which point the case transfers to the Independent Office of Appeals, which operates outside divisional authority.
- Criminal referral moves a case from civil examination to Criminal Investigation — a distinct legal threshold requiring evidence of willful violation, not mere civil underpayment. Once CI accepts a case, civil proceedings are typically suspended.
- Collection authority within SB/SE and W&I is bounded by the IRS statute of limitations on collection: the IRS generally has 10 years from assessment to collect a liability under IRC § 6502.
- Taxpayer Advocate intervention is available when normal agency channels have failed or a taxpayer faces significant hardship, but TAS does not override substantive legal determinations — it addresses process failures and systemic breakdowns.
The IRS's mission and statutory authority sets the outer boundary for all divisional action: every operating unit acts under delegated authority from the Secretary of the Treasury, and no division can exceed the powers the Internal Revenue Code grants to the agency as a whole. The IRS budget and funding structure directly affects each division's staffing levels and operational capacity in any given fiscal year.