En esta noticia

Thousands of taxpayers do not know that a large tax debt can have consequences far beyond fines and interest. In certain cases, the United States Government can block the issuance of new passports, prevent their renewal, and even request the revocation of passports already in effect.

The measure arises from coordination between the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and the Department of State, which allows restricting passports of people with significant unresolved federal tax debts.

The procedure that can block and even revoke all passports

According to official IRS information, a person can be certified as a seriously delinquent taxpayer when they have an enforceable federal debt of more than USD 66,000, including taxes, interest, and penalties. This threshold is adjusted periodically for inflation.

For the measure to apply, the IRS must have initiated formal collection actions, such as:

  • The filing of a federal tax lien
  • The issuance of a tax levy (levy)
  • The exhaustion of certain administrative remedies

They prohibit and invalidate the passports of all those who postponed this procedure

Once the IRS certifies the debt to the Department of State, the authorities can:

  • Deny the issuance of a new passport
  • Reject a renewal application
  • Suspend the ongoing renewal process
  • Revoke an active passport in certain cases

The final decision on the issuance, restriction, or revocation of the passport rests with the Department of State.