A tax compliance report shows whether you have filed tax returns and paid taxes on time. Employers, federal agencies, banks and other authorities sometimes request a tax check to see if you’ve met all your tax obligations. The report is called: Letter 6201 for individuals and sole proprietors Letter 6575 for other businesses Find out how to get one and what the report shows. On this page Get a tax compliance report Tax compliance report vs. transcript What the report shows Tax certificate for federal contract awards Get a tax compliance report You can download a copy of your tax compliance report from your individual online account or business tax account. If you have resident alien status and are leaving the U.S., see how to get a tax clearance document. Tax compliance report vs. transcript If someone requests a tax compliance check, it’s better to give them a tax compliance report than a transcript. A tax compliance report shows less of your personal or business information and covers a longer period. A tax transcript shows the full details of your tax return (including income, dependents and filing status) and covers only 1 year. What the report shows The report doesn’t show your income, dependents or filing status. Here’s what it shows. Your compliance status Summarizes your compliance status as: compliant, non-compliant or compliance issue. Compliant You’ve met all your tax obligations. You filed all returns, and paid all taxes on time. You don’t have an overdue tax return or unpaid tax debt. Noncompliant You have an overdue tax return or unpaid tax debt. The data is current as of the date of the report. If you recently submitted a return or payment, it takes 7 to 10 days to post to your account. Compliance issue You have one or more of these issues: Are paying a balance due through an installment agreement Have a history of filing or paying taxes late Received a civil fraud penalty, even if it’s fully paid Have a balance due that’s under administrative or judicial review Filing information Lists your tax filing history. If you’re a sole proprietor required to file excise or employment tax returns, it shows any delinquent business tax returns. It doesn’t show corporate or partnership tax information. Amount you owe Lists any federal taxes owed or says no taxes are due. Additional information Lists any of these that apply to you: Late payments of federal income, employment or excise taxes for the past 4 tax years Tax returns not filed or filed late in the past 6 years Fraudulent failure to file or civil tax fraud penalties assessed within 5 years Tax certificate for federal contract awards The tax certificate for award use (Letter 6575) shows whether your business has a seriously delinquent tax debt as defined by the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2019. A business may download the letter if needed for federal contracting purposes.