For alternative investment funds, tax season has never been a simple, low-effort process. The potential pitfalls are many, from carried interest compliance to proper reporting of complex instruments. As of early 2026, the IRS enforcement landscape is shifting toward a technologically driven, data-focused model, aimed at high-income earners and complex partnerships, including private investment funds. While the agency faces significant budget cuts and staff losses, it is utilizing artificial intelligence and advanced analytics to identify noncompliance, maintaining high-value enforcement despite a lower overall audit rate.
For investors and fund managers, this shift can have financial consequences, in addition to harming a fund/fund manager’s credibility. In the absence of a robust and capable tax team, funds may be at risk of missteps that could trigger amendments, penalties, and a complicated, costly restatement process.
Understanding the most common mistakes is essential for assessing risk and ensuring the fund’s tax positions and documentation are as strong as its investment strategy. While this is not a complete and all compassing list, it does highlight some of the most common issues that we have come across recently.
Why Fund Managers Should Care
Check out our 2025/2026 Tax Planning Guide to read more about carried interest compliance.
Alternative funds have a variety of structures to accommodate diverse investor profiles, such as master‑feeder funds, blockers, SPVs, and offshore entities. When a fund is improperly structured or doesn’t match the fund’s actual economics or operations, the IRS sees it as a red flag, which may lead to unwanted tax exposure and unexpected tax leakage.
Risks for investors and fund managers
A fund’s structure needs to be well thought out and properly executed to achieve the (present and future) goals of all parties involved. Investors increasingly evaluate structural soundness as part of operational due diligence. Fund managers should take a good look at their structure with their tax team to make sure it still matches the needs of their investor base and is executed properly.
For more information on UBTI, please check out our Anchin Alert.
State tax authorities have become more aggressive, and many now coordinate directly with the IRS, creating a more complex enforcement environment. Funds that focus solely on federal compliance risk are missing obligations that can cascade into multi‑state audits.
As more states move to a market-based sourcing approach and seek to collect tax where the benefit is received rather than where the fund is or where the work is done, state exposure is more relevant than ever for partnerships.
Partnerships often unknowingly have nexus in multiple states and may be on the hook for years of past due tax and compliance. It is extremely important to have a tax team that understands state and local issues to provide timely guidance and identify which states have filing requirements. Many states have updated their rules in the past few years and will continue to do so. What was considered proper in the past may now be a red flag in current and future years.
Why this matters
Investors increasingly expect funds to demonstrate a comprehensive, multi‑jurisdictional compliance framework that adapts to the rapidly changing and dynamic state and local tax environment.
For more information on state disparities, read our Anchin Alert and visit the State & Local Tax page on our website.
Passive Foreign Investment Company (PFIC) rules are notoriously complex, and funds with foreign investments or offshore vehicles often underestimate the compliance burden.
Investor‑level implications
For investors, mishandling a PFIC investment can translate directly into a weaker after-tax return on investment and open the door to a costly challenge by the IRS.
Hedge funds frequently trade instruments with specialized tax rules, such as options, swaps, futures, publicly traded partnerships (PTP’s), and structured products. These instruments are fertile ground for IRS adjustments due to their inherent complexity.
Key risks
Investors rely on accurate reporting to understand their tax exposure and minimize their risk. Managers must work with their tax team to ensure that all transactions are completely understood and reported accordingly.
Generally, the first item that the IRS will request is the Fund’s partnership agreement (LPA). Any mismatch between what is outlined in the LPA and what has been reported opens the door to a slew of questions.
Why this matters to stakeholders
Investors expect the fund’s legal and tax frameworks to be aligned. Any disconnect between the two opens the door to costly errors and challenges.
The IRS’s renewed focus on the private investment fund space is not a temporary trend; it’s a structural shift. Funds that treat tax compliance as a once‑a‑year exercise are more exposed than ever, while those that invest in strong governance, documentation, oversight, and collaboration with their tax professionals are better positioned to protect returns and maintain investor confidence.
For investors, these issues should be part of due diligence and ongoing monitoring. For fund managers, they are an opportunity to demonstrate operational excellence and differentiate their funds in a competitive market.
For further information and guidance on how you and your fund can ensure it is equipped to handle the complex tax landscape in which it operates, please reach out to George Teixeira, Matthew Talia, or your Anchin Relationship Partner.