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Taxes

IRS Seeks More Than $1 Billion From SVB for Taxes

The IRS claims Silicon Valley Bank owes both corporate income and employment taxes spanning a four-year period ending in 2023.

A property manager representative passes a sign at Silicon Valley Banks headquarters in Santa Clara, California on March 10, 2023. (Noah Berger/AFP via Getty Images/TNS)

By Sabrina Willmer, Bloomberg News (TNS)

The IRS is seeking to recover about $1.4 billion in taxes it claims are owed by Silicon Valley Bank, the regional lender that failed last year. 

The federal tax agency claims the California-based lender owes both corporate income and employment taxes spanning a four-year period ending in 2023, according to a lawsuit filed Tuesday in Washington federal court. The complaint was brought against the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, which is the receiver of the collapsed bank. 

The complaint comes on the heels of a similar one from New York City, which is trying to collect more than $2.1 million in back taxes it claims Silicon Valley Bank owes. The bank’s collapse almost a year ago represented the biggest U.S. bank failure in more than a decade and marked the start to a crisis in the sector. In January, the parent company of SVB entered a deal with major creditors as the bankruptcy case moved toward a resolution. 

The IRS noted in its court filing that the amount sought represents an estimate “because pending examinations of the tax returns were underway.”

The agency determined that some of the employment taxes had been paid, according to the filing, which didn’t specify how much.

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