Going Paperless With the IRS’s Blessing
Here’s something many business owners don’t realize: the IRS has formally approved paperless recordkeeping since 1997. You don’t need to keep a single paper receipt if your digital system meets the requirements laid out in Revenue Procedure 97-22 and Revenue Procedure 98-25.
That’s not a loophole or a gray area — it’s explicit IRS guidance that has been in place for nearly three decades. Yet many businesses still hoard shoeboxes of fading thermal receipts, unsure whether digital copies will hold up in an audit.
They will. And in most cases, a well-organized digital system is actually better than paper for audit defense. This guide explains the IRS requirements, walks you through practical implementation, and shows you how to build a compliant digital archive that protects your deductions. For the broader context on receipt rules, start with our comprehensive guide to IRS receipt requirements.
Rev. Proc. 97-22: The Foundation of Digital Receipts
What It Covers
Revenue Procedure 97-22, issued in 1997, establishes the IRS’s requirements for electronic storage systems that image, or otherwise digitally reproduce, paper documents. In practical terms, it’s the ruling that says: yes, you can scan your receipts and throw away the originals.
The revenue procedure applies to all books and records that a taxpayer is required to retain under the Internal Revenue Code and its regulations. That includes:
- Receipts and invoices
- Canceled checks (or digital equivalents)
- Bills and statements
- Contracts and agreements
- Payroll records
- Any other documents supporting tax return positions
For a deeper dive into how Rev. Proc. 97-22 specifically applies to receipt scanning, see our dedicated guide on digital receipts and Rev. Proc. 97-22.
The Five Core Requirements
Rev. Proc. 97-22 establishes five requirements that any electronic storage system must meet:
1. Accurate and Complete Reproduction
Your digital copy must be an accurate and complete reproduction of the original document. This means:
- The scan or photograph must be legible — all text, numbers, and details clearly readable
- Nothing should be cut off, cropped out, or obscured
- Color reproduction isn’t strictly required, but grayscale or color scans are preferable to pure black-and-white for receipts with colored ink or highlights
- Resolution should be sufficient to read all text (generally 300 DPI or higher for scanned documents)
2. Indexing System
Documents must be stored in a system that provides an indexing mechanism allowing the IRS to locate, identify, and access specific documents. In practice, this means you need a way to:
- Search for documents by date, vendor, amount, or category
- Retrieve a specific receipt when requested
- Organize documents in a logical, navigable structure
A folder on your desktop named “receipts 2024” with 800 unsorted JPEGs doesn’t meet this requirement. A system organized by date, vendor, and expense category does.
3. Protection Against Alteration
Your system must include reasonable controls to prevent alteration, destruction, or deterioration of the stored documents. The IRS wants assurance that the digital record you produce during an audit is the same as what was originally captured.
This doesn’t necessarily require blockchain-level security. Reasonable controls include:
- Storing documents in a system that logs modifications
- Using file formats that preserve original data (PDF, TIFF) rather than easily editable formats
- Maintaining access controls so not everyone can delete or modify records
- Using cloud storage with version history
4. Accessibility and Readability
Records must be readily accessible and readable for as long as they’re required to be retained. This means:
- You must be able to produce records promptly upon IRS request
- The format must be viewable without specialized or obsolete software
- Records must remain accessible for the full retention period (generally three to seven years — see our guide on how long to keep receipts)
5. Quality Assurance
You need a quality assurance program that regularly tests your system to confirm records are being stored accurately and remain retrievable. For a small business, this can be as simple as periodically verifying that recent scans are legible and that older records are still accessible.
Rev. Proc. 98-25: Machine-Readable Electronic Records
What It Adds
While Rev. Proc. 97-22 covers digitized images of paper documents, Rev. Proc. 98-25 addresses records that originate electronically — data from accounting software, point-of-sale systems, electronic payment platforms, and other automated data processing systems.
If you use QuickBooks, Xero, FreshBooks, or similar software, Rev. Proc. 98-25 governs how those electronic records must be maintained.
Key Requirements
- Machine-readable format: Electronic records must be retained in a format that can be processed by a computer — not just printed out
- Data integrity: The electronic records must contain enough detail to support the figures on your tax return
- Audit trail: The system should maintain a trail from source documents to the final tax return figures
- Hardcopy capability: You must be able to produce paper printouts of electronic records if the IRS requests them
Do You Need to Notify the IRS? (Spoiler: No)
This is one of the most common questions — and one of the most common sources of outdated advice. Before 2017, businesses using electronic storage systems were required to notify the IRS. Rev. Proc. 97-22 originally included a notification requirement.
However, since 2017, the IRS no longer requires advance notification. You can implement an electronic recordkeeping system without filing any special forms or letters with the IRS. Just make sure your system meets the five requirements above.
If you encounter advice telling you to notify the IRS before going paperless, that advice is outdated.
Practical Implementation for Small Businesses
The IRS requirements sound formal, but implementing a compliant system is straightforward. Here’s how to do it at each complexity level.
Option 1: Organized Folder System
The simplest compliant approach uses cloud storage (Google Drive, Dropbox, iCloud) with a structured folder hierarchy:
Business Records/ ├── 2024/ │ ├── Income/ │ │ ├── 1099s/ │ │ ├── Invoices/ │ │ └── Payment Records/ │ ├── Expenses/ │ │ ├── Advertising/ │ │ ├── Car-Vehicle/ │ │ ├── Insurance/ │ │ ├── Meals/ │ │ ├── Office-Supplies/ │ │ ├── Professional-Services/ │ │ ├── Rent/ │ │ ├── Travel/ │ │ └── Utilities/ │ └── Tax-Returns/
Pros: Free or low cost, simple to set up, works with any cloud provider
Cons: Manual filing, no automatic categorization, no OCR search, relies on discipline
Compliance notes: Meets the basic requirements if you maintain consistent naming conventions (e.g., “2024-03-15_OfficeDepot_$47.52.pdf”), the cloud provider maintains version history, and you verify accessibility periodically.
Option 2: Dedicated Receipt Management Tool
Purpose-built tools handle the compliance requirements automatically:
- Accurate reproduction: Built-in scanning optimized for receipt capture
- Indexing: Automatic data extraction (date, vendor, amount, category) with search capability
- Alteration prevention: Cloud storage with audit trails and version control
- Accessibility: Records available from any device, exportable on demand
- Quality assurance: Automated verification of scan quality
SparkReceipt, for example, combines receipt scanning with automatic organization and export capabilities — addressing all five Rev. Proc. 97-22 requirements in a single workflow.
Pros: Automated categorization, searchable archive, built-in compliance features, minimal manual effort
Cons: Monthly or annual cost, requires adopting a new tool
Option 3: Full Accounting Integration
For businesses with higher transaction volumes, integrating receipt management with accounting software (QuickBooks, Xero, etc.) creates a complete system that satisfies both Rev. Proc. 97-22 (document imaging) and Rev. Proc. 98-25 (electronic records).
Pros: Comprehensive system, direct link from receipts to books to tax return, strongest audit position
Cons: Most complex to set up, highest cost, may be overkill for simple businesses
Choosing the Right Approach
| Factor | Folder System | Dedicated Tool | Full Integration |
|---|---|---|---|
| Monthly transactions | < 20 | 20 – 200 | 200+ |
| Setup effort | Low | Low | Medium-High |
| Ongoing effort | High | Low | Low |
| Cost | Free | $-$$ | $$-$$$ |
| Search capability | File names only | Full OCR search | Full OCR + accounting data |
| Audit readiness | Good (if maintained) | Strong | Strongest |
Backup and Disaster Recovery
Digital records are only as good as your backup strategy. The IRS requires that records remain accessible for the full retention period — a hard drive failure, ransomware attack, or cloud provider outage shouldn’t wipe out years of tax documentation.
The 3-2-1 Backup Rule
Follow this standard backup approach:
- 3 copies of your data
- 2 different storage types (e.g., cloud + external drive)
- 1 offsite copy (cloud storage qualifies)
Practical Backup Strategies
- Primary: Cloud-based receipt management tool or cloud storage (Google Drive, Dropbox)
- Secondary: Automatic sync to a second cloud provider or local NAS device
- Tertiary: Annual export to an external hard drive stored in a secure location
Testing Your Backups
A backup you’ve never tested is a backup you can’t trust. At least once a year:
- Verify you can access your backup copies
- Open several random files to confirm they’re readable
- Test your restoration process — can you recover a specific document?
- Verify that older records (from previous tax years) are still accessible
Audit Response Workflow With Digital Records
One of the biggest advantages of a well-organized digital system is how it transforms the audit experience. Here’s what an audit response looks like with paper vs. digital:
With Paper Records
- Receive IRS notice requesting documentation for specific deductions
- Search through boxes, folders, and envelopes for relevant receipts
- Discover several receipts have faded to the point of illegibility
- Realize two key receipts are missing entirely
- Make photocopies of what you have
- Write explanations for missing documents
- Mail everything and hope for the best
With Digital Records
- Receive IRS notice requesting documentation for specific deductions
- Search your digital archive by date, vendor, category, or amount
- Select the relevant documents
- Export as a PDF package with a summary cover sheet
- Submit electronically or print crisp copies
Digital records don’t fade, don’t get lost in drawers, and can be retrieved in minutes rather than hours. In an audit, speed and completeness of your response signal to the examiner that your records are well-maintained — which often works in your favor.
File Formats and Long-Term Preservation
Recommended File Formats
- PDF: The gold standard for document preservation. Widely supported, difficult to edit without leaving traces, and readable decades from now.
- TIFF: High-quality image format favored by document management professionals. Excellent for long-term preservation.
- JPEG: Acceptable for receipt photos, but use high quality settings to prevent compression artifacts from making text illegible.
- PNG: Good for screenshots and digital receipts. Lossless compression preserves quality.
Formats to Avoid
- Proprietary formats that require specific software to open
- Low-resolution images where text is difficult to read
- Heavily compressed JPEGs with visible artifacts
Retention Periods: How Long to Keep Digital Records
Digital storage is cheap, so the practical answer is: keep everything for at least seven years. But the legal minimums vary:
| Situation | Retention Period |
|---|---|
| Standard tax records | 3 years from filing date |
| Income understatement > 25% | 6 years |
| Failure to file a return | No limit |
| Fraud | No limit |
| Employment tax records | 4 years |
| Property/asset records | Until disposition + 3 years |
For detailed guidance on each scenario, see our guide on how long to keep receipts.
Common Electronic Recordkeeping Mistakes
1. Keeping Only Bank Statements
Bank and credit card statements show amounts and vendors but not what was purchased or the business purpose. You need itemized receipts in addition to statements.
2. Relying on a Single Storage Location
A single point of failure — whether it’s one hard drive, one cloud account, or one phone — puts your entire archive at risk. Always maintain backups.
3. Inconsistent Scanning Quality
A blurry, partially cropped receipt photo doesn’t meet the “accurate and complete reproduction” requirement. Take a moment to ensure each scan is clear and complete before moving on.
4. No Indexing System
Dumping 500 files into a single folder with names like “IMG_4523.jpg” doesn’t satisfy the indexing requirement. Use descriptive file names, folder structures, or a tool that provides searchable metadata.
5. Ignoring Born-Digital Records
Many expenses now generate digital receipts from the start — email confirmations, PDF invoices, online subscription records. These need to be captured and stored with the same discipline as scanned paper receipts. Don’t let them languish in your email inbox.
Security Considerations
Tax records contain sensitive information — your business financials, vendor relationships, and in some cases personal data. Protect your digital archive with:
- Strong passwords on all accounts that store tax records
- Two-factor authentication enabled on cloud storage and receipt management tools
- Encryption for locally stored files (most modern operating systems offer built-in drive encryption)
- Access controls limiting who can view, edit, or delete records
- Regular security updates on all devices used to access records
Building Your System: A Step-by-Step Plan
Ready to go paperless? Here’s a practical implementation plan:
- Choose your approach: Folder system, dedicated tool, or full integration (see comparison table above)
- Set up your structure: Create folders by year and category, or configure your chosen tool’s categories
- Establish a capture routine: Scan paper receipts immediately, forward email receipts to your archive, download digital invoices at time of receipt
- Implement backups: Set up at least two backup locations following the 3-2-1 rule
- Test your system: Can you find a specific receipt from last month in under two minutes? If not, improve your indexing
- Schedule quarterly reviews: Check for gaps in documentation, verify backup integrity, and ensure older records remain accessible
- Migrate existing records: If you have boxes of paper receipts from the current and previous tax years, scan and digitize them. Then securely dispose of the originals (shred, don’t just toss)
The Bottom Line
The IRS gave businesses the green light to go paperless nearly three decades ago. Rev. Proc. 97-22 and 98-25 lay out clear, achievable requirements for electronic recordkeeping — and since 2017, you don’t even need to notify the IRS that you’re using a digital system.
A well-implemented digital archive isn’t just more convenient than paper — it’s actually stronger for audit defense. Digital records don’t fade, can’t be misplaced in a drawer, and can be searched, organized, and produced in minutes.
The key is building a system that meets the five core requirements: accurate reproduction, indexing, alteration prevention, accessibility, and quality assurance. Whether you achieve that with a simple folder structure or a dedicated tool, the result is the same — a paperless, IRS-compliant recordkeeping system that protects your deductions and saves you time.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute tax, legal, or financial advice. IRS recordkeeping requirements may change, and specific situations may require additional documentation. Consult a qualified tax professional for advice tailored to your circumstances. SparkReceipt provides tools for receipt management and expense tracking but does not provide tax advice.