Title 5 › Part III— EMPLOYEES › Subpart I— Miscellaneous › Chapter 95— PERSONNEL FLEXIBILITIES RELATING TO THE INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE › § 9505
Before September 30, 2013, IRS senior executives who run important programs can get a performance bonus even if section 5384(b)(2) would otherwise limit it, if the Secretary of the Treasury decides the award is deserved based on the executive’s performance. The Secretary must consider things like progress on goals under the Government Performance and Results Act of 1993, subtitle III of title 40, Revenue Procedure 64–22 (as in effect on July 30, 1997), taxpayer service surveys, and other measures set with the IRS Oversight Board. Any award over 20 percent of an executive’s basic pay must be approved by the Secretary. The Secretary also sets the total amount of performance awards that can be paid to career senior IRS executives each fiscal year under this rule and section 5384. That total cannot be larger than the maximum that would apply under paragraph (3) of section 5384(b) if “the Internal Revenue Service” were used instead of “an agency.” When calculating awards for other parts of the Department of the Treasury under section 5384(b)(3), the IRS is not counted. No bonus may be paid if it would make an executive’s total yearly pay exceed the maximum allowed under section 104 of title 3, even if section 5307 would otherwise allow the bonus.
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Government Organization and Employees — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
5 U.S.C. § 9505
Title 5 — Government Organization and Employees
Last Updated
Apr 3, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60