Before a levy or garnishment occurs, you will receive a letter from the IRS which is an “IRS Notice of Intent to Levy.” This letter will allow you 30 days to respond or the IRS will issue the levy or garnishment to seize your assets or wages. If the IRS does not receive a response or payment, then you will receive an “IRS Final Notice of Intent to Levy.” Upon receiving this notice, there is generally a short deadline until they begin garnishing your wages or issuing a levy on your bank accounts. There are several other notices you should familiarize yourself with before a levy or garnishment occurs:
Phase One – Investigation
Our tax professional, when appropriate and needed, will request an immediate stay of enforcement with the IRS or State. After, you will undergo a rigorous financial analysis to identify your current and projected financials under IRS (and/or State standards), the master tax file will be pulled, tax transcripts will be obtained, then our tax professional will review them, penalty abatements qualifications are to be checked, statute of limitations on collection of tax debts will be evaluated, the possible resolutions (IA, CNC, PPIA, OIC, other) with pros and cons of each will be detailed, and lastly, the final recommended resolution will be provided to you.
Phase Two – Compliance
If needed, compliance is done by making sure missing tax returns are filed (or ones with mistakes are corrected). It is important to maintain compliant with IRS rules and regulations and ensure that future returns are in good standing. In some cases, by filing missing returns or fixing ones with mistakes, the taxpayer receives a refund from having overpaid in taxes.
You have rights as a taxpayer, and our experienced tax professionals will work with the IRS to find alternatives to these debilitating collection methods of a levy or garnishment. Reach out to CuraDebt—a reputable debt and tax relief company in the business for since 2001 year. We can help you manage your levy or garnishment with the IRS.