Did the IRS send you a notice or letter proposing an individual tax assessment?
As former IRS ages and teaching instructors we can walk you through the process of the next step in going over every possible solution to minimize the tax that the Internal Revenue Service is trying to propose at some point will want to collect.
When you receive this letter from the Internal Revenue Service they are letting you know that they have no record of receiving any tax return from you.
in most cases the tax returns were never sent in an IRS must follow up on this. The IRS process and method of this is by proposing an individual tax assessment and the letter 2566 is their methodology to let you know you some back tax money to the Internal Revenue Service because of your lack of filing a tax return.
Many times these assessments are not correct but IRS simply does not have all the facts and information.
IRS uses their computer system and their information bank to prepare this proposed tax assessment. The Internal Revenue Service searches W-2s, 1099s, and other third-party information forms to prepare this tax return.
If this is happened to you and you disagree with the tax assessment and don’t know what to do call us today for a free initial tax consultation and we will walk you through the process.
We are a full-service tax firm tax has worked thousands of cases since 1982
Info on the Letter
Tax Information Center : IRS : Audits and Tax Notices
IRS Letter 2566 – Proposed Individual Tax Assessment
The IRS has no record of receiving your tax return so they have proposed taxes due based on information they received from others.
IRS Letter 2566, Proposed Individual Tax Assessment
Why you received IRS Letter 2566
You did not file a tax return for the year shown on the notice.
The IRS received income information reported under your tax identification number from others, such as employers, financial institutions, and other payers.
The IRS sent Letter 2566 to notify you that since you did not file a tax return as required, the IRS prepared one for you, using the information they have from others.
This notice will include a report showing all income items and the taxes, penalties, and interest proposed.
You have the right to file an original return which may reduce the amount of the proposed taxes.
Notice deadline: 30 days
If you miss the deadline:
You will lose your right file an appeal with the IRS Office of Appeals and the IRS will send you a Statutory Notice of Deficiency which gives you 90 days to file a petition with the U.S. Tax Court before the IRS records the tax liability to your tax account.
However, you can still file an original tax return after the tax liability is recorded.
Want more help? Call us today for free initial tax consultation and we can walk you through the process.
Help Received IRS Letter 2566 + Proposed Individual Tax Assessment * former irs agent help