Need A IRS Tax Wage Garnishment Levy Release, Here Is What You Do, Former IRS agent

Fresh Start Tax

 

As a former IRS agent and teaching instructor many taxpayers receive a nasty gram from Internal Revenue Service, they find out that the IRS has either sent out a tax levy.

 

There is never a good time but it always seems to happen at the worst times, always.

The best thing you could possibly do is talk to a professional tax firm that can go over the various options that you have.

It is important that you understand the system and to know that a bank levy garnishment or a wage garnishment is not going to go away until Internal Revenue Service is contacted.

IRS  sent the bank levy or the wage garnishment levy because taxpayers have failed to contact them. Sadly, many taxpayers have never received prior bills or notices because they moved and the notices never found their way to be opened.

IRS sends out a series of 4 to 6 letters depending on the case, the dollar amount,  the type of delinquency and have formally requested demand for payment on the back taxes.

If the Internal Revenue Service  received no correspondence or no call the Internal Revenue Service through their computerized system will issue a bank levy or wage garnishment notice.

The Internal Revenue Service keeps all W-2s, 1099s, and all third-party income sources on a computer in which they draw upon to issue IRS bank levies or wage garnishments. The Internal Revenue Service keeps his income source list for six years.

So, now the ball is put in your court, you are not going to receive another paycheck and IRS has just frozen your bank account for 21 days so what is the next step.

The Internal Revenue Service will be waiting for you to contact them and give them information so they can literally close your case off the IRS enforcement computer.

 

What IRS is waiting before they can release a bank or wage garnishment:

The IRS has certain procedures through their internal revenue manual that dictates what the next step will be systems before they will release a bank or wage garnishment notice.

They are as follows:

1.IRS will completely review your current financial statement,

2.IRS knows all your tax returns are filed, and after this is done,

3. IRS is willing to close your case off of the IRS enforcement computer and issue a notice of  release of the wage or bank levy garnishment.

 

What You Should Do:

It is in your best interest to contact a professional tax firm to set up a current tax strategy and exit strategy and to develop a plan to get your levy and wage garnishment immediate released.

The Internal Revenue Service will review your financial statement on form 433 a or 433F  before they will make a determination on your case. It is their primary document they use to handle all open IRS collection cases.

The financial statement is the key

The filling out, the completion, and the sending out to Internal Revenue Service is the key to not only getting an immediate release of a bank levy or wage garnishment notice but settling and closing your case.

The Internal Revenue Service will make sure all documentation is received to make sure the correctness and accuracy of the financial statement.

IRS will also require for verification:

1. The last 3 to 6 months bank statements,

2.copies of pay stubs,

3. copies of all bills for the last 3 to 6 months, and,

4. more importantly they will evaluate your current living expenses to that against the national, regional and local  standards.

IRS will evaluate your house and utility expenses, your car expenses, your medical expenses, and any monthly bills that you have.

All bills in expenses must be within the IRS current standards to be acceptable to the Internal Revenue Service.

The bottom line,  IRS will review your current financial statement and usually make one of three determinations on how they will close your case off the enforcement computer and at the same time issue a release of bank levy or a wage garnishment notice.

Upon IRS receiving all the documentation on the financial statement IRS may determine to put you in:

1. a currently non-collectible hardship status,

2. ask you to enter into a monthly installment payment or,

3. maybe encourage you to file an offer in compromise because you meet certain qualifications to settle your tax debt to the offer in compromise program.

Can you do this yourself, well I can’t fix my own car I hire a mechanic so basically it all depends on your skill level, confidence and knowledge of the system.

Call us today for a free initial tax consultation we will walk you through the process of getting an immediate release on your wage or bank levy garnishment.

 

 

How Much Money Will IRS Settle For On My Tax Debt, Former IRS Agent Explains the System

Fresh Start Tax

 

 

There is a very specific procedure to understand on how much IRS may settle your tax debt.

 

To know about the procedures is the key to understand how you can settle your tax debt for the lowest possible amount.

There are hundreds or maybe a thousand firms promising IRS will settle your tax debt for pennies on the dollar.

While this is true, there are many scrupulous companies out there that simply take your money and you have a case that has no chance of settlement. I know because I receive hundreds of calls a year about tax resolution firms that take money from suspecting taxpayers hoping to settle their debt only to find out they have been ripped off. Make sure this does not happen to you.

 

A simple call to our office, free tax consultation, will tell you the truth about is the offer in compromise program right for you.

If you want to know the truth about the offer in compromise program I am the person you need to speak to. Since 1982.

I am a former IRS agent and teaching instructor with my former boss of the offer in compromise program.

I know the system inside and out I worked it I’ve trained others and have accepted offers in compromise for the federal government.

I am a true IRS tax expert, national speaker, and have been on FOXBusiness news and other outlets speaking about different matters about Internal Revenue Service.

There are many myths about the offer in compromise program. Everyone wants to settle their tax debt for pennies on the dollar but there are certain realities that exist about the program.

 

There are strict standards that the IRS employee before they accept an offer in compromise.

I know because I’ve both accepted offers in compromise taught new employees to accept the offer in compromise or reject them and I know the system inside and out.

I suggest that every client or taxpayer before they file an offer in compromise either do one of two things.

 

Number one, call a true tax expert who knows the offer in compromise inside out or number two, to fill out the IRS pre-qualifier tool for the offer in compromise.

If you’re calling a professional firm you want to make sure the representative has at least filed 100 offers.

It takes a lot of experience and knowledge to get an offer in compromise through. some are very simple and don’t need a lot of experience while others demand. expertise skill level.

The Internal Revenue Service spends several hours, much more than you think to accept an offer in compromise. As a general rule, the average agent can spend between 20 to 40 hours to accept an offer in compromise.

After that takes place, the revenue officer must convince their local supervisor, the area manager, and the General Counsel of Internal Revenue Service to accept the offer.

It literally goes back and forth in the system. Some exceptions do exist. Dollar amount has a lot to do in the direction your offer will take.

Why? because all offers and compromise are a matter of public record.

That public record is available at eight regional IRS offices in the United States. Even though offers are open to public inspection only one person last year looked through the IRS offers in compromise files. IRS is not made electronic copies for review.And I doubt in the future they will be well equipped to do that. IRS always has an issue about putting anything on computer for violation, corruption and infiltrating the IRS computers.

There is a base rule for Internal Revenue Service accepting an offer in compromise.

You must give IRS the total equity in all your assets before IRS will consider or contemplate the acceptance. Some exceptions exist, assets consist of houses, pension plans, stock, business valuations, IRS wants to make sure you’re actually borrowing the money to settle.

If you are interested in filing an offer in compromise you can call us today for a free initial tax consultation and I will walk you through the process of the true IRS debt settlement called the offer in compromise.

 

FACTS ON THE OIC:

IRS last year accepted approximately 30,000 offers in compromise in approximately 75,000 were accepted. The average settlement was $9500.

Don’t let this average settlement fool you, it’s based on an average of all the offers accepted.

Offers in compromise are excepted by formula not by judgment.

The basic formula :the total value of your assets times what you have left over a month on a current income and expense statement times the number of months left in the statute. Some exceptions do apply.In general the IRS is looking for reasonable collection probabilities.

 

Due diligence that can be used by IRS.

You want to make sure your financial statement is accurate.

IRS has a host of web-based tools that can search your assets, places were you work, your income, your real estate records, your car records, your business records, insurance records , financial statement you’ve given institutions, credit reports and financial statements you’ve given the credit companies.

The amount of due diligence that the IRS spends working on cases depend strictly on the dollar amount of the tax debt. If you over hundred thousand dollars IRS spends a great deal more honor offer case.

Make sure you are very honest in the submission of your offer in compromise

 

So. what is an offer in compromise, a tax debt settlement

An offer in compromise allows you to settle your tax debt for less than the full amount you owe.

It may be a legitimate option if you can’t pay your full tax liability, or doing so creates a financial hardship.

IRS consider your unique set of facts and circumstances:

• Ability to pay;
• Income;
• Expenses; and
• Asset equity.

IRS generally approve an offer in compromise when the amount offered represents the most we can expect to collect within a reasonable period of time.

 

The Offer in Compromise program is not for everyone.

 

If you hire a tax professional to help you file an offer, be sure to check his or her qualifications.

Make sure you are eligible to file:

Before IRS can consider your offer, you must be current with all filing and payment requirements.

You are not eligible if you are in an open bankruptcy proceeding.

Use the Offer in Compromise Pre-Qualifier to confirm your eligibility and prepare a preliminary proposal.

You’ll find step-by-step instructions and all the forms for submitting an offer in the Offer in Compromise Booklet, Form 656-B (PDF). Your completed offer package will include:

• Form 433-A (OIC) (individuals) or 433-B (OIC) (businesses) and all required documentation as specified on the forms;

• Form 656(s) – individual and business tax debt (Corporation/ LLC/ Partnership) must be submitted on separate Form 656;

• $186 application fee (non-refundable); and

• Initial payment (non-refundable) for each Form 656.

Select a payment option

Your initial payment will vary based on your offer and the payment option you choose:

• Lump Sum Cash: Submit an initial payment of 20 percent of the total offer amount with your application. If your offer is accepted, you will receive written confirmation. Any remaining balance due on the offer is paid in five or fewer payments.

• Periodic Payment: Submit your initial payment with your application. Continue to pay the remaining balance in monthly installments while the IRS considers your offer. If accepted, continue to pay monthly until it is paid in full.

If you meet the Low Income Certification guidelines, you do not have to send the application fee or the initial payment and you will not need to make monthly installments during the evaluation of your offer. See your application package for details.

Understand the process

While your offer is being evaluated:

• Your non-refundable payments and fees will be applied to the tax liability (you may designate payments to a specific tax year and tax debt);

• A Notice of Federal Tax Lien may be filed;

• Other collection activities are suspended;

• The legal assessment and collection period is extended;

• Make all required payments associated with your offer;

• You are not required to make payments on an existing installment agreement; and

• Your offer is automatically accepted if the IRS does not make a determination within two years of the IRS receipt date.

 

If your offer is accepted

• You must meet all the Offer Terms listed in Section 8 of Form 656, including filing all required tax returns and making all payments;
• Any refunds due within the calendar year in which your offer is accepted will be applied to your tax debt;
• Federal tax liens are not released until your offer terms are satisfied; and
• Certain offer information is available for public review by requesting a copy of a public inspection file.
If your offer is rejected
• You may appeal a rejection within 30 days using Request for Appeal of Offer in Compromise, Form 13711 (PDF).

Call us today for a free initial tax consultation and we will walk you through the system to get your offer in compromise accepted if you are a credible candidate for the program.

We only file offers in compromise if you are a suitable candidates. there is nothing worse than a professional tax from scamming people and taking money from unsuspecting people thinking their IRS offer in compromise has a shot of acceptability.

Just for the record, the feature of the offer in compromise is that IRS will release your federal tax liens that have been filed after the taxes paid off.

Also remember all your tax returns must be filed before the Internal Revenue Service will contemplate even working the offer in compromise.

Remember, offers in compromises are not for all people. You must speak to true tax experts to make sure you qualify and you should never give your money to any firm unless you speak to the person and you truly understand how IRS will accept your financial statement and accept the offer in compromise.

Call us today for a free tax consult.

 

How Much Money Will IRS Settle For On My Tax Debt, Former IRS Agent Explains the System

 

Settle Your Tax Debt Through an Offer in Compromise With Former IRS Agents + Ft. Lauderdale, Miami, Boca Raton, Pompano Beach, Palm Beaches

 

Fresh Start Tax

Yes, you can resolve your IRS tax debt through the Offer in Compromise, Local Experts, Call us to find out more, Free Consult

We worked out of the local South Florida IRS offices.

There are hundreds or maybe a thousand firms promising IRS will settle your tax debt for pennies on the dollar.

While this is true, there are many scrupulous companies out there that simply take your money and you have a case that has no chance of settlement. I know because I receive hundreds of calls a year about tax resolution firms that take money from suspecting taxpayers hoping to settle their debt only to find out they have been ripped off.

Make sure this does not happen to you.

A simple call to our office, free tax consultation, will tell you the truth about is the offer in compromise program right for you.

If you want to know the truth about the offer in compromise program I am the person you need to speak to. Since 1982.

I am a former IRS agent and teaching instructor with my former boss of the offer in compromise program.

I know the system inside and out I worked it I’ve trained others and have accepted offers in compromise for the federal government.

I am a true IRS tax expert, national speaker, and have been on FOXBusiness news and other outlets speaking about different matters about Internal Revenue Service.

 

There are many myths about the offer in compromise program.

 

There are strict standards that the IRS employee before they accept an offer in compromise. I know because I’ve both accepted offers in compromise taught new employees to accept the offer in compromise or reject them and I know the system inside and out.

I suggest that every client or taxpayer before they file an offer in compromise either do one of two things.

Number one, call a true tax expert who knows the offer in compromise inside out or number two, to fill out the IRS pre-qualifier tool for the offer in compromise.

If you’re calling a professional firm you want to make sure the representative has at least filed 100 offers.

It takes a lot of experience and knowledge to get an offer in compromise through. some are very simple and don’t need a lot of experience while others demand. expertise skill level.

The Internal Revenue Service spends several hours, much more than you think to accept an offer in compromise. As a general rule, the average agent can spend between 20 to 40 hours to accept an offer in compromise.

After that takes place, the revenue officer must convince their local supervisor, the area manager, and the General Counsel of Internal Revenue Service to accept the offer.

 

It literally goes back and forth in the system. Some exceptions do exist. Dollar amount has a lot to do in the direction your offer will take.

 

Why? because all offers and compromise are a matter of public record.

That public record is available at eight regional IRS offices in the United States. Even though offers are open to public inspection only one person last year looked through the IRS offers in compromise files. IRS is not made electronic copies for review.

There is a base rule for Internal Revenue Service accepting an offer in compromise.

You must give IRS the total equity in all your assets before IRS will consider or contemplate the acceptance. Some exceptions exist, assets consist of houses, pension plans, stock, business valuations, IRS wants to make sure you’re actually borrowing the money to settle.

If you are interested in filing an offer in compromise you can call us today for a free initial tax consultation and I will walk you through the process of the true IRS debt settlement called the offer in compromise.

FACTS:

IRS last year accepted approximately 30,000 offers in compromise in approximately 75,000 were accepted. The average settlement was $9500.

Don’t let this average settlement fool you, it’s based on an average of all the offers accepted.

Offers in compromise are excepted by formula not by judgment.

The basic formula are the total value of your assets times what you have left over a month on a current income and expense statement times the number of months left in the statute. Some exceptions do apply

Due diligence that can be used by IRS.

You want to make sure your financial statement is accurate.

IRS has a host of web-based tools that can search your assets, places were you work, your income, your real estate records, your car records, your business records, insurance records , financial statement you’ve given institutions, credit reports and financial statements you’ve given the credit companies.

The amount of due diligence that the IRS spends working on cases depend strictly on the dollar amount of the tax debt. If you over hundred thousand dollars IRS spends a great deal more honor offer case.

Make sure you are very honest in the submission of your offer in compromise

So. what is an offer in compromise, a tax debt settlement?

An offer in compromise allows you to settle your tax debt for less than the full amount you owe.

It may be a legitimate option if you can’t pay your full tax liability, or doing so creates a financial hardship.

IRS consider your unique set of facts and circumstances:

• Ability to pay;
• Income;
• Expenses; and
• Asset equity.

IRS generally approve an offer in compromise when the amount offered represents the most we can expect to collect within a reasonable period of time.

The Offer in Compromise program is not for everyone.

If you hire a tax professional to help you file an offer, be sure to check his or her qualifications.

Make sure you are eligible to file:

Before IRS can consider your offer, you must be current with all filing and payment requirements.

You are not eligible if you are in an open bankruptcy proceeding.

Use the Offer in Compromise Pre-Qualifier to confirm your eligibility and prepare a preliminary proposal.

You’ll find step-by-step instructions and all the forms for submitting an offer in the Offer in Compromise Booklet, Form 656-B (PDF). Your completed offer package will include:

• Form 433-A (OIC) (individuals) or 433-B (OIC) (businesses) and all required documentation as specified on the forms;

• Form 656(s) – individual and business tax debt (Corporation/ LLC/ Partnership) must be submitted on separate Form 656;

• $186 application fee (non-refundable); and

• Initial payment (non-refundable) for each Form 656.

Select a payment option

Your initial payment will vary based on your offer and the payment option you choose:

• Lump Sum Cash: Submit an initial payment of 20 percent of the total offer amount with your application. If your offer is accepted, you will receive written confirmation. Any remaining balance due on the offer is paid in five or fewer payments.

• Periodic Payment: Submit your initial payment with your application. Continue to pay the remaining balance in monthly installments while the IRS considers your offer. If accepted, continue to pay monthly until it is paid in full.

If you meet the Low Income Certification guidelines, you do not have to send the application fee or the initial payment and you will not need to make monthly installments during the evaluation of your offer.

Understand the process

While your offer is being evaluated:

• Your non-refundable payments and fees will be applied to the tax liability (you may designate payments to a specific tax year and tax debt);

• A Notice of Federal Tax Lien may be filed;

• Other collection activities are suspended;

• The legal assessment and collection period is extended;

• Make all required payments associated with your offer;

• You are not required to make payments on an existing installment agreement; and

• Your offer is automatically accepted if the IRS does not make a determination within two years of the IRS receipt date.

If your offer is accepted

• You must meet all the Offer Terms listed in Section 8 of Form 656, including filing all required tax returns and making all payments;
• Any refunds due within the calendar year in which your offer is accepted will be applied to your tax debt;
• Federal tax liens are not released until your offer terms are satisfied; and
• Certain offer information is available for public review by requesting a copy of a public inspection file.
If your offer is rejected
• You may appeal a rejection within 30 days using Request for Appeal of Offer in Compromise, Form 13711 (PDF).

Call us today for a free initial tax consultation and we will walk you through the system to get your offer in compromise accepted if you are a credible candidate for the program.

We only file offers in compromise if you are a suitable candidates.

Remember, offers in compromises are not for all people.

You must speak to true tax experts to make sure you qualify and you should never give your money to any firm unless you speak to the person and you truly understand how IRS will accept your financial statement and accept the offer in compromise.

Call us today for a free tax consult.

When you call our offices you will speak to true IRS tax experts, guaranteed.

Settle Your Tax Debt Through an Offer in Compromise With Former IRS Agents + Ft. Lauderdale, Miami, Boca Raton, Pompano Beach, Palm Beaches

You Can Resolve IRS Tax Debt Through Offer in Compromise, Former IRS Agent

Fresh Start Tax

Yes, you can resolve your IRS tax debt through the Offer in Compromise, Since 1982. Call us to find out more, Free Consult

 

There are hundreds or maybe a thousand firms promising IRS will settle your tax debt for pennies on the dollar.

While this is true, there are many scrupulous companies out there that simply take your money and you have a case that has no chance of settlement. I know because I receive hundreds of calls a year about tax resolution firms that take money from suspecting taxpayers hoping to settle their debt only to find out they have been ripped off.

Make sure this does not happen to you.

A simple call to our office, free tax consultation, will tell you the truth about is the offer in compromise program right for you.

If you want to know the truth about the offer in compromise program I am the person you need to speak to. Since 1982.

I am a former IRS agent and teaching instructor with my former boss of the offer in compromise program.

I know the system inside and out I worked it I’ve trained others and have accepted offers in compromise for the federal government.

I am a true IRS tax expert, national speaker, and have been on FOXBusiness news and other outlets speaking about different matters about Internal Revenue Service.

There are many myths about the offer in compromise program.

 

There are strict standards that the IRS employee before they accept an offer in compromise. I know because I’ve both accepted offers in compromise taught new employees to accept the offer in compromise or reject them and I know the system inside and out.

I suggest that every client or taxpayer before they file an offer in compromise either do one of two things.

 

Number one, call a true tax expert who knows the offer in compromise inside out or number two, to fill out the IRS pre-qualifier tool for the offer in compromise.

If you’re calling a professional firm you want to make sure the representative has at least filed 100 offers.

It takes a lot of experience and knowledge to get an offer in compromise through. some are very simple and don’t need a lot of experience while others demand. expertise skill level.

The Internal Revenue Service spends several hours, much more than you think to accept an offer in compromise. As a general rule, the average agent can spend between 20 to 40 hours to accept an offer in compromise.

After that takes place, the revenue officer must convince their local supervisor, the area manager, and the General Counsel of Internal Revenue Service to accept the offer.

It literally goes back and forth in the system. Some exceptions do exist. Dollar amount has a lot to do in the direction your offer will take.

Why? because all offers and compromise are a matter of public record.

That public record is available at eight regional IRS offices in the United States. Even though offers are open to public inspection only one person last year looked through the IRS offers in compromise files. IRS is not made electronic copies for review.

There is a base rule for Internal Revenue Service accepting an offer in compromise.

You must give IRS the total equity in all your assets before IRS will consider or contemplate the acceptance. Some exceptions exist, assets consist of houses, pension plans, stock, business valuations, IRS wants to make sure you’re actually borrowing the money to settle.

If you are interested in filing an offer in compromise you can call us today for a free initial tax consultation and I will walk you through the process of the true IRS debt settlement called the offer in compromise.

FACTS:

IRS last year accepted approximately 30,000 offers in compromise in approximately 75,000 were accepted. The average settlement was $9500.

Don’t let this average settlement fool you, it’s based on an average of all the offers accepted.

Offers in compromise are excepted by formula not by judgment.

The basic formula are the total value of your assets times what you have left over a month on a current income and expense statement times the number of months left in the statute. Some exceptions do apply

Due diligence that can be used by IRS.

You want to make sure your financial statement is accurate.

IRS has a host of web-based tools that can search your assets, places were you work, your income, your real estate records, your car records, your business records, insurance records , financial statement you’ve given institutions, credit reports and financial statements you’ve given the credit companies.

The amount of due diligence that the IRS spends working on cases depend strictly on the dollar amount of the tax debt. If you over hundred thousand dollars IRS spends a great deal more honor offer case.

Make sure you are very honest in the submission of your offer in compromise

 

So. what is an offer in compromise, a tax debt settlement

An offer in compromise allows you to settle your tax debt for less than the full amount you owe.

It may be a legitimate option if you can’t pay your full tax liability, or doing so creates a financial hardship.

IRS consider your unique set of facts and circumstances:

• Ability to pay;
• Income;
• Expenses; and
• Asset equity.

IRS generally approve an offer in compromise when the amount offered represents the most we can expect to collect within a reasonable period of time.

 

The Offer in Compromise program is not for everyone.

 

If you hire a tax professional to help you file an offer, be sure to check his or her qualifications.

Make sure you are eligible to file:

Before IRS can consider your offer, you must be current with all filing and payment requirements.

You are not eligible if you are in an open bankruptcy proceeding.

Use the Offer in Compromise Pre-Qualifier to confirm your eligibility and prepare a preliminary proposal.

You’ll find step-by-step instructions and all the forms for submitting an offer in the Offer in Compromise Booklet, Form 656-B (PDF). Your completed offer package will include:

• Form 433-A (OIC) (individuals) or 433-B (OIC) (businesses) and all required documentation as specified on the forms;

• Form 656(s) – individual and business tax debt (Corporation/ LLC/ Partnership) must be submitted on separate Form 656;

• $186 application fee (non-refundable); and

• Initial payment (non-refundable) for each Form 656.

Select a payment option

Your initial payment will vary based on your offer and the payment option you choose:

• Lump Sum Cash: Submit an initial payment of 20 percent of the total offer amount with your application. If your offer is accepted, you will receive written confirmation. Any remaining balance due on the offer is paid in five or fewer payments.

• Periodic Payment: Submit your initial payment with your application. Continue to pay the remaining balance in monthly installments while the IRS considers your offer. If accepted, continue to pay monthly until it is paid in full.

If you meet the Low Income Certification guidelines, you do not have to send the application fee or the initial payment and you will not need to make monthly installments during the evaluation of your offer. See your application package for details.

Understand the process

While your offer is being evaluated:

• Your non-refundable payments and fees will be applied to the tax liability (you may designate payments to a specific tax year and tax debt);

• A Notice of Federal Tax Lien may be filed;

• Other collection activities are suspended;

• The legal assessment and collection period is extended;

• Make all required payments associated with your offer;

• You are not required to make payments on an existing installment agreement; and

• Your offer is automatically accepted if the IRS does not make a determination within two years of the IRS receipt date.

 

If your offer is accepted

• You must meet all the Offer Terms listed in Section 8 of Form 656, including filing all required tax returns and making all payments;
• Any refunds due within the calendar year in which your offer is accepted will be applied to your tax debt;
• Federal tax liens are not released until your offer terms are satisfied; and
• Certain offer information is available for public review by requesting a copy of a public inspection file.
If your offer is rejected
• You may appeal a rejection within 30 days using Request for Appeal of Offer in Compromise, Form 13711 (PDF).

Call us today for a free initial tax consultation and we will walk you through the system to get your offer in compromise accepted if you are a credible candidate for the program.

We only file offers in compromise if you are a suitable candidates.

Just for the record, the feature of the offer in compromise is that IRS will release your federal tax liens that have been filed after the taxes paid off.

Remember, offers in compromises are not for all people. You must speak to true tax experts to make sure you qualify and you should never give your money to any firm unless you speak to the person and you truly understand how IRS will accept your financial statement and accept the offer in compromise.

Call us today for a free tax consult.

You Can Resolve IRS Tax Debt Through Offer in Compromise, Former IRS Agent