Tax Help – IRS Audit, IRS Tax Debt, File Back Tax Returns – Nashville, Memphis, Knoxville

Fresh Start Tax

 

We can affordably resolve your IRS Problem.

We have been in practice since 1982 and are A plus rated by the Better Business Bureau.

Since 1982, we have successfully resolved hundreds and hundreds of IRS cases.

We have successfully represented individuals, corporations, partnerships for IRS tax audits.

We have settled IRS tax debt through the Offer in Compromise Program called Fresh Start Initiative and filed a voluminous amount of old, past, and back tax returns.

All our work is done in house by a professional staff of tax experts including tax attorneys, tax lawyers, certified public accountants, and enrolled agents, former IRS agents, managers and tax instructors who have over 60 years of direct work experience at the Internal Revenue Service.

 

Areas of Professional Tax Representation

 

  • On staff, Board Certified Tax Attorney’s, IRS Tax Lawyers, Certified Public Accountants, Enrolled Agents,
  • Full Service Accounting Tax Firm,
  • We taught Tax Law in the IRS Regional Training Center
  • Former IRS Agents, Managers and Instructors with over 60 years experience in the local, district and regional IRS offices.
  • Highest Rating by the Better Business Bureau  “A” Plus
  • Fast, affordable, and economical
  • Licensed and certified to practice in all 50 States
  • Nationally Recognized Veteran /Published  Former IRS Agent
  • Nationally Recognized Published EZINE Tax Expert
  • As heard on GRACE Net Radio.com – Monthly Radio Show-Business Weekly

 

Areas of Professional Tax Practice:

 

  • Same Day IRS & State Tax Representation
  • Offers in Compromise / IRS Tax Debt Settlements
  • Immediate Release of IRS Bank Levies or IRS Wage Garnishments
  • Tax Relief from a IRS Bill, Letter or Notice of “Intent to Levy”
  • IRS Tax Audits IRS Hardships Cases or Unable to Pay
  • Payment Plans, Installment Agreements, Structured agreements
  • Abatement of Penalties and Interest
  • State Sales Tax Cases
  • Payroll / Trust Fund Penalty Cases / 6672
  • Filing Late, Back, Unfiled Tax Returns
  • Tax Return Reconstruction
  • FBAR/FATCA

 

Tax Help – IRS Audit, IRS Tax Debt, File Back Tax Returns – Nashville, Memphis, Knoxville

 

Owe, File Back Taxes, IRS Problems, File Late Returns – Nashville, Knoxville, Memphis

Fresh Start Tax

 

The Affordable Tax Option!

We are an affordable team of IRS tax experts who specialize in fixing any IRS problems you have. We have 60 years with the IRS.

We are A+ rated by the Better Business Bureau have been in practice since 1982.

We are comprised of tax attorneys, tax lawyers, certified public accountants, and former IRS agents, managers and tax instructors who have a combined 60 years of direct work experience in the local, district, and regional tax offices of the Internal Revenue Service.

All our work is done in-house and we can handle anything from a first IRS notice including tax court.

We are your affordable tax option for resolving any problems such as owing IRS back taxes, filing back tax returns, or filing multiple years of late tax returns.

We can not only file all your old back returns we can also work on a tax settlement at the same time.

 

How does IRS settle back taxes – through the Offer in Compromise Program

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

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

IRS considers your unique set of facts and circumstances. Every taxpayer set of circumstances is different. If you heard someone settled their tax debt for pennies on the dollar it very well could be true if they are qualified and suitable candidate.

 

IRS looks at four main factors they are as follows

1. Ability to pay;
2. Income;
3. Expenses; and
4. 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.
Make sure you are eligible for the Offer in Compromise

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 tool that you can find on our website to see if you are a suitable candidate.

 

Submitting  your offer

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.

 

Most Importantly Select a payment option

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

1. Lump Sum Cash:

Submit an initial payment of 20 percent of the total offer amount with your application. Wait for written acceptance, then pay the remaining balance of the offer in five or fewer payments.

2.Periodic Payment:

Submit your initial payment with your application. Continue to pay the remaining balance in monthly installments while the offer is being considered.

Call us today to learn more if you owe or need to file back taxes.

We can fix all your IRS problems, file your late tax returns and workout effective tax settlement that meets all your current financial needs.

 

Owe, File Back Taxes, IRS Problems, File Late Returns ,- Nashville, Knoxville, Memphis,

 

How to Work out a Deal with IRS to Settle IRS Tax Debt, Former IRS

Fresh Start Tax

 

I am a Former IRS Agent and Teaching instructor of the Offer in Compromise.) private practice since 1982. I am a tax expert on how to work a deal out with the Internal Revenue Service and settle a tax debt.

Being a former IRS agent one of the first questions I  am asked by people who owe IRS tax debt is what does it take to work out a deal or settle my IRS tax debt?

It is a bit tricky when you work out a deal to settle your tax debt with the IRS. You must be a suitable and qualified candidate to settle your IRS tax debt and this process called offer in compromise.

 

  • IRS accepts 38% of all offers in compromise filed.
  • There were approximately 78,000 offers in compromise file last year with the Internal Revenue Service.
  • Those that were accepted were settled for an average of $.14 on the dollar.

 

The Process to work out a deal with the IRS and settle a IRS Tax Debt

 

Offers In Compromise/Settle Tax Debt

What is an OIC?

An offer in compromise (OIC) is an agreement between a taxpayer and the Internal Revenue Service that settles the taxpayer’s tax liabilities for less than the full amount owed.

If the liabilities can be fully paid through an installment agreement or other means, the taxpayer will in most cases not be eligible for an OIC.

 

In order to be eligible for an OIC, the taxpayer must have:

1. filed all tax returns,

2. made all required estimated tax payments for the current year and

3. made all required federal tax deposits for the current quarter if the taxpayer is a business owner with employees.

 

The IRS will not accept an OIC unless the amount offered by the taxpayer is equal to or greater than the reasonable collection potential the RCP.

The RCP is how the IRS measures the taxpayer’s ability to pay.

The RCP includes the value that can be realized from the taxpayer’s assets, such as real property, automobiles, bank accounts, and other property.

In addition to property, the RCP also includes anticipated future income, less certain amounts allowed for basic living expenses.

The IRS may accept an OIC based on three (3) grounds.

First. Acceptance is permitted if there is doubt as to liability.

This ground is only met when there is a genuine dispute as to the existence or amount of the correct tax debt under the law.

Second. Acceptance is permitted if there is doubt that the amount owed is fully collectible. Doubt as to collectibility exists in any case where the taxpayer’s assets and income are less than the full amount of the tax liability.

Third. Acceptance is permitted based on effective tax administration.

An offer in compromise may be accepted based on effective tax administration when there is no doubt that the tax is legally owed and that the full amount owed can be collected, but requiring payment in full would either create an economic hardship or would be unfair and inequitable because of exceptional circumstances.

 

Submissions of the Settling to Tax Debt through the OIC

When submitting an OIC based on doubt as to collectibility or based on effective tax administration, taxpayers must use the most current version of Form 656, Offer in Compromise, and also submit Form 433-A (OIC) (PDF), Collection Information Statement for Wage Earners and Self-Employed Individuals, and/or Form 433-B (OIC) (PDF), Collection Information Statement for Businesses.

A taxpayer submitting an OIC based on doubt as to liability must file a Form 656-L (PDF), Offer in Compromise (Doubt as to Liability), instead of Form 656 and Form 433-A (OIC) and/or Form 433-B (OIC). Form 656 can be found in the Offer in Compromise Booklet, Form 656-B (PDF).

 

Fees

A taxpayer must submit a $186 application fee with the Form 656. Do not combine this fee with any other tax payments.

There are, however, two exceptions to this requirement.

First, no application fee is required if the OIC is based on doubt as to liability.

Second, the fee is not required if the taxpayer is an individual (not a corporation, partnership, or other entity) who qualifies for the low-income exception. This exception applies if the taxpayer’s total monthly income falls at or below 250 percent of the poverty guidelines published by the Department of Health and Human Services. Section 4 of Form 656 contains the Low Income Certification guidelines to assist taxpayers in determining whether they qualify for the low-income exception.

A taxpayer who claims the low-income exception must complete section 4 of Form 656.

 

How to Pay to Settle IRS Tax Debt

Taxpayers may choose to pay the offer amount in a lump sum or in installment payments.

A “lump sum offer” is defined as an offer payable in 5 or fewer installments within 5 or fewer months after the offer is accepted.

If a taxpayer submits a lump sum offer, the taxpayer must include with the Form 656 a nonrefundable payment equal to 20 percent of the offer amount.

This payment is required in addition to the $186 application fee.

The 20 percent payment is “nonrefundable” meaning it will not be returned to the taxpayer even if the offer is rejected or returned to the taxpayer without acceptance.

Instead, the 20 percent payment will be applied to the taxpayer’s tax liability. The taxpayer has a right to specify the particular tax liability to which the IRS will apply the 20 percent payment.

An offer is called a “periodic payment offer” under the tax law if it is payable in 6 or more monthly installments and within 24 months after the offer is accepted.

When submitting a periodic payment offer, the taxpayer must include the first proposed installment payment along with the Form 656.

This payment is required in addition to the $186 application fee.

This amount is nonrefundable, just like the 20 percent payment required for a lump sum offer.

Also, while the IRS is evaluating a periodic payment offer, the taxpayer must continue to make the installment payments provided for under the terms of the offer.

These amounts are also nonrefundable.

These amounts are applied to the tax liabilities and the taxpayer has a right to specify the particular tax liabilities to which the periodic payments will be applied.

Ordinarily, the statutory time within which the IRS may engage in collection activities is suspended during the period that the OIC is under consideration and is further suspended if the OIC is rejected by the IRS and where the taxpayer appeals the rejection to the IRS Office of Appeals within 30 days from the date of the notice of rejection.

 

How to Work out a Deal with IRS to Settle IRS Tax Debt, Former IRS

IRS Federal Tax Lien – When Can IRS File a Tax Lien, What You Need to Know

Fresh Start Tax

There’s nothing worse than having a federal tax lien filed against you from the Internal Revenue Service.

It will absolutely destroy your credit score.

Being a former IRS agent I am asked all the time when does IRS file a federal tax lien?

Please find their policy statement below.

If you need help getting your federal tax lien released  call us today for a free initial tax consultation.
Policy Statement 5-47

Notices of lien generally filed only after taxpayer is:

  • contacted in person,
  • by telephone or
  • by notice:

 

Notice of lien filing in jeopardy assessment cases

In jeopardy assessment cases, a notice of lien shall be filed immediately after notice and demand has been delivered (whether or not received by the taxpayer) and the assessment remains unpaid.

 

Other notice of lien filing requirements

A notice of lien must be filed:

  • prior to instituting levy action on property in possession of the taxpayer; and
  • prior to service of final demand for payment if there is reasonable probability that suit may later be instituted.

 

Call us today to get a release of a Federal Tax Lien.

Offer in Compromise – May be Rejected because of Public Policy, Former IRS

Fresh Start Tax

 

IRS accepts 38% of all offers in compromise filed.

However……

The majority of those offers in compromise that are rejected are based on the fact they don’t meet the current standards and criteria that IRS looks for to be accepted.

I should know, I am a former IRS agent/ revenue officer that both worked the program and taught the program as a former IRS agent.

Now in private practice, many taxpayers come to me seeking representation and want to settle their tax debt through an offer in compromise but because of how their assessment or liability arose,  they will be unable to settle their tax debt through the offer in compromise.

It is important to know that all offers in compromise and are accepted are placed in the district office for public review.

Anyone can go into a district office and speak to a manager and asked to inspect all offers in compromise that have been asked accepted via the Internal Revenue Service.

With that in mind, the Internal Revenue Service reserves the right to reject an offer compromise based on public policy.

An offer compromise that is rejected because of public policy is rejected because it would undermine compliance with the tax laws.

An example of this would be someone who is laundered money, the IRS  set up a tax assessment and that taxpayer is wanting to settle their debt. No way!

There are a multitude of reasons that IRS may reject an offer in compromise based on public policy.

Call us today for free initial tax consultation and we may be able to show you ways that you can address your situation IRS and get your offer accepted if possible,.

Below you will find the IRS policy statement regarding the public policy

 

IRS Policy Statement 5-89

1.2.14.1.15  (07-26-1960)
Policy Statement 5-89

 

Offer may be rejected for public policy reasons

If the acceptance of an offer might in any way be detrimental to the Government’s interests, it may be rejected even though it is shown conclusively that the amounts offered are greater than could reasonably be collected in any other manner.

IRS Tax Debt Settlement, File Back Tax Returns – Memphis, Nashville, Knoxville

Fresh Start Tax

 

Affordable Former IRS Agent and Managers who really know the system.

If you need to settle a back IRS tax debt or tax bill call us today and speak directly to affordable IRS tax experts.

We have over 60 years of combined work experience in the local, district, and regional tax offices of the Internal Revenue Service.

Our firm is comprised of tax attorneys, tax lawyers, certified public accountants, enrolled agents and former IRS agents.

We have over 206 years of being in a professional tax practice and we are A+ rated by the Better Business Bureau.

We have been in practice since 1982.

We know every possible tax solution to settle an IRS tax debt.With over 60 years at IRS we know all there is to know, use it to your advantage.

 

File Back Tax Returns and Settle

We can file all your back tax returns with little or no records.

Being former IRS agents, managers and tax instructors we have learned the techniques of preparing returns on reconstructive methods used by Internal Revenue Service.

We were former IRS instructors and have taught this procedure to new IRS agents.

Call us today for free initial tax consultation.

 

Beware:

Before choosing a professional tax firm beware of Internet sites that are marketing or advertising companies.

The sites will have no bios of tax professionals.

They will sell your information to third parties for the highest bidder.

Whoever you choose, make sure they have true tax professionals listed on their site.

 

IRS Tax Debt Settlement, File Back Tax Returns , Memphis, Nashville, Knoxville,