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6 Things You Can Do If You Owe The IRS

June 5, 2015 by admin

Steven A. Leahy
6 Things You Can Do If You Owe The IRS

By Steven A Leahy

My office helps businesses and families fix their IRS problems fast. What you need to know is there are only Six Things you can do if you owe the IRS.

The first thing you can do is – pay the IRS. Generally, I recommend that taxpayers pay the IRS any way they can. Borrow from family and friends, even credit cards, better to owe anyone else but the IRS. You can still apply to abate any penalties after you pay. But, it is best to resolve your IRS problem as quickly as you can.

The second thing you can do if you owe the IRS money is to enter into an installment agreement. There are several different kinds of installment agreement: Guaranteed Installment, Streamlined Installments; Partial Pay Installments and Full pay installments. Determining what your monthly payment should be is more an art than a science. If you enter into an installment agreement and default, you will find yourself right back where you started. So, be careful! Don’t let the IRS force you into an agreement you can’t afford.

The next thing you can do if you owe the IRS is an Offer-in-Compromise. An Offer-in-Compromise is a reduced amount the IRS will agree to accept “in compromise.” The recent IRS Fresh Start Initiative changed some of the parameters of this program, making it easier for taxpayers to qualify. Historically only about 18% of applications were approved. So all of those commercials you hear about “paying the IRS pennies on the dollars” actually very rarely occurred. It may take a year or longer before you find if your offer is approved or denied – once the offer is denied you may find yourself right back where you started.

The fourth thing you can do is have the IRS declare you Currently Not Collectible. If you can prove to the IRS that you don’t have enough money at the end of each month to pay your reasonable and necessary expenses and pay the IRS. The IRS will agree to leave you alone for a time – not forever. But they will give you time to recover, without worrying about the IRS garnishing your wages of levying your bank accounts. If your income increases, the IRS may ask you to re-establish your currently not collectible status, or work out an installment agreement. Often, this is a good alternative. People often panic because they know they owe the IRS and know they can’t pay them – so they bury their head in the sand. Instead, address the problem and prove you can’t pay.

You can also file bankruptcy if you owe the IRS – that’s the fifth thing you can do. Taxes in bankruptcy can be very complicated, and not all taxes are dischargeable in bankruptcy. But many taxes are dischargeable, and we have helped many taxpayers walk away from their tax obligations. Because taxes in bankruptcy are complicated, make sure you find an attorney who understands tax issues and not just bankruptcy. Not all bankruptcy attorneys do.

The final thing you can do if you owe the IRS money, and this is what many of my clients do before they hire us to help them, is nothing. You can stick your head in the sand, pretend the IRS will forget about you and worry day and night about freezing bank accounts, garnishing wages and taking away your assets.

While there are only six things you can do if you owe the IRS, there are unlimited ways to mix these options to achieve the best results for you. So, if you have IRS problems, you should work with a local law firm. Better, you should give me a call – Opem Tax Resolutions & The Law Office of Steven A. Leahy, PC (312) 664-6649. I want to help! Call NOW to set up your FREE Consultation.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: “non collectible”, back taxes, installment agreement, irs non-collectible status, irs options, IRS problem, IRS Tax Debt, Offer in compromise Settlement, tax resolution chicago

How You Can Legally Settle Your Bad Debt, Avoid Foreclosure And Get A Fresh Beginning Starting Today…

April 1, 2015 by admin

Steven A. Leahy

How You Can Legally Settle Your Bad Debt, Avoid Foreclosure And Get A Fresh Beginning Starting Today…

By Steven A Leahy

On my radio show, The IRS Radio Hour, we talk a lot about helping people with financial problems. What I have discovered is when people have IRS problems, they often have other financial issues haunting them. My mission is to help as many people as I can achieve full financial recovery. That means, helping with more than just IRS problems. I help people with foreclosure issues, loan modifications, bankruptcy and other debt related problems.

A perfect case study can illustrate this approach:

Bob & Eddie (not their real names) ran a successful home repair business. But, because of health problems and the economic crash, their business seemed to disappear overnight. They were facing immediate foreclosure on two properties, bad debt law suits and massive IRS debt with liens & levies pending. Bob had given up and went into a state of depression. Eddie heard our ad and decided to see if I could help.

After meeting with me face to face, they decided to hire me to help them to full financial recovery. My team and I immediately began our investigation, filed our appearance in court on both of the Foreclosure Actions and our Power of Attorney with the IRS. We slowed down the foreclosure actions, and stopped the IRS collections efforts in order to give us time to complete our investigation.

In this case, after close consultations with Bob and Eddie, we represented them in a Chapter 7 bankruptcy. The bankruptcy resolved their bad debt issues, the threat of deficiency in the foreclosure cases and most, but not all, of their IRS problems.

After discharge of their Chapter 7 bankruptcy, Bob and Eddie were confident to start up a new business. With their new found freedom, they rebuilt their home repair business into a successful enterprise. We negotiated a loan modification on an investment property. Because the second foreclosure was pending more than 2 years after their discharge, they had an opportunity to save some money. In addition, we negotiated a cash for keys arrangement on their home, whereby they received $35,00.00 in cash upon surrender of the home.

Because we timed the chapter 7 correctly, much of their IRS debt was discharged in bankruptcy. There still remained, however, a small balance. We negotiated an installment agreement with the IRS and protected them from further levies and other IRS collection efforts.

Finally, they used this $35,000.00, in addition to money they saved during the duration of the foreclosure case, and purchased a new home. We represented them in the purchase of their new home and they moved on with their lives, in a new home, with a minimum payment to the IRS and free of any other debt.

So, if you have an IRS problem, you should consult with a local attorney. The strategy you use will make ALL the difference in how your life progresses. Before you do anything, you should give me a call. We can discuss your options, complete your an investigation and determine the best course of action. – Opem Tax Resolutions & The Law Office of Steven A. Leahy, PC (312) 664-6649. Call NOW to set up your FREE Consultation.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: back taxes, bankruptcy chicago, debt help, foreclosure defense, IRS Tax Debt, short sale

IRS Lien vs Levy

February 26, 2015 by admin

Steven A. Leahy
IRS Lien vs Levy

By Steven A Leahy

On the IRS Radio Hour I often talk about the way the IRS works. The most important aspect of how the IRS works goes directly to how the IRS can collect assessed taxes from taxpayers, outside of voluntary agreements, like installment agreements, offers-in-compromise, currently not collectible, and bankruptcy. When a taxpayer ignores, or otherwise fails to negotiate a work out with the IRS, the IRS may take some drastic actions. The most dramatic action is a levy. This article will clear up IRS Lien vs Levy.

Many taxpayers confuse a levy and a lien. A federal tax lien is the federal government’s legal claim against a taxpayer’s property when a taxpayer neglects or fails to pay a tax debt. The IRS files a public document, the Notice of Federal Tax Lien, with the county recorder to alert the taxpayer’s creditors that the federal government has a legal right to the taxpayer’s property. A lien does not result in seizure of any of the taxpayer’s property.

A federal levy, on the other hand, is a legal seizure of a taxpayer’s property to satisfy a tax debt. If a taxpayer fails to pay the assessed tax, or make satisfactory arrangements to settle the debt, the IRS may seize any type of asset, real or personal.

There is a three-pronged procedure in place the IRS must follow in order to justify a levy. First, after the IRS assesses a tax, they must send a Notice and Demand For Payment. Second, the taxpayer must neglect or refuse to pay the tax. Finally, the IRS must send the taxpayer a Final Notice of Intent to Levy and Notice of Your Right to A Hearing. The Taxpayer has 30 days from the date of that notice to request a Collection Due Process hearing with the Office of Appeals.

Once the IRS fulfills their obligations under the three-pronged procedure, they can seize any property the taxpayer is holding (including, cars, boats, houses), or any property someone else is holding (wages, retirement accounts, bank accounts, rental income, accounts receivables, cash value of life insurance or commissions).

In my practice I have seen levies against rental income – the revenue officer actually visited the taxpayer’s tenants each month to collect the rent before the taxpayer could collect; levies against insurance payments due a doctor – the IRS ordered all insurance carriers to send all payments to the IRS; levies on commissions – the IRS contacted the contract employer and levied, took, all commissions the taxpayer was due. A Taxpayer should never under-estimate the creativity of an IRS Revenue Officer looking to levy assets to collect on an IRS obligation.

The two most common levies involve bank accounts and wages; low hanging fruit. Remember, a bank must report any interest paid of at least $10.00 with form 1099-int. So, the IRS knows where most every taxpayer banks. Once a bank receives a Notice of Levy, the taxpayer’s account is frozen – the bank must hold any money in the account, up to the amount you owe, for twenty-one days. After twenty-one days the bank must send the money, plus interest, to the IRS. Any money deposited in the account after the date of levy, is NOT included in the levy. However, the IRS can issue more than one levy on the same account. I have seen accounts levied each week for months on end.

Finally, the levy most taxpayer’s fear is the wage levy. A wage levy is often referred to as a wage garnishment. The IRS issues a wage levy to the taxpayer’s employer, and the employer is obligated to send all net income, less exemptions, to the IRS CONTINUOUSLY. The more a taxpayer makes, the more the IRS will take. Generally, the exemptions are calculated by determining the standard deduction and the amount deductible for exemptions on an income tax return for the year the levy is served, divided by Fifty-two. The exempt income is designed to provide minimal sustenance – not enough to pay your expense. To do that, the taxpayer must work out an agreement with the IRS.

If you are facing IRS Collection Efforts, you should work with a local law firm that understands the IRS Collection procedures and will work to get you the best deal possible. You should give me a call – Opem Tax Resolutions & The Law Office of Steven A. Leahy, PC (312) 664-6649. Call NOW to set up your FREE Consultation.

Filed Under: IRS Radio Hour Tagged With: “Owe Taxes”, back taxes, Chicago Tax Help, Help With IRS, IRS Levy, IRS Lien, irs options, IRS Options Help, IRS problem, IRS Tax Debt, Offer in Compromise IRS, Tax Debts, Tax Help Chicago, tax options Chicago, Tax Problem Help, tax resolution, taxes and bankruptcy

IRS Audits – What are they looking for?

February 26, 2015 by admin

Steven A. Leahy
IRS Audits – What are they looking for?

By Steven A Leahy

The IRS calls an audit an “Examination of Returns.” The IRS accepts most federal tax returns just as they are filed. Some returns, however, are selected for review. The IRS selects returns for audit by computerized screening, random sample, or by an income document matching program. An examination can take place in several ways. Some audits are handled exclusively by US Mail, in the taxpayer’s home or place of business, at an IRS office or at your representative’s office. The time, place, and manner of the audit are negotiable.

Here are nine “red flags” the IRS uses to select a return to audit:

1. Make a mistake on your tax return – Gross errors will bring immediate scrutiny to your return and cause the IRS to audit your return. Simple math errors, not signing a paper return, leaving off or incorrectly listing your social security number are common ways to invite IRS scrutiny.

2. Round off the entries on your tax form – Generally, life doesn’t happen in round numbers. If you use round numbers, it tells the IRS that the numbers may be fictitious, or at least not accurate.

3. File late, or not at all – When you file late, the return is not processed with the hoard of annual filers. Instead, your return will be processed by a person, looking at the details of your return.

4. Be a Tax Protester – Tax protesters don’t believe the IRS has legitimate authority to collect taxes and they thumb their nose at the IRS by filing returns that indicate zero tax owed (if a tax protester files a return at all). Tax protestors can count on the IRS assigning a revenue agent to review it.

5. Have unreported Foreign accounts – Foreign banks have been reporting American account holders to the IRS for some time now. So, even if you don’t report the foreign account, you can be assured that the foreign financial institution will.

6. Don’t report some income – Companies are to issue a 1099 for any payments over $600.00 or W-2s to employees. So, if you don’t report some income, the company that paid you will likely report the payment in a 1099 or W-2 and the IRS will have the paperwork to match against your return.

7. Claim large charitable contributions – This is an easy target for the IRS. The IRS can simply audit you by mail and ask for substantiation for all deductions.

8. Take a repeated loss on a home based business – If a business loses money for 3 out of 5 years, the IRS considers that activity to be a hobby, not a business. If it is a hobby, you can only deduct losses equal to or less than income. You can’t use the losses in a hobby to offset taxes from other income.

9. Use an unscrupulous tax preparer – When the IRS notices a specific tax preparer is preparing returns that generate large refunds the IRS is likely to audit ALL the taxpayers who used that tax preparer. So, be careful whom you hire.

Generally, the IRS has three years from the due date to audit a return. That explains why the IRS will usually conduct an audit for three consecutive years, rather than just one. There are exceptions to the three year rule. For example, if you underreport your income by more than twenty-five percent, the IRS has six years to audit. And, if a taxpayer files a fraudulent or false return, there isn’t a time limit on an audit.

So, if you are facing an IRS audit, or have already been audited, you should work with a local law firm that will work to get you through the audit process and collections in the best way possible. You should give me a call – Opem Tax Resolutions & The Law Office of Steven A. Leahy, PC (312) 664-6649. Call NOW to set up your FREE Consultation.

Filed Under: IRS Radio Hour Tagged With: “Owe Taxes”, back taxes, Chicago Tax Help, Help With IRS, IRS Levy, IRS Lien, irs options, IRS Options Help, IRS problem, IRS Tax Debt, Offer in Compromise IRS, Tax Debts, Tax Help Chicago, tax options Chicago, Tax Problem Help, tax resolution, taxes and bankruptcy

What is a 1099-A?

February 16, 2015 by admin

Steven A. Leahy
What is a 1099-A?

By Steven A Leahy

For the last several weeks we have been discussing 1099-Cs on The IRS Radio Hour. Any discussion of 1099-Cs naturally leads to the question – What is a 1099-A? This post will address that question.

As we discussed, 1099-C is a tax record sent by financial institutions to debtors when the lender forgives or cancels a debt in excess of $600.00. A 1099-A Acquisition or Abandonment of Secured Property is a related document for “[c]ertain lenders who acquire an interest in property that was security for a loan or who have reason to know that such property has been abandoned.” Generally, a taxpayer will receive this form in the mail after losing a property to foreclosure, or an automobile to repossession. Often, a taxpayer will receive both a 1099-A and 1099-C.

There is a lot of confusion out there on exactly which tax document a lender should send out. That’s why there isn’t consistency. Some lenders will send out a 1099-A after a foreclosure; others will send out a 1099-C; still, others will send out both forms, just to cover themselves. Some lenders may send a 1099-A first, to report the foreclosure to the IRS, and a 1099-C later, to document the decision to cancel the debt. It is vital that these documents are treated correctly for tax preparation purposes. A mistake may result in tens of thousands of dollars in IRS liabilities.

1099-As contain three important pieces of information, found in Boxes 2, 4 and 5. First, Box 2 reports the principal loan balance. Box 4 reports the fair market value (FMV) of the foreclosed property (generally, the price the house sold for at the foreclosure auction). Finally, Box 5 reports whether the taxpayer is personally liable for repayment: recourse vs. non-recourse. The very same exceptions and exclusions available for 1099-C income, are available for 1099-A income. Notably, Title 11 (bankruptcy), “Insolvency Exclusion,” and the exclusion offered by the Mortgage Forgiveness Debt Relief Act (MFDRA).

Some important information regarding the tax implications are not included on Form 1099-A. If the property that was lost was an investment property, rather than the taxpayers principle residence, the taxpayer will also need to supply the basis for the property ((Cost + improvements) – depreciation) in order to calculate the tax implications. Investment property losses may be fully deductible.

The key to excluding or exempting 1099-C debt forgiveness, and 1099-A property abandonment, from taxable income lies in tax preparation. If a taxpayer qualifies for an exception or exemption and fails to prepare the appropriate IRS forms, the IRS will complete an examination and assess a deficiency for that tax year. In addition to attaching the 1099-A or 1099-C to the taxpayer’s tax return, often IRS Form 982 Reduction of Tax Attributes Due to Discharge of Indebtedness is also required. Form 982 is used to determine the amount of discharged indebtedness that can be exempted or excluded from gross income.

If you are considering hiring a tax professional to complete your 2014 tax return, consider giving Opem Tax Resolutions and The Law Office of Steven A. Leahy, PC a call. We prepare old unfiled tax returns, as well as current returns. So, if you are a number of years behind in your filing, we can help get you in compliance with the IRS. Call (312) 664-6649 today and ask Bonnie to set up a time to talk me about your tax returns.

If you have an ongoing IRS problem – installment agreement, recent offer-in-compromise or currently not collectible status I recommend the IRS Protection Plan offered by Opem Tax Resolution and the Law Office of Steven A. Leahy, PC. This program anticipates the tax compliance requirements including, timely tax preparation, on-going IRS monitoring, resolution of IRS actions (cancellation of installment agreements or currently not collectible status and defaulting an offer in compromise). In addition, developing a relationship with a tax team will give you access to tax planning to avoid IRS problems in the future and minimize your tax burden.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: “Owe Taxes”, 1099, 1099-A, 1099-C, Chicago Tax Help, Help With IRS, IRS Help, IRS Help Chicago, IRS Tax Debt, tax attorney chicago, Tax Preparation, Tax Solution

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