Estimate Your Tax Savings
Online calculators cannot give you a reliable answer about IRS tax debt resolution because the math depends on facts the calculator does not have: your asset equity, allowable expenses, collection statute, prior compliance, and the specific penalty composition of your balance. The free case review can.
What Drives Real Savings
Real savings on IRS tax debt come from four sources: penalty abatement, Offer in Compromise settlement, collection statute expiration, and proper characterization of disputed items in audits or appeals. Each is fact-specific.
Penalty abatement is the highest-volume source of savings. The IRS has assessed five-figure failure-to-file and failure-to-pay penalties that can frequently be reduced or eliminated through First-Time Abate or reasonable cause requests.
Offer in Compromise savings are the largest in dollar terms when they happen, but only a fraction of taxpayers qualify based on their Reasonable Collection Potential.
Collection statute expiration means waiting out the 10-year clock under IRC Section 6502 on older liabilities, which can be the right strategy when other resolutions are not available.
How the Free Case Review Works
We pull your IRS account transcripts, review the assessment history, identify the collection statute expiration date for each tax year, and analyze your financial profile. From there, we project the savings achievable through each potential resolution path and recommend the one with the best outcome for your situation.
The review itself is free. We will quote any engagement fee in writing before any work begins, so you know the math up front.
What Information to Gather
Helpful (but not required) before the call: your most recent IRS notices, your last filed tax return, a rough estimate of your monthly income and necessary expenses, and a list of your significant assets and debts. If you do not have these, we can pull transcripts and work from there.
Talk to a real tax attorney. No retainer. No pressure. No more sleepless nights.
The hardest part is picking up the phone. After that, we take it from here. Free, confidential, and protected by attorney-client privilege.