


For taxpayers who have a tax debt under $25,000, a simple Streamlined Installment Plan can be applied for with IRS Form 9465.
Payments for this agreement will be calculated using a 72-month payment plan or divided by the months left in the Statute of Limitations for the debt, if less than 6 years.
Streamlined installment plans with a total tax debt of $25,000 or less are entitled to a simplified application process, which can be completely entirely online as well.
There are very few forms to fill out in comparison to other tax debt payment plans, and you do not need to submit to a thorough financial checkup.
However, the IRS may still place a federal tax lien on your account until your debt is completely paid, or until you have made at least a few back-to-back payments with no history of defaulting.
If you owe more than $25,000 but less than $50,000, you are still entitled to a streamlined installment agreement, but with an additional caveat. This is where the Fresh Start initiative comes into play.
If your current financial situation is especially dire, you should ask a tax professional about considering an Offer in Compromise.
This is a special installment agreement that can severely cut down what you owe, but with very stringent requirements.
To qualify for an Offer in Compromise, you must fill out a special Installment Agreement Request along with a unique OIC-specific Collection Information Statement. The IRS will use the information outlined on this special CIS to determine whether your finances support the offer you have outlined in your request.
Unlike other installment agreements, an OIC has no strict guidelines on the taxpayer’s end. However, the IRS can choose to accept or discard your offer.
To create an offer the IRS will be more likely to accept, you must determine your own Reasonable Collection Potential (RCP). This is effectively the sum of every liquid asset you possess, along with the quick sale value of every property you own, and your current disposable or net income (anything earned after taxes), with very few exemptions.
If the IRS determines that you cannot pay off your entire tax debt even on a shoestring budget, then your RCP will be used as a baseline for what to expect from a monthly installment plan.
Any offer that drops below the IRS’s calculated RCP (based on the information you provide) will generally be rejected.

For taxpayers who owe less than $25,000 and have temporary financial difficulty paying their tax debt, a Tiered Installment Plan is suggested.
With this program, the IRS will set low monthly payments for the first year of the agreement, with the payments increasing over time until the agreed pay-off amount is reached.
The purpose of a tiered installment plan is to give low-income taxpayers a chance to get back on their feet and focus on improving their financial situation, while still paying down their tax debt and keeping the IRS off their backs with additional collection actions.
Not all installment agreements are created equally. You can work with a tax professional to determine an installment agreement that better suits your needs, such as increasing your monthly payments to pay off your debt faster at a higher monthly cost or making lump sum payments to the IRS BEFORE applying for an installment agreement, so you can slip under the $50,000 threshold and avoid a much more thorough and headache-inducing Collection Information Statement.


Creating your own OIC can be difficult. Consider consulting a tax professional first to determine whether an offer in compromise is currently in your best interests.
If you owe the IRS money, then getting in touch with an experienced team of tax professionals can help you minimize your debt, avoid wasted time, and identify the best possible IRS payment plans for your individual circumstances.
We can help you figure out whether a streamlined plan is best for you, or whether you qualify for partial payment, an offer in compromise, or a lump-sum agreement.
Furthermore, investing in IRS payment plans as soon as possible can minimize IRS penalties and interest, shorten the duration of your potential tax lien, and avoid a wage garnishment, bank levy, or other IRS collection actions.
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Let the Licensed Professionals at Rush Tax Resolution analyze your personal tax situation and negotiate the best possible IRS payment plans for you.
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