IRS Notice · CP2000

Got an IRS CP2000 Notice? Here Is What It Means.

A CP2000 is a proposed change, not a bill and not a final decision. The income or other information reported to the IRS by third parties does not match what your return showed, so the IRS is proposing to adjust your tax. You can agree, partly agree, or disagree.

CP2000 proposed changeCP3219A notice of deficiencyAssessment and bill

The short version. A CP2000 comes from the Automated Underreporter program. It compares what employers, banks, and other payers reported against your return, and proposes a change where they do not match. It is a proposal you can respond to, not a bill you must pay and not a final determination. If you ignore it, it can become a notice of deficiency.

What a CP2000 is and is not

Treating a CP2000 as a final bill is the most common and most expensive mistake. It is a proposal with a response window.

A CP2000 is

  • A proposed change to your tax based on third party records.
  • A document you can agree with, partly agree with, or dispute.
  • A chance to fix a mismatch before it becomes permanent.
  • Often wrong or incomplete, since it does not know your full picture.

A CP2000 is not

  • A bill you are required to pay right now.
  • A formal notice of deficiency.
  • A final decision by the IRS.
  • Proof that you actually owe the proposed amount.

Why a CP2000 is often beatable

The Automated Underreporter program only sees the totals third parties reported. It does not see your cost basis, your deductions tied to that income, or income that was reported under a different category. Many CP2000 amounts shrink or disappear once you respond with the records the IRS did not have. The key is to respond on time with documentation, rather than ignore it.

What you can do about it

Respond within the window on the notice. Each step below is part of a normal CP2000 response that the IRS reviews.

Do not pay a proposed change you may not owe.

A CP2000 is the IRS best guess from incomplete records. Send your case in for a free review and we will tell you whether the proposed change holds up and how to respond.

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The legal basis

Free review

Want Someone to Look at It First?

Send the short version of what the CP2000 is proposing. We will tell you whether it holds up and whether you can respond yourself or should hand it to a professional.

Educational review only. We do not promise any outcome, and submitting this form does not create a professional relationship.

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