Common Tax Problems / Offer in Compromise

Common Tax Problem

Offer in Compromise

When you owe more than you could ever realistically pay, the IRS can settle for less. Here is what it is, whether you qualify, and the steps to take.

What It Is

An Offer in Compromise is a deal with the IRS to settle your tax debt for less than the full amount. It is not a discount and it is not a loophole. The IRS accepts it only when the numbers show it could not collect more from you another way before the collection clock runs out. For the right person, it can clear a large balance for a fraction of what is owed. For the wrong person, it is months of paperwork that goes nowhere, which is why it helps to know whether you qualify before you spend the time.

Is This You?

If most of these fit, an offer is worth looking at. If you have real ability to pay, the IRS will expect a payment plan instead, and an offer will likely be rejected.

What You Can Do

These are the steps that get you to a yes or no on an offer. Work through them in order.

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Want the Full Walkthrough?

Offer in Compromise Guide

The exact forms, Form 656 and Form 433-A (OIC), how to calculate your offer the way the IRS does, and the language that gets offers accepted.

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See the Other Common Problems

Liens, levies, payment plans, audits, and more, each explained the same way.

Common Tax Problems

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