Here’s how an IRS offer in compromise works, what it takes to qualify and what to know about the program.
Updated Apr 25, 2024 · 4 min read Written by Tina Orem Assistant Assigning Editor Tina Orem
Assistant Assigning Editor | Taxes, small business, Social Security and estate planning, home services
Tina Orem is an editor at NerdWallet. Prior to becoming an editor, she covered small business and taxes at NerdWallet. She has been a financial writer and editor for over 15 years, and she has a degree in finance, as well as a master's degree in journalism and a Master of Business Administration. Previously, she was a financial analyst and director of finance for several public and private companies. Tina's work has appeared in a variety of local and national media outlets.
Lead Assigning EditorArielle O'Shea
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Arielle O’Shea leads the investing and taxes team at NerdWallet. She has covered personal finance and investing for over 15 years, and was a senior writer and spokesperson at NerdWallet before becoming an assigning editor. Previously, she was a researcher and reporter for leading personal finance journalist and author Jean Chatzky, a role that included developing financial education programs, interviewing subject matter experts and helping to produce television and radio segments. Arielle has appeared on the "Today" show, NBC News and ABC's "World News Tonight," and has been quoted in national publications including The New York Times, MarketWatch and Bloomberg News. She is based in Charlottesville, Virginia.
Fact Checked Co-written by Sabrina Parys Assistant Assigning Editor Sabrina Parys
Assistant Assigning Editor | Taxes, Investing
Sabrina Parys is an assistant assigning editor on the taxes and investing team at NerdWallet, where she manages and writes content on personal income taxes. Her previous experience includes five years as a copy editor and associate editor in academic and educational publishing. She is based in Brooklyn, New York.
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Advertisements about "settling your tax debt for pennies on the dollar" typically refer to the process of applying for an IRS offer in compromise (OIC), which is an IRS program designed to help people pay at least some of their tax debt.
Statistically, the odds of getting an IRS offer in compromise are not impossible, but pretty low. In fact, the IRS accepted only 12,711 offers out of 30,163 in 2023 [0]
Internal Revenue Service . IRS Data Book, 2023. Accessed Apr 25, 2024.An offer in compromise is an IRS program that allows certain taxpayers to settle their IRS tax debt for less than they owe [0]
Internal Revenue Service . Offer in Compromise. Accessed Apr 25, 2024. . Taxpayers must meet qualification requirements to apply, and the IRS rejects most applications.Simple tax filing with a $50 flat fee for every scenario
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An application for an IRS offer in compromise has three parts:
Complete IRS Form 656. If you believe the tax debt isn’t yours or doesn’t actually exist, you can also file Form 656-L.
A $205 application fee, which is nonrefundable, but may be waived if you meet the IRS low-income guidelines.
An initial payment (also nonrefundable) toward your proposed new balance is due.When you apply for an IRS offer in compromise, you’ll have to provide a lot of information about your monthly income, assets, cash and other debt, as well as your rent, utilities, groceries and other expenses [0]
Internal Revenue Service . Form 656 Booklet: Offer in Compromise. Accessed Apr 25, 2024.You can hire a qualified tax professional or tax relief company to help you do the paperwork, but it’s not required, and the money you pay them might be more than the money you’re hoping to save on your taxes.
The offer-in-compromise process has two hurdles: qualifying to apply and getting the IRS to accept your offer. The IRS has an online tool to help you determine if you might be eligible.
Note that the agency will send back your application if any of these are true:
You forget to provide necessary information on the application. You’re behind on filing your tax returns. You haven’t received a bill for at least one tax debt included on your offer. You haven’t made all required estimated tax payments for the current year. You are in an open bankruptcy proceeding. You stop paying your taxes or filing your tax returns while you’re waiting for an answer. The IRS has sent your case to the Justice Department. You forget to include the application fee ($205 for most people; waived for low-income applicants).If the agency sends back your application, you can reapply after you’ve fixed the issues.
The IRS uses financial information about you to calculate your “reasonable collection potential,” or RCP — the amount it thinks it can get from you now and in the future [0]
Internal Revenue Service . Topic No. 204: Offers in Compromise. Accessed Apr 25, 2024.The IRS looks at your assets, cars, bank accounts, property, current income, future income, basic living expenses, where you live and even how old your car is, among other things, when calculating the RCP. The IRS won’t accept your offer in compromise unless the amount you offer is equal to or greater than the RCP.
Math aside, there are three reasons the IRS may grant an offer in compromise:
There’s a genuine legal dispute about whether your tax debt actually exists or about how much it is.Paying in full would create an economic hardship for you or be “unfair and inequitable because of exceptional circumstances.”
The IRS doubts it can ever fully collect from you.Simple tax filing with a $50 flat fee for every scenario
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Learn MoreAn IRS offer in compromise comes with two options for paying your new and improved tax bill.
You must include 20% of your offer amount with your application (in addition to the application fee). This money is nonrefundable, even if the IRS rejects your offer (the IRS will just apply it toward your tax bill).
You must send the first payment with your application (in addition to the application fee). This money is nonrefundable, even if the IRS rejects your offer (the IRS will just apply it toward your tax bill).
You can make payments while you wait for the IRS to decide whether to grant you an offer in compromise.
The process can be complex, but there are some key things to keep in mind:
There’s a $205 fee for most applicants, and it's nonrefundable (low-income taxpayers can get a waiver).
Once you file your application, the IRS suspends collection activities. The IRS can file or keep tax liens in place until it accepts your offer and you’ve fulfilled your end of the deal.
If you're waiting on a pending OIC agreement from the IRS, you may be able to prevent your refund from being garnished by seeking an offset bypass refund (OBR). You must work with the IRS to prove economic hardship to qualify, and you may not receive the full refund. The IRS has more details here .
Some of the information about your offer in compromise could be made public. The IRS’s public inspection files on offers in compromise include the taxpayer's name, city, state, ZIP code, liability amount and offer terms.
If the IRS rejects your offer, you can appeal within 30 days. The IRS has an online resource to walk you through that.
If an offer in compromise isn’t for you, or the IRS rejects your offer in compromise, you still may have other options for finding tax relief, including getting on an installment plan or requesting “currently not collectible” status.
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