DON'T TRAVEL THE ROAD ALONE. LET US HELP YOU.
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IRS PROBLEMS
Do you have an unpaid balance with the IRS?
Do you have unfiled tax returns?
Are you getting threatening letters from the IRS?
Is the IRS garnishing your wages and/or your bank account?
Are you currently facing an audit or other correspondence from the IRS?
Do you have unfiled tax returns?
Are you getting threatening letters from the IRS?
Is the IRS garnishing your wages and/or your bank account?
Are you currently facing an audit or other correspondence from the IRS?
If the answer to any of these questions is yes, call us and allow us to take this burden off your hands. Rodrick Dow is licensed to represent you before all levels of the IRS up to and including the Office of Chief Counsel (the IRS’s Legal Department). We will consider different strategies to solve your IRS issue(s) and do the best job that we can for you.
Don’t speak to the IRS yourself. Get professional representation
Are you currently facing an IRS audit?
If you have taxes that have been selected for an audit call us.
What is a Tax Lien?
A federal tax lien is the government’s legal claim against your property when you neglect or fail to pay a tax debt. It protects the government’s interest in all of your property, including real estate, personal property, and financial assets. Your dealings with the IRS, for the most part, are private. However, when the IRS files a lien, it becomes public information.
What is a Tax Levy?
An IRS levy permits the legal seizure of your property to satisfy a tax debt. The IRS can garnish your wages; take money from your bank or other financial accounts. They can seize and sell your vehicles, real estate, and other personal property. The IRS can and will levy wages, retirement accounts, bank accounts, rental income, accounts receivable, the cash loan value of life insurance, commissions, cars, boats, as well as other assets you own.
If the IRS levies your wages, they will leave you with a pre-determined calculated amount. The receivables will be required to be sent to the IRS. Your employer is required to levy your paycheck if they get a letter from the IRS. If the IRS levies your bank account, the IRS will levy 100% of the amount of the balance the IRS feels that you owe, even if you don’t actually owe the amount. To clarify this, the amount that the IRS claims that you owe is not always the actual amount you owe.
An SFR, which is a Substitute For Return is a perfect example. If you do not file your taxes, after a period of time, the IRS will complete a tax return for you. Believe me, it is not in your best interest to have the IRS file your tax return. If you have 1099 Misc income, a business, the return the IRS files will include all of your income and no expenses. In this case, this will almost always be more than the tax you actually owe; however if you ignore the letters, you will eventually be levied. Wages, bank account, etc. That is one way that the IRS can actually levy an amount that is not actually owed. There are others. Let's get started before it gets to that point.
If you have taxes that have been selected for an audit call us.
DO NOT GO TO OR TRY TO HANDLE YOUR AUDIT WITHOUT REPRESENTATION.
Get professional representation. The earlier you get us involved, generally the better. We will go to the audit for you and you can stay home. We want to prevent you from having that stress. If we represent you before the IRS, you generally never meet or speak with the IRS.What is a Tax Lien?
A federal tax lien is the government’s legal claim against your property when you neglect or fail to pay a tax debt. It protects the government’s interest in all of your property, including real estate, personal property, and financial assets. Your dealings with the IRS, for the most part, are private. However, when the IRS files a lien, it becomes public information.
What is a Tax Levy?
An IRS levy permits the legal seizure of your property to satisfy a tax debt. The IRS can garnish your wages; take money from your bank or other financial accounts. They can seize and sell your vehicles, real estate, and other personal property. The IRS can and will levy wages, retirement accounts, bank accounts, rental income, accounts receivable, the cash loan value of life insurance, commissions, cars, boats, as well as other assets you own.
If the IRS levies your wages, they will leave you with a pre-determined calculated amount. The receivables will be required to be sent to the IRS. Your employer is required to levy your paycheck if they get a letter from the IRS. If the IRS levies your bank account, the IRS will levy 100% of the amount of the balance the IRS feels that you owe, even if you don’t actually owe the amount. To clarify this, the amount that the IRS claims that you owe is not always the actual amount you owe.
An SFR, which is a Substitute For Return is a perfect example. If you do not file your taxes, after a period of time, the IRS will complete a tax return for you. Believe me, it is not in your best interest to have the IRS file your tax return. If you have 1099 Misc income, a business, the return the IRS files will include all of your income and no expenses. In this case, this will almost always be more than the tax you actually owe; however if you ignore the letters, you will eventually be levied. Wages, bank account, etc. That is one way that the IRS can actually levy an amount that is not actually owed. There are others. Let's get started before it gets to that point.