• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Pridgeon & Zoss, PLLC

Just another WordPress site

  • Home
  • Firm Overview
    • Review Us
  • Meet Our Attorneys
  • Tax Law Services
    • CP504 Notice in MN
  • Professional Referrals
  • Our Required Retainer Deposit & Fees
  • Blog
  • Contact Us
Home / Back Taxes Or Tax Debt / You’ve received a bill from the IRS: Now what?
  • Home
  • Firm Overview
    • Review Us
  • Meet Our Attorneys
  • Tax Law Services
    • CP504 Notice in MN
  • Professional Referrals
  • Our Required Retainer Deposit & Fees
  • Blog
  • Contact Us
Call
Contact
Blog

You’ve received a bill from the IRS: Now what?

It certainly doesn’t qualify as anyone’s favorite mailing.

In fact, receiving a letter from the Internal Revenue Service demanding payment for alleged tax debt can spoil the rest of the day for virtually any person in a heartbeat.

What do you do with such a communication?

Well, you can of course pay the full amount demanded. In some instances, that might obviously spell the best course of action, especially if the tab isn’t prohibitively high and a check can be written that won’t overly roil the family budget.

That is an optimal scenario, though. Tax debt often emerges as a result of formidable financial challenges facing an individual or family. In many cases, money demanded by the IRS simply can’t be paid.

At least not in one lump sum.

The IRS collection process merely starts with that demand, with the agency openly acknowledging that payment alternatives exist for some eligible taxpayers.

Most filers in Minnesota and nationally who are presented with a payment demand will in good faith try to eliminate the debt in full immediately or over an abbreviated period, given the interest and penalties the IRS tacks on to unpaid taxes. The agency process rewards that.

Put another way: It punishes payment delay by consistently escalating penalties on debt that is not promptly paid.

Some filers can avoid some of the nastiness entailed in that if they are deemed eligible to pay off debt pursuant to one of several installment programs offered by the IRS. Some persons can even qualify for a so-called “offer in compromise” that allows for payment of less than the full amount due.

The IRS collection process can understandably seem complex and intimidating to any person involved in it. In the event that a payment demand cannot be immediately satisfied, a debtor might want to contact an experienced tax attorney without delay to discuss other payment options and the eligibility requirements for participation in an IRS-authorized payment program.

On Behalf of Pridgeon & Zoss, PLLC Oct 23 2014 Back Taxes Or Tax Debt

Primary Sidebar

Do Not Delay Responding to a Tax Notice

Name(Required)

Practice Areas

Tax Disputes

  • Tax Litigation
  • Audits
  • Tax Appeals
    • Appealing a Levy Action

Business & Payroll Taxes

  • Trust Fund Assessments
  • Complying with Sales and Use Tax Laws

Self-Employed

  • No Taxes Withheld

Outstanding Balances

  • IRS Collections and Currently Not Collectible Status
  • Settlement Options
    • Offers in Compromise
    • Installment Agreements

Latest Blogs

5 Things to Do if You Get Audited in Minnesota

March 27, 2023

What is a Trust Fund Recovery Penalty?

January 31, 2023

A Guide to the Minnesota Tax Appeal Process

January 27, 2023

The Secret to Successful Self-Employment

October 19, 2022

Things You Should Expect Being Self-Employed in Minnesota

October 13, 2022

Footer

Edina Tax Law Office

4951 W 77th Street, Box 11
Edina, MN 55435

Telephone: 952-835-8320

Fax: 612-682-4711

Roseville Tax Law Office:

1915 Hwy 36 West, Box 3
Roseville, MN 55113

Telephone: 612-455-8948

Pridgeon & Zoss, PLLC provides legal counsel for clients in Minnesota and Western Wisconsin

© 2025 Pridgeon & Zoss, PLLC. All Rights Reserved.

Disclaimer | Site Map | Privacy Policy