Written by Scott Allen

IRS TAX LIENS – STOP IRS ACTION

IRS Tax Liens in Arizona

When do IRS tax liens expire?

Yes there is an expiration on IRS tax liens—ten years.  The ten years starts from the time the taxes were assessed.  Once the ten year period has passed the tax lien goes away automatically.

There is a caution flag that needs to be raised regarding actions you can inadvertently take that will extend the statute of limitations.  If you file a bankruptcy, a collection due process hearing, submit an offer in compromise or file an innocent spouse claim the 10 year statute to collect is extended because these actions stop the IRS from collecting the taxes due.

A bankruptcy extends the statute of limitation by the amount of time your were in bankruptcy plus six months.

A collection due process hearing will extend the statute of  limitations by the amount of time your hearing was pending.

An offer in compromise will extend the statute of limitations by the amount of time the offer was pending plus 30 days.

An innocent spouse claim will suspend the collection statute during the time the claim is under consideration.

Before any of these tax settlement strategies are utilized, make sure that the risk of extending the statute doesn’t exceed the benefit. IRS tax liens can impact your life in many ways. Be sure to also find out if its possible to settle the IRS or offer up a payment plan solution without the filing of IRS tax liens on your record.

Scott Allen E. A.

Tax Debt Advisors, Inc.