New Law Revamps IRS
Offer in Compromise Program
July 11, 2006
WASHINGTON - Under a
new federal law, taxpayers submitting new offers in
compromise must make a 20 percent nonrefundable, up-front
payment in many cases, the Internal Revenue Service
announced today.
The recently-enacted Tax Increase Prevention and
Reconciliation Act of 2005 (TIPRA) made major changes to the
offer in compromise (OIC) program, tightening the rules for
lump-sum offers and periodic-payment offers. These changes
become effective for all offers received by the IRS starting
July 16, 2006.
An offer in compromise is an agreement between a taxpayer
and the IRS that resolves the taxpayer's tax debt. The IRS
has the authority to settle, or "compromise," federal tax
liabilities by accepting less than full payment in certain
circumstances.
Under the new law, taxpayers submitting requests for
lump-sum OICs must include a payment equal to 20 percent of
the offer amount. The payment is nonrefundable, that is, it
will not be returned if the OIC request is later rejected. A
lump-sum OIC means any offer of payments made in five or
fewer installments.
Taxpayers submitting requests for periodic-payment OICs must
include the first proposed installment payment with their
application. A periodic payment OIC is any offer of payments
made in six or more installments. The taxpayer is required
to pay additional installments while the offer is being
evaluated by the IRS. All installment payments are
nonrefundable.
Under the new law, taxpayers qualifying as low-income or
filing an offer based solely on doubt as to liability
qualify for a waiver of the new partial payment
requirements.
If the IRS cannot make a determination on an OIC within two
years, then the offer will be deemed accepted. If a
liability included in the offer amount is disputed in any
court proceeding, that time period is omitted from
calculating the two-year timeframe.
OIC requests are submitted using Form 656, Offer in
Compromise. The form provides detailed instructions for
completing an offer and includes all of the necessary
financial forms. When submitting Form 656, taxpayers must
include an application fee of $150 unless they qualify for
the low-income exemption or are filing a
doubt-as-to-liability offer.
A new version of Form 656, revised to reflect the new law,
will be posted on IRS.gov in the next few weeks. In the
meantime, taxpayers may continue to use the 2004 revision of
the form.
Complete information on the entire collection process and
the OIC program are on IRS.gov. Further details on the TIPRA
changes can be found in Notice 2006-68, available now on the
IRS Web site and scheduled to be published in Internal
Revenue Bulletin 2006-31, dated July 31, 2006.
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