IRS Is a Lot More Open to Compromise These Days
It used to be that if you owed a large debt to the IRS you didn’t have a great chance of catching a break. Even though the IRS has always been able to compromise, at least a little, the tax agency has never been really eager to do so. Some people might not even be aware that this was a possibility, but it is. It’s called an offer in compromise and it gives taxpayers with overwhelming debt the chance to pay off that debt for less than the total amount owed.
During the 10 years between 2000 and 2010 the IRS accepted somewhere in the neighborhood of 25-30 percent of these petitions on average, but never reached the 40 percent threshold. However, recently, especially during the last three years the IRS seems to have become a lot more charitable with offers in compromise. That’s good news for taxpayers with large amounts of tax debt.
In the 2012, the IRS accepted 24,000, or 38 percent, of these offers and that number jumped to 31,000, or 42 percent in 2013. In 2014, the number dipped slightly to 27,000 accepted offers, or 40 percent. Typically the IRS does not accept OICs if the agency feels that the taxpayer has the means to pay off the entire debt. However, every situation is different, so if you are considering making an offer in compromise to the IRS to settle your tax debt, then you might want to speak with an experienced tax accountant from GROCO first, in order to weigh your options. You can contact us by clicking here or by calling 1-877-CPA-2006.
AI & Human Potential
Why the Next Tech Revolution May Be About Amplifying — Not Replacing — Us In an era when AI is often framed as an existential threat to employment, creativity, and even human identity, entrepreneur Paul Allen offers a markedly different vision: AI not as a substitute for humanity, but as its most powerful tool for…
Reframing Mental Health For A New Generation Of Athletes
By the time most professional athletes hang up their skates, cleats, or jerseys, the public assumes the hardest battles are behind them. For former professional hockey goaltender Chuck Thuss, the most significant battles began long after the final buzzer. Today, Thuss is the Founder and CEO of Compassionate Connection and co-host of the mental-health-focused podcast…
How Great Leaders Make High-Stakes Decisions
Matt George explains how great leaders make high-stakes decisions through clarity, board alignment, disciplined execution, and values-driven leadership under pressure.
Kollectiv AI
Late one night in San Francisco, long after his kids had gone to sleep, Andrey Akselrod sat at his desk staring at a small stack of papers that had come to define his year. They were hospital bills—simple on the surface, catastrophic in practice. The visit itself had lasted only 24 hours. The aftermath stretched…