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i have heard; that the irs does forgive;from time to time;is that true or false;does the irs have people with taxes;can yahoo;ask;the irs;these questions;does the irs have a heart;has anyone;anywhere;got the irs;to be more;people helpful;thanks.

2007-02-04 02:07:49 · 8 answers · asked by Anonymous in Business & Finance Taxes United States

8 answers

As another poster said you can try the Offer in Compromise, but chances are that you would be turned down if it is shown that you are working and could pay what you owe over time.
Depending on why your taxes weren't paid on time,(illness,out of the country, etc) If you have the full amount of the Tax paid off in full, you can request an abatement of the penalties you were charged if you meet the requirements. Interest is never abated.
Call The IRS @ 1-800-829-1040
Those advertisements you see on TV are a ripoff. They take their fee up front and do nothing,

2007-02-04 02:32:19 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

obviously, you do not have the completed tale on the project. At your time, the IRS both issued a CP2000, or an audit letter or if he under no circumstances filed all, filed an replace go back. Your chum (and his mom) did not deal with it wisely. The IRS may have then adjusted the unique tax bill--increasing it--and then requested for the money. Failure to pay or set up a value plan may reason the IRS to commence taking enforcment action to get the money. For the business employer to already be levying his economic employer account signifies that the quantity is significant and that the tax bill exceeded off extremely a lengthy time period in the past. For a foreclosure, the business employer may have issued a 1099-A showing that the domicile develop into taken, that the debtors nevertheless owed $XXX and the the straightforward marketplace fee develop into $YYY. The FMV represents the sales fee of the domicile and may were pronounced on agenda D for that tax year. in all chance, the domicile did no longer have a taxable benefit. many human beings anticipate that they don't pick to instruct the 1099-A on their tax go back and are only shocked even as the IRS promises it in with a fee foundation of 0. If there develop right into a 1099-C, an similar situation takes position...yet you pronounced he had helped the ex pay this section. If he coowned the domicile with the ex-, probability free better 1/2 has no longer some thing to do with this. Alternately, if he develop into audited, this can some thing else. the actual incontrovertible truth that you elevate his sales is straightforward. Did he report a tax reurn at enthusiastic about that year? Or did the IRS do it for him? (Has he a minimum of been filing for the contractor activity? that could no longer tax-exempt earnings. it would want to be excludable, yet on condition that he archives.)

2016-11-25 00:43:33 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

The IRS does not have a heart.

They never "forgive" taxes unless you are destitute (no home, no car, no assets at all, no job, etc). If you don't pay you will not be able to have a bank account, a house or a car.

You sometimes can get them to settle for less on the penalty and interest side, almost never on the actual taxes owed.

Good luck, the IRS has all the power and you have none.

2007-02-04 02:12:06 · answer #3 · answered by Gem 7 · 0 3

The IRS has an process called an "Offer In Compromise", where you make an settlement offer based on your assets and your future earning ability.

These compromises are very time consuming and 85+% of them are rejected.

So, the answer is "maybe" but probably not.

2007-02-04 02:25:20 · answer #4 · answered by Wayne Z 7 · 2 1

Look in the Blue Pages of your phone book under US Government for the nearest office of the Internal Revenue Service- Taxpayer Assistance Division office and bring your ID,Social Security card,and all your paperwork along with your W-2(s). Explain your situation and these folks can help you with payment arrangements,answer any and all tax questions AND help file your taxes for free.

2007-02-04 02:17:02 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

i no from expierence the irs doesnt forgive when you owe money, ive paid bak some from as many as 10 yrs ago..

2007-02-04 02:17:52 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

The IRS will forgive tax debt. Just go through bankruptcy procedding, piece of cake, right?

2007-02-04 02:15:17 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 4

Thats a big ole No. Are you serious, the US government forgive? HA. That is a good one.

2007-02-04 02:10:47 · answer #8 · answered by behr28 5 · 1 3

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