How to Qualify
The IRS considers certain conditions when reviewing your application to determine your eligibility for an OIC.
First, if the IRS finds there is a reasonable doubt as to whether you will be able to pay your payment. Usually, this is the case when your income is too low, or your assets aren’t valuable enough to be sold for enough money to pay off the obligation.
The second is if you can prove to the IRS that it would be financially difficult for you to pay the entire tax due.
The third scenario involves asserting that the amount owed to the IRS is inaccurate. This is the least common choice and requires another form to be filled out.
The IRS modified the regulations pertaining to OICs in 2012. Previously, settlement amounts were calculated by multiplying your monthly income by 48 months. Currently, you only multiply your monthly disposable income by 12 months, so all you have to pay is 25% of what you would have paid otherwise.
In other words, your payment would be less if you applied for an OIC now than it would have been in the past.
To be eligible for an OIC, you must have.
- Filed all returns – current and unfiled tax returns.
- Submitted all requested information to the IRS.
- Completed all tax payments for the entire year
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