Response Guides for Every Major IRS Notice
When your client receives an IRS notice, every day counts. These guides cover the exact response required, deadlines, and resolution strategies for every major IRS notice and letter. Updated for 2026.
Balance Due & Underreporter Notices
CP14 — Balance Due Notice
First IRS balance due notice. Verify assessment, evaluate payment options, and respond within 60 days.
CP2000 — Underreporter Notice
AUR program, 1099 reconciliation, penalty abatement, and 30-day response procedure.
CP2501 — Income Discrepancy
Pre-assessment income discrepancy notice. Respond before CP2000 is issued.
CP11 — Math Error (Balance Due)
IRS math error adjustment resulting in balance due. 60-day abatement window.
CP22A — Changes to Your Tax Return
IRS processed a change to the return resulting in balance due.
CP49 — Overpayment Applied
IRS applied a refund to a prior balance. Verify correct application.
CP75 — EITC Audit
EITC audit — documentation required to support earned income credit claim.
CP88 — Delinquent Return Refund Hold
IRS is holding a refund pending a delinquent return. File immediately.
Collection & Levy Notices
CP501 — Reminder Balance Due
First reminder notice. Verify balance and initiate payment or resolution.
CP503 — Second Balance Due Notice
Second notice in the collection sequence. Installment, OIC, or CDP options.
CP504 — Intent to Levy
Intent to levy state refund. 30-day window before seizure action.
LT11 / Letter 1058 — Final Levy Notice
Final notice of intent to levy. CDP hearing (Form 12153) within 30 days.
CP90 — Final Notice of Intent to Levy
Final notice before levy on wages, bank, or other assets.
CP523 — Installment Agreement Default
IRS intends to terminate installment agreement. Cure default within 30 days.
LT16 — Balance Due & Return Delinquency
Combined balance due and missing return notice. File returns immediately.
Audit & Examination Notices
CP259 — Return Delinquency (Business)
IRS has no record of a required business return (e.g., Form 1120S, 1065).
CP71A — Annual Reminder of Balance Due
Annual reminder of unpaid balance. Evaluate OIC, CNC, or installment.
CP161 — Balance Due (Partnership/S-Corp)
Balance due notice for partnership or S-Corp. Verify entity-level assessment.
Statutory Notices & Letters
Letter 3219 — Statutory Notice of Deficiency
90-day letter. File Tax Court petition within 90 days (150 if abroad) to preserve rights.
Letter 1153 — Trust Fund Recovery Penalty
Proposed TFRP assessment. Request CDP hearing or conference within 60 days.
Letter 531 — Notice of Deficiency (30-day)
30-day letter proposing adjustments. Respond or request Appeals conference.
Notice 1058 — Final Notice Before Levy
Equivalent to LT11. Triggers CDP hearing rights under §6330.
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Book A Strategy Call With A Tax AdvisorFrequently Asked Questions
Verify the notice is legitimate by checking the notice number and comparing it to your filed return. Do not ignore it — most IRS notices have strict response deadlines. Pull your IRS account transcript online at IRS.gov to confirm the assessment matches what the IRS shows on file.
Most IRS notices require a response within 30 days from the date printed on the notice. Some notices, like statutory notices of deficiency, give you 90 days. Missing the deadline can result in default assessments, loss of appeal rights, or escalation to collection action including liens and levies.
Yes. First-time penalty abatement (FTA) is available if you have a clean three-year compliance history — meaning you filed all required returns on time and paid all taxes due for the prior three years. You can request FTA by calling the IRS at 1-800-829-4933 or by submitting a written request.
You have the right to dispute any IRS assessment. File a written protest within the response window explaining why you disagree, attach supporting documentation, and request a conference with IRS Appeals. If the amount is under $25,000, you can use the simplified Collection Due Process (CDP) hearing request.
Yes. The IRS offers installment agreements for taxpayers who cannot pay in full. For balances under $50,000, you can apply online at IRS.gov/OPA. For larger balances, you will need to submit Form 9465 along with Form 433-A (Collection Information Statement) documenting your income and expenses.
An IRS notice alone does not affect your credit score. However, if the balance remains unpaid and the IRS files a federal tax lien (Notice of Federal Tax Lien), that lien becomes a public record and can significantly damage your credit. Paying or resolving the balance before lien filing protects your credit.
For simple issues like verifying a payment or correcting a minor discrepancy, calling 1-800-829-4933 is faster. For complex disputes, penalty abatement requests, or anything involving legal arguments, always respond in writing via certified mail with return receipt so you have proof of timely response.
Yes. Your CPA, EA, or tax attorney can represent you before the IRS using Form 2848 (Power of Attorney). Once filed, the IRS will communicate directly with your representative. This is strongly recommended for notices involving audits, large balances, or potential criminal referrals.
Ignoring an IRS notice triggers an escalation sequence: the IRS will send follow-up notices (CP501, CP503, CP504), then a final notice of intent to levy (LT11 or CP90). After the final notice, the IRS can levy bank accounts, garnish wages, and seize property without further warning.
Yes. The IRS generally has 10 years from the date of assessment to collect a tax debt (the Collection Statute Expiration Date or CSED). After 10 years, the debt expires and the IRS can no longer collect. However, certain actions — like filing an Offer in Compromise or requesting a CDP hearing — can toll (pause) the statute.
Penalties can be abated through FTA, reasonable cause, or statutory exception. Interest, however, is almost never abated — the IRS is required by law to charge interest on unpaid tax from the due date until the date of payment. The only way to stop interest from accruing is to pay the underlying tax balance.
Keep the original notice, all correspondence sent to and received from the IRS, copies of any returns or amended returns filed in response, proof of payment (cancelled checks, bank statements), and certified mail receipts. Retain these records for at least 7 years after the issue is fully resolved.
Legitimate IRS notices always arrive by U.S. mail — the IRS does not initiate contact by email, text, or social media. Every genuine notice includes a notice number (e.g., CP14, CP2000), your correct SSN or EIN (partially masked), and a specific tax year. You can verify any notice by calling the IRS directly at 1-800-829-1040.