Skip to content
AICPA-CIMA
  • AICPA & CIMA:
  • Home
  • Engage 365 Communities
  • CPE & Learning
  • My Account
Journal of Accountancy
  • TECH & AI
    • All articles
    • Artificial Intelligence (AI)
    • Microsoft Excel
    • Information Security & Privacy

    Latest Stories

    • Drafting an AI policy that actually works
    • What AI agents mean for CPA firms
    • A guide to fighting AI-fueled AP/AR fraud

  • TAX
    • All articles
    • Corporations
    • Employee benefits
    • Individuals
    • IRS procedure

    Latest Stories

    • IRS designates certain CRAT arrangements as listed transactions
    • Eligible taxpayers to get automatic IRS penalty relief
    • IRS adds online option, details for Kwong-related refund claims
  • PRACTICE MANAGEMENT
    • All articles
    • Diversity, equity & inclusion
    • Human capital
    • Firm operations
    • Practice growth & client service

    Latest Stories

    • IRS designates certain CRAT arrangements as listed transactions
    • Eligible taxpayers to get automatic IRS penalty relief
    • Scam stoppers: 5 ways CPAs can help older clients fight financial fraud
  • FINANCIAL REPORTING
    • All articles
    • FASB reporting
    • IFRS
    • Private company reporting
    • SEC compliance and reporting

    Latest Stories

    • SEC shares 3 goals in proposed 2026–2030 strategic plan
    • SEC proposes rescission of climate disclosure rules
    • SEC proposes semiannual reporting option for public companies
  • AUDIT
    • All articles
    • Attestation
    • Audit
    • Compilation and review
    • Peer review
    • Quality Management

    Latest Stories

    • PCAOB consultation process offers new options for firms seeking guidance
    • Standardization of sustainability reporting improves, but obstacles remain
    • How to monitor a firm’s system of quality management
  • MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTING
    • All articles
    • Business planning
    • Human resources
    • Risk management
    • Strategy

    Latest Stories

    • How to handle increased enforcement of unclaimed property notices
    • Standardization of sustainability reporting improves, but obstacles remain
    •  What it takes for a CFO to lead operations and tech
  • Home
  • News
  • Magazine
  • Podcast
  • Topics
Advertisement
  1. newsletter
  2. Cpa Insider
CPA INSIDER

15 things you need to know when clients owe taxes to the IRS

Each year, about 1 out of every 6 individual clients files a tax return with a balance due.

By Jim Buttonow, CPA/CITP
February 29, 2016

Please note: This item is from our archives and was published in 2016. It is provided for historical reference. The content may be out of date and links may no longer function.

Related

July 9, 2026

IRS designates certain CRAT arrangements as listed transactions

July 8, 2026

Eligible taxpayers to get automatic IRS penalty relief

July 6, 2026

IRS adds online option, details for Kwong-related refund claims

TOPICS

  • Tax
    • IRS Practice & Procedure
    • Individual Income Taxation

There are more than 18 million individual and business taxpayers who owe money to the IRS. 

Each year, about one out of every six individual clients (that’s more than 26 million taxpayers) files a tax return with a balance due. Many of those people can’t pay. They need advice and potentially an alternative to paying the entire balance at once.

If you’re advising these clients, here are 15 things they need to know about IRS collection that come into play before and after filing.

1. File the return before the due date. 

That a return should be filed may seem obvious to practitioners, but for many taxpayers who are going to owe, it’s tempting to ignore the problem and just not file. Remind them that not filing only makes matters worse because it can mean a very expensive failure-to-file penalty that can add up to 25% more to the balance. 

Also, clients who request filing extensions aren’t immune to penalties. Remember to inform your clients that if they don’t pay 90% of the ultimate balance they owe with the extension, they’ll incur a failure-to-pay penalty.

2. Get into an agreement with the IRS.

Advertisement

Clients should also be made aware that, depending on their circumstances, if they owe money to the IRS and don’t pay, the IRS can file a tax lien or issue a levy to collect the taxes. The only way your client can avoid these enforced collection actions is to get into an agreement with the IRS.

3. Starting in 2015, no agreement may mean no passport.

In late 2015, Congress passed a law that allows the U.S. State Department to revoke taxpayers’ passports or deny passports to those who owe more than $50,000 to the IRS and are not in an agreement to pay.

4. There are options. There are several types of IRS collection agreements.

The installment agreement is the most common payment arrangement. There are several kinds of those available, depending on your client’s situation. Your client can also get an extension of up to 120 days to pay the IRS, just by asking for it. 

If your client is in a hardship situation (determined according to IRS standards), there are hardship agreements. These include deferring payment (called “currently not collectible” by the IRS), or the offer in compromise for extreme hardship situations, when the IRS will settle the tax debt for less than the taxpayer owes. For more, see “IRS Offers Collection Alternatives for Your Financially Distressed Clients.”

All of these options are viable agreements with the IRS, and clients will avoid levies and potentially passport problems. Depending on your client’s circumstances and on the type of agreement your client may enter into, the IRS may file a tax lien.

Advertisement

5. Taxpayers can request and receive most agreements on irs.gov.

In the past year, the IRS has made improvements to its online payment arrangement tool on irs.gov. In fact, in 2015, the tool was used four times more than in 2014. That’s largely because setting up the agreement with the tool was much quicker than waiting on IRS phone lines or waiting for a paper response from the IRS.

6. Some agreements come with a federal tax lien.

Extensions to pay and streamlined installment agreements are surefire ways to avoid a tax lien filing if your client acts proactively. However, if your client owes more than $50,000 (which is rare) or owes more than $10,000 and can’t pay within six years, the IRS will usually file a tax lien.

If your client does have a tax lien, once he or she pays off the balance, you can use lien-withdrawal procedures to help remove the tax lien from your client’s credit and public record.

7. The IRS has 10 years to collect.

If your client can’t pay the IRS before the 10-year statute to collect expires, the IRS usually writes off the remaining tax, interest, and penalties. For this reason, any agreement that doesn’t pay off the balance before the statute of limitation expires always requires taxpayers to file detailed financial statements and other documents with the IRS to prove that they can’t pay the IRS with assets and income.

Advertisement

8. Don’t forget to request penalty abatement toward the end of the installment agreement.

As clients finish paying in an installment agreement, many tax professionals forget to request penalty abatement for their clients for failure to pay penalties. These penalties accrue over the term of the installment agreement. If your client has a three-year clean compliance history before the year with the penalty, use first-time abatement to remove the penalties paid for one tax period. See “Know These Penalty Abatement Realities to Better Help Your Clients” for additional guidance on requesting penalty abatement.

9. Your client must file all required returns to get into an IRS agreement.

If your client needs a collection alternative, it’s essential that your client file all required tax returns for the past six years. If your client hasn’t filed any of these returns, your client won’t be able to get into an agreement with the IRS (other than the extension to pay). If you’re not sure whether your client has filed returns for the past six years, research your client’s history using IRS transcripts.

10. An offer in compromise (OIC) may be a possible solution in desperate times.

OICs are over-publicized, but they are a possible solution if your client can’t pay within the statute of limitation—based on IRS financial standards. The OIC pre-qualifier tool is a good resource to determine whether your client qualifies. You should completely evaluate your client’s circumstances to see if an OIC is a good option.

11. Your client should pay by direct debit to avoid default. 

Advertisement

Missed payments result in additional fees to reinstate an installment agreement—and unpleasant letters from the IRS. Taxpayers who pay by check are three times more likely to default on their agreement. 

Keep in mind that with direct debit installment agreements your clients won’t get a monthly letter reminder of how much they owe the IRS. Instead, the IRS will send only an annual statement of account activity, including the balance owed and accrued penalties and interest. Direct debit agreements also have a lower setup fee, $52, versus the $120 fee for payment by check.

12. Use the streamlined installment agreement to get the best terms. 

The streamlined installment agreement usually comes with the best payment terms. Your client can make equal monthly payments for up to 72 months, for balances of up to $50,000.  

If your client owes more than $50,000, advise your client to pay down the debt to below the $50,000 streamlined installment agreement threshold to get payment terms over 72 months. Otherwise, the IRS will determine the payment based on your client’s income and IRS-allowed expenses. That can yield a much higher payment than the streamlined agreement terms.

13. Avoid defaulting on the agreement.

If your client owes again and can’t pay, his or her current agreement will default. Your client will have to reinstate the agreement and pay a $50 reinstatement fee to the IRS. 

Taxpayers often cause their agreements to default because they should have made estimated tax payments or need to increase their income withholding.

Also, if any additional amounts become due from other IRS compliance activity, such as an audit or underreporter inquiry, your client should pay those in full or request that the IRS add them to the existing agreement to avoid default.

14. Your client won’t get any refunds until he or she has paid the entire balance.

Clients often don’t understand this aspect of collection agreements, so be sure to give them a heads-up. Until your client pays the entire balance, the IRS will always take the refund.

15. The annual interest and penalty cost of an installment agreement is about 6%.

The IRS currently charges a 3% interest rate on underpayments. If your client gets into an installment agreement, the failure to pay penalty is 0.25% per month, or 3% per year. In essence, in addition to the initial setup fee, the cost of an installment agreement is 6% of the total balance owed per year.

Now, give your clients peace of mind

It’s common for taxpayers to file and owe. If you have a client who owes the IRS and can’t pay, that client will look to you for reassurance and expertise. These 15 essential IRS collection knowledge points will help you advise your client on what to do next.   

Jim Buttonow, CPA/CITP, directs tax practice and procedure product development for H&R Block, and serves as chairman of the IRS Electronic Tax Administration Advisory Committee (ETAAC). He has more than 28 years of experience in IRS practice and procedure.

Advertisement

latest news

July 9, 2026

IRS designates certain CRAT arrangements as listed transactions

July 8, 2026

Eligible taxpayers to get automatic IRS penalty relief

July 7, 2026

Scam stoppers: 5 ways CPAs can help older clients fight financial fraud

July 6, 2026

IRS adds online option, details for Kwong-related refund claims

July 6, 2026

PCAOB consultation process offers new options for firms seeking guidance

Advertisement

Most Read

Self-directed IRAs: A tax compliance black hole
IRS adds online option, details for Kwong-related refund claims
Eligible taxpayers to get automatic IRS penalty relief
How to build reusable Skills in Anthropic's Claude AI
Profession Ready Initiative targets gaps in early-career CPA readiness
Advertisement

Podcast

July 9, 2026

From estate planning to AI: Managing CPA liability

July 2, 2026

The AICPA’s CEO on trust, AI, and the profession’s future

June 25, 2026

Midyear advocacy update: STEM, BOI, taxes and licensure

Features

Start in high school to strengthen the accounting profession

Start in high school to strengthen the accounting profession

Accountancy in America: Meeting the moment for 250 years

Accountancy in America: Meeting the moment for 250 years

A guide to fighting AI-fueled AP/AR fraud

A guide to fighting AI-fueled AP/AR fraud

How to handle increased enforcement of unclaimed property notices

How to handle increased enforcement of unclaimed property notices

How to tame funding volatility in not-for-profits

How to tame funding volatility in not-for-profits

What AI agents mean for CPA firms

What AI agents mean for CPA firms

FROM THIS MONTH'S ISSUE

A cool tool for customizing Windows 11

Improve Windows 11’s usability with a start-menu and taskbar replacement tool to personalize your experience. Learn how in this Tech Q&A article.

From The Tax Adviser

June 30, 2026

Condo casualty losses: Deductions for common-interest property

May 31, 2026

Trust distributions: Timing, tax, and practical considerations

May 31, 2026

Current developments in taxation of individuals: Part 3

April 30, 2026

Current developments in taxation of individuals: Part 2

MAGAZINE

July 2026

July 2026

June 2026

June 2026

May 2026

May 2026

April 2026

April 2026

March 2026

March 2026

February 2026

February 2026

January 2026

January 2026

December 2025

December 2025

November 2025

November 2025

October 2025

October 2025

September 2025

September 2025

August 2025

August 2025

view all

View All

PUSH NOTIFICATIONS

Learn about important news

This quick guide walks you through the process of enabling and troubleshooting push notifications from the JofA on your computer or phone.

CPA LETTER DAILY EMAIL

Subscribe to the daily CPA Letter

Stay on top of the biggest news affecting the profession every business day. Follow this link to your marketing preferences on aicpa-cima.com to subscribe. If you don't already have an aicpa-cima.com account, create one for free and then navigate to your marketing preferences.

Connect

  • JofA on X
  • JofA on Facebook

HOME

  • News
  • Monthly issues
  • Podcast
  • A&A Focus
  • PFP Digest
  • Academic Update
  • Topics
  • RSS feed
  • Site map

ABOUT

  • Contact us
  • Advertise
  • Submit an article
  • Editorial calendar
  • Privacy policy
  • Terms & conditions

SUBSCRIBE

  • Academic Update
  • CPE Express

AICPA & CIMA SITES

  • AICPA-CIMA.com
  • Global Engagement Center
  • Financial Management (FM)
  • The Tax Adviser
  • AICPA Insights
  • Global Career Hub
AICPA & CIMA

© 2026 Association of International Certified Professional Accountants. All rights reserved.

Reliable. Resourceful. Respected.