If you got a CP504, LT11, or Letter 1058 — here's what's happening.
The IRS sends letters in a predictable sequence. Each one is a step up in seriousness, and each one has a deadline attached. The most common letters people receive after a tax balance accrues are:
- CP14 — first balance-due notice. The friendly opening of the conversation. You owe; pay or call. (IRS CP14 reference)
- CP501 / CP503 — reminders. You still owe; the balance is growing with penalties and interest.
- CP504 — Notice of Intent to Levy state tax refund (and other property). This is where most people first feel the pressure. (IRS CP504 reference)
- LT11 / Letter 1058 — Final Notice of Intent to Levy and Notice of Your Right to a Hearing. You have 30 days from the date on the letter to request a Collection Due Process (CDP) hearing. Miss this and the IRS can levy wages, bank accounts, and property. (IRS Letter 1058 / LT11 reference)
- Notice of Federal Tax Lien (NFTL) — filed at the county level. Public record. Attaches to all assets you own. Does not seize anything by itself, but complicates refinancing and selling property. (IRS Federal Tax Lien reference)
The most time-sensitive of these is Letter 1058 / LT11. The 30-day CDP deadline is hard. If you have one of those letters, flag it now — the assessment widget on our lien-help page will surface this question and tell you whether to act today.
Everything else in this guide assumes you have one of these notices, or a tax lien filing, or both.
The five IRS programs you may qualify for.
The IRS itself publishes five core ways to resolve a tax balance. These are not company programs, partner programs, or government programs you have to be approved into via an intermediary. They are the rules the IRS uses, and the forms are public. The only question is which one fits your situation.
1. Installment Agreement (IA)
What it is: A monthly payment plan with the IRS. You and the IRS agree on a monthly amount; you pay until the balance and accrued interest/penalty is satisfied or until the Collection Statute Expiration Date (CSED), whichever comes first.
Forms: Form 9465 (Installment Agreement Request) plus Form 433-F (Collection Information Statement) for balances above the streamlined threshold. (IRS Payment Plans page)
Who it's for: Almost everyone with a balance. The IA is the workhorse — it's how most IRS debt actually gets resolved. There are streamlined IAs for balances under $50,000 (individual) where the paperwork is simpler.
Common mistake: Paying a tax-relief firm $1,500–$5,000 to set up an IA that you could file in an afternoon with Form 9465 and a $31–$225 IRS user fee. The forms are public and the qualification rules are public.
2. Offer in Compromise (OIC)
What it is: A formal IRS settlement program where the IRS accepts less than the full amount owed. Used in two situations: (a) doubt as to collectibility (you can't pay it all even on a payment plan) or (b) effective tax administration (full payment would create economic hardship).
Forms: Form 656 (Offer in Compromise) plus Form 433-A(OIC) for individuals or 433-B(OIC) for businesses. Application fee $205 (waived for low-income), plus a 20% non-refundable initial payment for lump-sum offers. (IRS OIC page)
Who it's for: Taxpayers whose financial situation, under the IRS's Reasonable Collection Potential (RCP) formula, would result in the IRS collecting less than the full balance over the remaining statute. The published acceptance rate hovers around 30% — meaning most applicants don't qualify. An honest software tool will tell you this before you spend the $205 fee.
Common mistake: Believing “tax-relief” firm advertisements that promise OIC qualification. Nobody can promise IRS acceptance — the IRS makes that determination on the math, not on advocacy. The number that matters is your RCP.
3. Currently Not Collectible (CNC) Status
What it is: A temporary pause on IRS collection when your income barely covers necessary living expenses (using the IRS's Allowable Living Expense standards). The debt remains — interest still accrues — but the IRS stops actively pursuing it. The status is reviewed periodically.
Forms: Form 433-F or 433-A (Collection Information Statement). Submitted to a Revenue Officer or via the ACS (Automated Collection System) line. (IRS Topic 202 reference)
Who it's for: Taxpayers whose monthly necessary expenses exceed monthly income under IRS standards. CNC is genuinely useful for people who simply cannot pay right now. The lien may still be filed, but levies generally stop.
4. Penalty Abatement
What it is: Removal of failure-to-file, failure-to-pay, or failure-to-deposit penalties. Available via First-Time Abate (FTA) for taxpayers with a clean compliance record for the prior three years, or via reasonable-cause abatement (illness, disaster, death in family, etc.).
Forms: Form 843 (Claim for Refund and Request for Abatement) — or a written request following the IRS's reasonable cause guidance. (IRS Penalty Relief page)
Who it's for: Anyone with penalties on their balance. Penalties commonly run 25% or more of the underlying balance — penalty abatement is one of the highest-ROI moves in tax resolution and is widely under-used.
5. Levy or Garnishment Release
What it is: Stopping an active wage garnishment or bank levy. The release is generally triggered by entering one of the four programs above (most often an IA or CNC status), or by demonstrating that the levy is creating economic hardship.
Forms: No single form — typically a Form 911 (Request for Taxpayer Advocate Service Assistance) or direct contact with the IRS collection function with substantiating hardship documentation. (IRS Levy reference)
Who it's for: Anyone with an active garnishment or levy. This is the most time-sensitive item on this list — if your wages are being garnished today, this is your top priority.
Why tax-relief firms charge $5,000–$15,000 — and what they actually do.
The traditional tax-relief firm business model is well documented. It works like this:
- You see a TV ad, radio spot, or Google ad. (Optima, for example, is the heaviest TV advertiser in the sector — they spent years building a Robin Thicke-jingle TV brand. Source: Forbes profile, 2018.)
- You call a toll-free number. A sales rep — paid on commission — asks about your debt. They quote an “investigation fee” of $250–$595. (Source: LendEDU industry pricing analysis.)
- After the investigation, you're quoted a resolution fee between $3,500 and $15,000 — sometimes more — depending on what programs they recommend.
- You sign a Power of Attorney (Form 2848). They use that POA to pull your IRS transcripts and prepare the same Form 9465 or Form 656 you would have prepared yourself.
- Whether your IRS application is accepted depends on the IRS's own math — RCP, allowable living expenses, compliance history. Not on the firm. (See, for example, the BBB complaint pattern across this sector for “non-responsive after payment, charging $5,000–$18,000 for installment agreements clients could set up themselves” — documented in our incumbent audit.)
Some tax-relief firms do good work. Many do not. The structural issue is that the fee is locked in before the IRS's decision — so the firm has every incentive to take your case regardless of your actual qualification odds.
The Federal Trade Commission has brought a long series of actions against firms in this space — including JK Harris, American Tax Relief, Accelerated Debt Settlement, and others — for the most egregious version of these practices. The phrases that get firms sued (“pennies on the dollar,” “guaranteed settlement,” “IRS-approved”) are exactly the ones we won't use. (See FTC v. American Tax Relief LLC.)
How Beacon Tax Relief is different.
We are software. You sign in, you answer questions about your financial situation, the software walks you through which IRS program fits your numbers, it pre-fills the forms, it tracks the deadlines, and it gives you the PDFs to sign and mail (or upload to the IRS) yourself.
That last part is critical: you sign and submit every form. Beacon Tax Relief is not a representative. We are not your attorney, CPA, or Enrolled Agent. We do not call the IRS on your behalf. We do not file under a Power of Attorney. We give you the tools, the math, and the deadlines.
That trade-off is what makes the price work. $149 a month vs. $5,000–$15,000 up front. Most customers pay approximately 80% less than they would pay a traditional tax-relief firm. (The 80% figure is substantiated against the published incumbent fees in our internal research/incumbent_audit.md file.)
We use AI inside the product — for notice decoding, for plain-English explanations, for form-field guidance — but we don't lead with “AI” in our marketing because the AI is the engine, not the brand. What matters to you is whether the software gets you through Form 656 correctly. The AI just makes it faster.
Frequently Asked Questions.
Will doing this myself hurt my outcome?
Probably not — and frequently the opposite. The forms are designed for taxpayers to file themselves. The IRS publishes extensive instructions. The qualification math is mechanical, not persuasive: there's no “advocacy” that changes your RCP number. The biggest risks of self-filing are (a) entering the wrong numbers and (b) missing deadlines. Both are exactly what software is good at preventing.
What if my case is complicated?
If you have a business with unfiled payroll returns, trust fund recovery penalty exposure, criminal tax issues, or are heading toward Tax Court, you need an actual tax attorney or Enrolled Agent — not software, not Beacon Tax Relief, and not a relief firm call center either. We will tell you that. The assessment widget flags complicated cases out to qualified professionals.
Do I need an Enrolled Agent or CPA?
For most IA, CNC, penalty abatement, and lien-discharge cases: no. For OIC: it depends on the complexity of your assets and income. For audit representation or appeals: yes, get a real representative.
What about free help?
The IRS's Taxpayer Advocate Service (TAS) is free and helps taxpayers facing financial hardship or unable to resolve issues through normal channels. Low Income Taxpayer Clinics (LITCs) provide free representation for qualifying low-income taxpayers. Both are real, public services, and we recommend them honestly when you may qualify. (Taxpayer Advocate Service · LITC directory)
Does Beacon Tax Relief guarantee anything?
No outcome with the IRS can be guaranteed by anyone — that determination is the IRS's alone. What we guarantee is the software: cancel any time, 14-day money-back, no win-back calls, keep every document you generated. That's it.
This article is educational. It is not legal, tax, or accounting advice. Beacon Tax Relief is a software company. Not a law firm. Not a CPA firm. Not an Enrolled Agent firm. Not affiliated with the Internal Revenue Service or any government agency. Citations to IRS.gov pages are provided so you can read the official rules in full.