Form 656 - Offer In Compromise (Including Form 433-A (Oic), Form 433-B (Oic)) Page 4

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an offer unless the trust fund portion of the tax is paid or the Trust Fund
Recovery Penalty determinations have been made on all potentially responsible
individual(s). Trust fund taxes are the money withheld from an employee’s
wages, such as income tax, Social Security, and Medicare taxes.
The IRS will keep any refund, including interest, for tax periods extending
through the calendar year that the IRS accepts the offer. For example, if your
offer is accepted in 2012 and you file your 2012 Form 1040 showing a refund,
IRS will apply your refund to your tax debt.
The IRS may keep any proceeds from a levy served prior to you submitting an
offer. The IRS may levy your assets up to the time that the IRS official signs
and accepts your offer as pending. If your assets are levied after your offer is
pending, immediately contact the IRS person whose name and phone number is
listed on the levy.
If you currently have an approved installment agreement with IRS and are
making installment payments, then you may stop making those installment agree-
ment payments when you submit an offer. If your offer is returned for any reason,
your installment agreement with IRS will be reinstated with no additional fee.
PAYING FOR YOUR OFFER
Application fee
Offers require a $150 application fee.
EXCEPTION: If you are submitting an individual offer and meet the Low
Income Certification guidelines (see page 2 of Form 656, Offer in Compro-
mise), you will not be required to send the application fee.
Payment options
Submitting an offer requires the selection of a payment option as well as
sending an initial payment with your application. The amount of the initial
payment and subsequent payments will depend on the total amount of your offer
and which of the following payment options you choose.
Lump Sum Cash: This option requires 20% of the total offer amount to be paid
with the offer and the remaining balance paid in five or fewer payments within 24
months of the date your offer is accepted.
Periodic Payment: This option requires the first payment with the offer and the
remaining balance paid, within 24 months, in accordance with your proposed
offer terms. Under this option, you must continue to make all subsequent
payments while the IRS is evaluating your offer. Failure to make these
payments will cause your offer to be returned.
The length of the payment option you choose may affect the amount of the offer
we will accept. Generally, an offer paid within five months of acceptance will
require a lesser amount. In all cases, your offer amount must be paid within 24
months of the date the offer is accepted. Your offer amount cannot include a
refund we owe you.
If you meet the Low Income Certification guidelines, you will not be
required to send the initial payment, or make the monthly payments during
the evaluation of your offer but you will still need to choose one of the
payment options.
If your offer is returned or not accepted, any required payment(s) made with the
filing of your offer and thereafter, will not be refunded. Your payment(s) will be
applied to your tax debt.
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Parent category: Financial