IRS Payment Plans

Source: Internal Revenue Code § 6159 (installment agreements), § 7122 (offers in compromise). Taxpayer Bill of Rights (IRC § 7803(a)(3)). IRS Fresh Start Initiative (2012).

Last reviewed:

Written in plain language for general understanding. This is educational content, not legal advice. Based on federal statutes and official sources.

Federal Law

What is this right?

If you owe taxes but can't pay the full amount, you have the right to set up a payment plan with the IRS. The IRS offers several options, from short-term extensions to long-term installment agreements. In some cases, you may even settle for less than you owe through an Offer in Compromise.

The IRS would rather work with you than against you when it comes to collecting tax debt. Ignoring the debt is the worst option.

When does it apply?

This right applies when:

  • You filed your tax return but cannot pay the full amount owed
  • You received a balance-due notice from the IRS
  • You owe back taxes from previous years

Common misconceptions:

  • "I can't afford to pay, so I'll just ignore it" — This guarantees penalties, interest, and eventually enforced collection (wage garnishment, bank levies, liens). Payment plans stop most collection actions.
  • "The IRS won't work with me" — The IRS approves most payment plan requests. Streamlined installment agreements (for balances under $50,000) are nearly automatic.
  • "An Offer in Compromise means I pay pennies on the dollar" — Not usually. The IRS evaluates your ability to pay based on income, expenses, and assets. The offer must be realistic. Most OICs are rejected because the amount offered is too low.

What should you do?

Step 1: File your return even if you can't pay. Filing on time avoids the failure-to-file penalty (5% per month), which is 10x worse than the failure-to-pay penalty (0.5% per month).

Step 2: Apply for a payment plan. You can apply online at irs.gov/payments for balances up to $50,000. Use Form 9465 for larger amounts.

Step 3: Consider your options: short-term plan (180 days, no fee), long-term installment agreement (up to 72 months), or Offer in Compromise (settle for less).

Step 4: If you can't afford any payment, request "Currently Not Collectible" (CNC) status. The IRS temporarily halts collection, though interest continues to accrue.

Step 5: Contact the Taxpayer Advocate Service (TAS) at 1-877-777-4778 if you're facing a hardship. They're an independent organization within the IRS that helps taxpayers resolve problems.

What should you NOT do?

Don't ignore IRS notices. Each ignored notice escalates collection — from letters to phone calls to liens, levies, and wage garnishment.

Don't pay scammers. The IRS will never call you threatening arrest or demand payment by gift card. These are scams.

Don't miss installment payments. Defaulting on a payment plan accelerates collection. If you can't make a payment, contact the IRS before the due date.

Don't assume you need to hire an expensive firm. Many "tax resolution" companies charge thousands for services you can do yourself or through a local CPA/enrolled agent for much less.

Texas Law
TX

How Texas differs from federal law

Texas has no state income tax, so payment plans for individual income tax don't apply:

  • No state income tax debt: Individual taxpayers in Texas have no state income tax obligations, so state payment plans for income tax don't exist.
  • Franchise tax: Businesses that owe Texas franchise tax can set up payment agreements with the Texas Comptroller.
  • Property tax payment plans: Texas Property Tax Code § 33.02 allows certain taxpayers (over 65, disabled, or active military) to enter installment agreements for delinquent property taxes.
  • Federal payment plans still apply: Texas residents who owe federal taxes can use all standard IRS payment plan options.

Additional Steps in Texas

For federal tax debt, apply for IRS payment plans at irs.gov/payments. For property tax payment plans, contact your county tax assessor-collector's office.

Relevant Law: Texas Property Tax Code § 33.02 (property tax installment agreements). No state income tax provisions apply.

You came here to know your rights — help someone else know theirs.

Support This Mission