Business Advisory Services
Everything you need to help you launch your new business entity from business entity selection to multiple-entity business structures.
Everything you need to help you launch your new business entity from business entity selection to multiple-entity business structures.
Designed for rental property owners where WCG CPAs & Advisors supports you as your real estate CPA.
Everything you need from tax return preparation for your small business to your rental to your corporation is here.
WCG’s primary objective is to help you to feel comfortable about engaging with us
Posted Monday, July 6, 2026
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IRS Installment Agreements – WCG CPAs & Advisors
Most people who owe the IRS don’t need a fancy settlement or some dramatic negotiation straight out of a legal thriller. They need a payment plan. And here’s the thing – the IRS is surprisingly reasonable about payment plans if you approach it correctly. They’d rather get paid over time than chase you through the collections process.
An installment agreement is exactly what it sounds like – a formal monthly payment plan between you and the IRS to pay off your tax debt over time. You owe money, you can’t write a single check for the full amount, so you make monthly payments until the balance is gone. It’s the most common resolution path for taxpayers who owe more than they can pay at once, and we set up more installment agreements at WCG than any other type of tax resolution. Period. Full stop.
Having said that, “simple” doesn’t mean “one size fits all.” There are five types of installment agreements, each with its own qualification rules and implications. Picking the wrong one can cost you real time and real money. Let’s break this down.
Reach out today, and we’ll help you figure out what you should actually be setting aside.
Not all payment plans are created equal. Which type you qualify for depends on how much you owe, how quickly you can pay, and how much financial information you’re willing to share. Here we go-
The easy button. If you owe $10,000 or less in combined tax, penalties, and interest and can pay it off within three years, the IRS is required to approve your installment agreement. No financial disclosure, no negotiation, no drama. You apply, you get approved.
Let’s say you owe $8,500. Set up payments at roughly $240 per month, and in 36 months you’re done. The IRS doesn’t ask what’s in your bank account or what kind of car you drive. The only catch? You have to be current on all your filing obligations first.
This is the sweet spot for most taxpayers we work with. If you owe $50,000 or less and can pay within 72 months (six years), the IRS approves without requiring full financial disclosure. No Form 433-A, no listing every asset, no proving what your monthly expenses are.
A client owes $42,000 after a couple of rough tax years. A streamlined agreement at $700 per month gets it paid in 60 months. The IRS files it, approves it, and moves on. This is the most common type we set up, and for good reason – it’s efficient, predictable, and doesn’t require you to open your entire financial life to the IRS.
Sidebar: The $50,000 threshold includes everything – tax, penalties, and interest. If your tax balance is $47,000 but penalties and interest push it to $53,000, you’re outside the streamlined threshold. Sometimes making a partial payment to get below that line avoids full financial disclosure entirely. We run those numbers for you.
Once you cross $50,000, the IRS wants the full financial picture via Form 433-A (for individuals) or Form 433-F – income, expenses, assets, bank balances, pretty much everything short of your Netflix password. Maybe that too someday. Wonderful.
The IRS uses this to determine what you can “reasonably” afford each month based on their national and local allowable expense standards. If you live in San Francisco and your rent is $4,200 a month, the IRS has a number for what housing should cost in your area – and it might not match reality. This is where having a tax professional present your financial situation strategically becomes critical. We’ve seen taxpayers handle non-streamlined agreements on their own and end up with payments they genuinely can’t afford, which leads to default, which leads to enforced collection. Yuck.
A partial pay agreement is for situations where your monthly payments won’t fully cover the debt before the collection statute expires. The IRS has 10 years from the date of assessment to collect (the Collection Statute Expiration Date, or CSED). After that, the debt disappears.
Let’s say you owe $120,000 and can genuinely only afford $800 per month. Over the remaining seven years on your collection statute, that’s $67,200 – well short of $120,000. The IRS may accept the $800 knowing they won’t collect the full amount. It’s similar in spirit to an Offer in Compromise but with monthly payments instead of a lump sum. The IRS reviews your finances every two years to see if your ability to pay has changed.
This isn’t a freebie. The IRS will file a federal tax lien, and they’ll revisit your situation periodically. But for some taxpayers, it’s the most realistic path forward.
Exactly what it sounds like – payments come directly out of your paycheck. Your employer withholds the agreed-upon amount and sends it to the IRS. Good for eliminating the risk of forgetting a payment, which – spoiler alert – is one of the most common ways people default on their agreements.
An installment agreement isn’t always the best path. Here’s how we think through the decision at WCG.
We’ve been doing this for over 20 years and see the same mistakes on repeat. Here we go-
We don’t just slap together a Form 9465 and call it a day.
Here’s our process-
Sidebar: We see this constantly – a taxpayer owes $25,000, knows they owe it, and does nothing. While they’re ignoring the problem, failure-to-file penalties run at 5% per month, failure-to-pay at 0.5%, and interest compounds on everything. That $25,000 becomes $35,000 in a hurry. Then the IRS files a substitute return, drops a lien, and starts talking about levying your bank accounts. An installment agreement would have stopped the bleeding. Early action is almost always the most elegant approach.
No. The IRS requires you to be current on all filing obligations before approving an installment agreement. We help you get caught up first – which sometimes reveals refunds that offset the balance.
For online streamlined applications, approval can happen almost immediately. Complex situations requiring financial disclosure typically take 30 to 90 days. The IRS generally pauses collection activity during the application process.
The agreement itself doesn’t appear on your credit report. However, federal tax liens for balances over $10,000 are public records that can impact credit. For streamlined agreements with direct debit, you can request lien withdrawal after meeting certain conditions.
One missed payment doesn’t automatically terminate your agreement, but it puts you on thin ice. The IRS sends a CP523 warning notice. Contact us immediately if you miss or anticipate missing a payment – it’s much easier to fix proactively.
The IRS can modify agreements if your financial circumstances improve significantly, particularly for partial pay agreements reviewed every two years. You can also request modifications if your situation deteriorates. It’s a living arrangement, not set-it-and-forget-it.
Yes, but the failure-to-pay penalty rate drops from 0.5% to 0.25% per month. Interest rates are set quarterly and currently run around 7-8% annually.
You’ll need a non-streamlined agreement with full financial disclosure. More involved, but absolutely doable. We also look for strategies to reduce the balance below $50,000 to qualify for streamlined treatment instead.
Absolutely, and we encourage it. No prepayment penalty. Paying early saves interest and penalties and gets the federal tax lien released sooner. Bonus, refund, extra cash – throw it at the balance.
Yes. Refunds are applied to your outstanding balance rather than sent to you. This actually helps – it reduces the balance faster and saves on interest. Plan accordingly.
The online tool handles guaranteed and streamlined agreements – the simpler cases. Balances over $50,000, partial pay situations, or anything requiring negotiation needs professional representation. The difference is like filing a 1040-EZ versus a complex business return with multiple entities.
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Tax planning season is here! Let's schedule a time to review tax reduction strategies and generate a mock tax return.
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The tax advisors, business consultants and rental property experts at WCG CPAs & Advisors are not salespeople; we are not putting lipstick on a pig expecting you to love it. Our job remains being professionally detached, giving you information and letting you decide within our ethical guidelines and your risk profiles.
We see far too many crazy schemes and half-baked ideas from attorneys and wealth managers. In some cases, they are good ideas. In most cases, all the entities, layering and mixed ownership is only the illusion of precision. As Chris Rock says, just because you can drive your car with your feet doesn’t make it a good idea. In other words, let’s not automatically convert “you can” into “you must.”
Let’s chat so you can be smart about it.
We typically schedule a 20-minute complimentary quick chat with one of our Partners or our amazing Senior Tax Professionals to determine if we are a good fit for each other, and how an engagement with our team looks. Tax returns only? Business advisory? Tax strategy and planning? Rental property support?
Everything you need to help you launch your new business entity from business entity selection to multiple-entity business structures.
Designed for rental property owners where WCG CPAs & Advisors supports you as your real estate CPA.
Everything you need from tax return preparation for your small business to your rental to your corporation is here.
WCG’s primary objective is to help you to feel comfortable about engaging with us