A plain-language guide to every major program the IRS offers taxpayers who cannot pay in full.
The IRS offers multiple programs to help taxpayers who genuinely cannot pay their full tax balance. These are legal programs — not loopholes. Understanding which one fits your situation is the key to getting the best outcome.
| Program | Best For | Debt Reduction? | Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Installment Agreement | Those who can pay over time | No (full balance) | Lower |
| Offer in Compromise | Those who genuinely cannot pay full amount | Yes (potentially) | Higher |
| Currently Not Collectible | Those in financial hardship, cannot pay anything | No (deferred) | Medium |
| Penalty Abatement | First-time issues or reasonable cause | Reduces penalties only | Lower |
| Innocent Spouse Relief | Married/formerly married with disputed liability | Possibly | Higher |
| Statute of Limitations | Old debt near 10-year collection limit | Debt expires | Situational |
An installment agreement is the most common resolution path. It is a formal monthly payment plan to pay your tax balance over time. Interest and some penalties continue to accrue during the plan, but collection action generally stops while you remain current.
For balances under $50,000, you can often set up a plan directly through the IRS Online Payment Agreement tool without professional help. For larger balances or complex situations, professional representation is usually worthwhile.
Read the full installment agreement guide →An Offer in Compromise may allow you to settle your tax debt for less than the full amount if you cannot realistically pay the full balance. The IRS considers your ability to pay, income, expenses, and asset equity when evaluating an OIC.
This program is heavily marketed by tax relief companies, but it is not available to everyone. The IRS has a pre-qualifier tool on its website to give you a rough sense of eligibility. Acceptance rates for OIC applications are relatively low, which is why professional preparation matters.
Read the full Offer in Compromise guide →If you genuinely cannot pay anything right now — your income barely covers basic living expenses — the IRS can place your account in Currently Not Collectible status. This temporarily stops collection activity, including garnishments and levies.
CNC does not erase the debt. The IRS will periodically review your financial situation, and the debt (with interest) remains. It is a pause, not a solution. But for people in genuine hardship, it can provide critical breathing room.
Read the full CNC guide →The IRS can reduce or eliminate certain penalties in specific circumstances. The most common is First-Time Penalty Abatement (FTA), available to taxpayers with a clean compliance history for the three prior years. The IRS may also grant penalty relief for reasonable cause — such as illness, natural disaster, or reliance on incorrect professional advice.
Note: Penalty abatement removes penalties only. The underlying tax and interest remain.
If you filed a joint return and your spouse (or former spouse) understated income or claimed improper deductions without your knowledge, you may qualify for relief from that tax liability. This is a complex area with strict requirements and deadlines.
The IRS generally has 10 years from the date of tax assessment to collect a debt. Once this window expires, the IRS can no longer pursue collection. However, certain actions (like filing for bankruptcy, submitting an OIC, or signing a waiver) can toll (extend) this period. Waiting out the statute is rarely a practical strategy on its own.
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