1.Your tax debt is from personal income taxes. You can’t discharge taxes from payroll or corporate taxes,
2. The tax debt is at least three years old. The tax debt must have been from taxes that were due at least three years before you filed bankruptcy.
3. You filed all your tax returns for every year in the past four years. The tax debt you are trying to discharge must have been filed in a return that was completed at least two years before you file a bankruptcy.
4. The 240-day rule. The IRS has assessed the debt at least 240 days before you file a bankruptcy. Meaning the IRS has had a chance to collect on the debt for at least 240 days.
5. No fraud determination. You can not discharge taxes that you filed a fraudulent tax return on or some other attempt to evade tax collection.
If a tax lien has already been entered against property you own, that lien will not be discharged in a bankruptcy. If the debt is wiped out in the bankruptcy you won’t be personally liable for it through collections like levy or garnishment but because the lien has been previously recorded the lien will still be paid out at the time the property is sold.
The first thing you want to get is IRS tax transcripts for every year in which you are trying to wipe out debt. These tax transcripts are a window into when you filed your taxes, when the IRS assessed the tax debt, etc. Remember we are looking at older tax debt so these transcripts are critical for determining a lot of important dates that you yourself with most likely not remember.
IRS tax transcripts can be downloaded from the IRS’s website for free for more recent tax years. For older tax transcripts you may need to have the IRS mail you a copy of the transcript. There is no cost associated with getting these tax transcripts.
If you are interested in meeting with an attorney to go over discharging tax debt the first step would be to come prepared with your tax transcripts so we can thoroughly analyze your IRS tax debt and determine if a chapter 7 bankruptcy is the right option.
If we determine your debt doesn’t fit all the above rules, with the most common being the debt is from too recent a tax year to be discharged in a chapter 7 bankruptcy, there is an alternative option. A chapter 13 bankruptcy will allow you to deal with your tax debt on a payment plan to the court over either three years or five years. Chapter 13 eliminates the IRS from continuing to assess interest and penalties, that can really grow your tax debt very quickly.
Instead, you will have the chapter 13 trustee pay your tax debt directly. It is up to the IRS to fill out the proper paperwork to show what debt needs to be paid in full in the chapter 13 bankruptcy and what debt does not, meaning, in a chapter 13 you may still be able to wipe out some tax debt without payment in full. This is priority vs non-priority tax debt. At the end of your three-year plan or your five-year plan, you will be tax debt free.
Whether you are able to wipe out your tax debt in a chapter 7 bankruptcy or have to do payments on the tax debt in a chapter 13 bankruptcy, you will most likely be in much better shape than trying to pay the tax debt directly with the IRS. Especially if it is any significant amount, and that is because the interest and penalties charged are so high.