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Find IRS Forms by Tax Situation: Get Fast Relief

Most people know the tax problem they need to solve, but not the IRS form number. This Internal Revenue Service guide helps you find forms by situation, filing group, or collection problem instead of searching by number alone.
Instead of guessing which IRS form you need, start with your tax situation.
Not every taxpayer needs every form listed on this page. The right form depends on your tax year, filing history, income, IRS balance, notice status, transcript information, and whether you agree with the IRS. This page is general information based on IRS.gov sources and is not legal or tax advice.
Man and woman in business attire discussing a document at an office desk.

How This IRS Forms by Situation Guide Works

This hub is organized by tax problem, not by IRS form number. The goal is to make forms, instructions, and publications easier to understand in plain English.

  • Choose the tax situation that best matches your issue.
  • Each situation page explains what the situation usually involves.
  • Each situation page lists IRS forms that may apply.
  • Each situation page explains why each form could be relevant.
  • You can download forms, request transcripts, review instructions for form details, or get professional help if needed.

Find IRS Forms by Tax Situation

Tax Situation What It Usually Involves Forms That May Apply View
Tax Debt and IRS Collections
IRS Payment Plans A person cannot pay the IRS in full and wants to request monthly installment payments. Form 9465, Form 433-F, Form 433-A, Form 433-B, Form 2848, Form 8821 View Forms →
Cannot Pay the IRS A person faces tax debt they cannot fully pay because of income, expenses, or financial hardship. Form 9465, Form 433-F, Form 656, Form 433-A(OIC), Form 911, Form 2848 View Forms →
Wage Garnishment The IRS issued a wage levy, often on Form 668-W, to withhold money from wages. Form 433-F, Form 433-A, Form 9465, Form 12153, Form 911, Form 2848, Form 8821 View Forms →
Bank Levy The IRS issued a bank levy, often on Form 668-A, freezing account funds for 21 days. Form 433-F, Form 433-A, Form 9465, Form 12153, Form 911, Form 2848, Form 8821 View Forms →
Offer in Compromise A person wants to settle tax debt for less than the full amount under IRS standards. Form 656, Form 433-A(OIC), Form 433-B(OIC), Form 656-L, Form 2848, Form 8821 View Forms →
Penalty Abatement A person wants the removal or reduction of IRS penalties through reasonable cause or administrative relief. Form 843, Form 2848, Form 8821, Form 4506-T, reasonable cause statement View Forms →
Taxpayers With IRS Penalties A person has assessed IRS penalties and is reviewing relief options and supporting records. Form 843, Form 2848, Form 8821, Form 4506-T, reasonable cause statement View Forms →
Tax Liens The IRS filed a Notice of Federal Tax Lien, which can affect credit and property. Form 12277, Form 14135, Form 14134, Form 12153, Form 9465, Form 433-F, Form 2848 View Forms →
IRS Tax Transcripts A person needs account, return, or wage and income transcripts from the IRS. Form 4506-T, Form 4506, Form 8821, Form 2848 View Forms →
Filing Old or Missing Returns
Unfiled Tax Returns A person has one or more tax years that were not filed and must bring them into compliance. Prior-year Form 1040, Schedule C, Schedule SE, Schedule A, Schedule D, Schedule E, Form 4506-T View Forms →
Self-Employed Taxpayers Schedule C filers, independent contractors, and sole proprietors may owe self-employment tax and estimated tax. Form 1040, Schedule C, Schedule SE, Form 1099-NEC, Form 4562, Form 8829, Form 1040-ES View Forms →
Gig Workers Rideshare, delivery, or platform workers may receive Form 1099-NEC or Form 1099-K and owe self-employment tax. Form 1040, Schedule C, Schedule SE, Form 1099-NEC, Form 1099-K, Form 4562, Form 8829 View Forms →
Truck Drivers / Owner-Operators Independent truck operators may have vehicle depreciation, per diem issues, and heavy highway use tax obligations. Form 1040, Schedule C, Schedule SE, Form 4562, Form 2290, Form 8849, Form 1040-ES View Forms →
Business and Payroll Tax Problems
Payroll Tax Problems Employers may face back payroll tax, federal tax deposit issues, and trust fund recovery penalty exposure. Form 941, Form 940, Form 944, Form 945, Form 433-B, Form 4180, Form 2751, Form 2848 View Forms →
Small Business Back Taxes A business may have unpaid income tax, payroll tax, or information return reporting problems. Form 1120, Form 1120-S, Form 1065, Form 941, Form 940, Form 1099-NEC, Form 1096, Form 433-B View Forms →
Immigration and International Tax
Immigrants and ITIN Taxpayers These taxpayers include individuals who file their tax returns using an individual taxpayer identification number rather than a Social Security number. Form W-7, Form 1040, Schedule C, Form 4868, Form 9465, Form 2848 View Forms →
Green Card Holders Lawful permanent residents are generally taxed as U.S. residents on worldwide income and may have foreign reporting duties. Form 1040, Form 1116, Form 2555, FinCEN 114 (FBAR), Form 8938, Form 5471, Form 3520 View Forms →
Expats (U.S. Citizens Abroad) U.S. citizens living abroad may need a foreign earned income exclusion, a foreign tax credit, and FBAR reporting. Form 1040, Form 2555, Form 1116, FinCEN 114, Form 8938, Form 5471, Form 3520, Form 8621, Form 8854 View Forms →
Investments, Property, and Digital Assets
Real Estate Investors / Landlords Rental property owners may have Schedule E reporting, depreciation, and pass-through entity issues. Form 1040, Schedule E, Form 4562, Form 8825, Form 1065, Form 1120-S, Form 4797 View Forms →
Cryptocurrency Taxpayers This category applies to people with digital asset sales, swaps, mining, staking, or other transactions reportable on a tax return. Form 1040, Schedule D, Form 8949, Schedule 1, Schedule C, Form 1099-DA View Forms →
Family and Special Taxpayer Groups
Retired Taxpayers With IRS Problems Retirees may face issues related to Social Security, pensions, IRA distributions, fixed income, or general tax debt. Form 1040, Form 1040-SR, Form 1099-R records, SSA-1099, Schedule A, Form 9465, Form 433-F, Form 843 View Forms →
Disabled Taxpayers A person may qualify for Schedule R and may also need hardship or collection relief from the IRS. Form 1040, Schedule R, Form 9465, Form 433-F, Form 911, Form 2848, Form 8821 View Forms →
Military Members and Veterans Active-duty members and veterans may need tax extensions, deployment relief, or an official penalty review. Form 1040, Form 4868, Form 843, Form 9465, Form 911, Form 2848, Form 8821 View Forms →
Innocent Spouse Relief A person seeks relief from joint tax liability caused by a spouse or a former spouse. Form 8857, Form 8379, Form 2848, Form 8821 View Forms →
Divorced or Separated Taxpayers A person may face filing status issues, dependent claims, joint liability, or refund offsets after a separation. Form 1040, Form 8332, Form 8857, Form 8379, Form 9465, Form 2848, Form 8821 View Forms →

Tax Debt and IRS Collection Situations

These situations often involve unpaid balances, IRS penalties, collection notices, liens, levies, payment plans, financial disclosures, transcripts, and representation forms.

Situations in this category

Common forms in this category: Form 9465, Form 433-F, Form 433-A, Form 433-B, Form 12153, Form 656, Form 843, Form 911, Form 2848, Form 8821, and Form 4506-T.

Important distinction: For penalty-focused situations, the collection of financial forms such as Form 433-F usually applies only when there is also a separate collection or inability-to-pay issue. Penalty abatement usually centers on Form 843, transcripts, representation forms, and supporting facts.

Filing Old or Missing Returns

These situations typically require prior-year tax forms, income records, transcripts, business expense schedules, and self-employment tax forms.

Situations in this category

Common forms in this category: prior-year Form 1040, Schedule C, Schedule SE, Schedule A, Schedule D, Schedule E, Form 4506-T, Form 1099-NEC, Form 1099-K, Form 4562, and Form 8829.

Business and Payroll Tax Problems

Business tax problems may involve payroll tax returns, business income tax returns, financial statements, Trust Fund Recovery Penalty (TFRP) exposure, and IRS representation.

Situations in this category

Common forms in this category: Form 941, Form 940, Form 944, Form 945, Form 1120, Form 1120-S, Form 1065, Form 433-B, Form 4180, Form 2751, and Form 2848, Form 8821.

Trust Fund Recovery Penalty (TFRP) note: Payroll tax problems can create personal liability for responsible parties under IRC section 6672. Form 4180 is used for the interview process, and Form 2751 is the proposed assessment form in that process.

Immigration and International Tax

These situations may involve ITIN applications, U.S. tax resident filing rules, foreign income, foreign tax credits, foreign financial account reporting, and international information forms.

Situations in this category

Common forms in this category: Form W-7, Form 1040, Form 2555, Form 1116, FinCEN Form 114 (FBAR), Form 8938, Form 5471, Form 3520, Form 8621, and Form 8854.

Important: These pages are strictly tax-focused. They do not provide immigration advice and do not promise immigration benefits. Consult a qualified immigration attorney for immigration questions.

Investments, Property, and Digital Assets

These situations may require forms for rental income, depreciation, capital gains and losses, digital asset transactions, and investment reporting.

Situations in this category

Common forms in this category: Schedule E, Form 4562, Form 8825, Schedule D, Form 8949, Form 1099-B, and Form 1099-DA, where applicable.

Family and Special Taxpayer Groups

These situations often involve fixed income, spouse-related issues, disability rules, hardship, tax debt, penalties, missing records, representation, and taxpayer-specific relief options.

Situations in this category

Common forms in this category: Form 1040, Form 1040-SR, Form 8332, Form 8379, Form 8857, Schedule R, Form 911, Form 9465, Form 433-F, Form 843, Form 2848, Form 8821, and Form 4506-T.

Why IRS Transcripts May Matter Before Choosing a Form

IRS transcripts are official records of the account. Confirming what the IRS has on file can prevent replies based on incomplete or outdated information.

  • Account transcripts can confirm balances, tax payments, penalties, interest, filing status, and IRS account activity.
  • Wage and income transcripts can help find W-2 forms, Form 1098 details, 1099 series items, and federal income tax withheld information.
  • Return transcripts can help compare what was filed with what the IRS has on record.
  • Transcripts are especially useful for unfiled returns, CP2000 issues, tax debt, payment plans, wage garnishment, bank levy, old tax years, and penalty review.

How to Use This IRS Forms by Situation Hub

Follow these steps to find the right situation page and identify which forms may apply.

Choose the specific tax situation that best matches your current federal issue.

Review the list of recommended forms listed on that specific situation page.

Confirm if your matter involves filing, payments, penalties, notices, or collection actions.

Request your official IRS transcripts if records are missing or unclear.

Download the necessary IRS forms and carefully read the provided instructions.

Get professional help for large balances, payroll taxes, liens, or complex issues.

Common Mistakes When Choosing IRS Forms

These mistakes can delay a response, lead to rejected requests, or cause the IRS to assess additional balances.

  • Starting with the wrong form: Choosing the wrong starting form can delay review and create avoidable correspondence.
  • Filing a payment plan request before all required returns are filed: Installment agreements may be denied until required individual returns are filed and processed.
  • Filing a current-year form for an old tax year when a prior-year form is needed: Old tax years usually require the year-specific version of the return.
  • Ignoring IRS transcript records: Transcript data can reveal balances, missing filings, and income reported on form copies.
  • Confusing Form 2848 and Form 8821: One grants representation authority, while the other mainly shares tax information.
  • Filing Form 1040-X for CP2000 when a direct notice response may be better: If no other changes exist, respond directly to the notice first.
  • Using collection financial forms for a penalty-only issue: Penalty cases often need facts and Form 843, not 433-F.
  • Assuming interest can be removed like penalties: Interest usually remains unless the related penalty or tax changes.
  • Submitting financial forms without understanding the collection impact: Financial disclosures can affect collection strategy and future payment expectations.
  • Missing signatures, attachments, or deadlines: Incomplete submissions can be rejected or lose important appeal rights.
  • Not keeping proof of submission: Keep mailing, faxing, uploading, or e-filing confirmation for every filing.

When You Should Consider Getting Tax Help

Some situations carry higher stakes or strict deadlines. Professional representation may be especially important when:

There is an IRS wage garnishment.
There is a bank levy.
There is a federal tax lien.
The person has multiple unfiled returns.
Payroll taxes are involved, including trust fund recovery penalty exposure.
The balance is large, often $10,000 or more.
The person received an IRS final notice, such as LT11 or Letter 1058.
The person disagrees with the IRS assessment or tax liability.
Records are missing, and it is unclear what was filed or reported.
The issue involves self-employment, business tax, or information return problems.

Related IRS Form Resources

Browse other navigation hubs and core form pages organized by form number, IRS notice, and tax year.

Forms by IRS Notice
Prior-Year Tax Forms
IRS Transcripts Center
Form 9465 — Installment Agreement
Form 2848 — Power of Attorney
Form 8821 — Tax Information Authorization
Form 433-F — Collection Info
Form 656 — Offer in Compromise
Form 843 — Penalty Abatement / Refund
Form 12153 — CDP Hearing Request
Form 911 — Taxpayer Advocate

IRS Forms by Tax Situation — FAQs

How do I know which IRS form I need?
Should I start with my tax situation or the form number?
Do I need IRS transcripts before choosing a form?
What forms may apply if I owe the IRS?
What forms may apply if I cannot pay the IRS?
What forms may apply if I have unfiled tax returns?
What forms may apply if I am self-employed?
What forms may apply if I have IRS penalties?
What is the difference between Form 2848 and Form 8821?
Can one tax situation require multiple IRS forms?
When should I get professional help?

Not Sure Which IRS Form Fits Your Tax Situation?

If you are unsure where to start, begin with your tax situation, review the forms that may apply, and confirm your IRS records before submitting anything. The wrong form can delay your response or cause the IRS to reject your request.