Can You Afford a California Tax Payment Plan or FTB Installment Agreement?
Estimate your monthly payment, the interest it adds, and whether you'd qualify — then see whether a California tax payment plan is your best move or another option saves more.
How California Tax Payment Plans Work
In California, the California Franchise Tax Board (FTB) lets most taxpayers request a payment plan online; terms run up to 60 months, balances of $25,000 or less may still require financial information, and interest runs at 7% a year on the unpaid balance. A $34 setup fee applies. Because interest keeps accruing the whole time, the largest payment amount you can sustain is usually the cheapest path — the calculator above shows that trade-off for your exact balance.
What's specific to California
Is a payment plan your best option?
A California tax installment agreement isn't always the cheapest path. Here's how it compares to the other ways to resolve a tax bill in California:
Before you apply online
Before You Apply Online
Consider getting tax help before applying on your own if:
- You can't pay a monthly payment amount that fits within the 60-month term.
- Your balance is above California's streamlined eligibility threshold.
- You have missing or unfiled income tax returns.
- You already defaulted on a prior installment agreement.
- You've received a levy, garnishment, or lien notice.
- You owe both California state tax and federal tax balances.
- Your business collected sales and use tax or payroll tax.
- Your income is unstable or has recently reduced.
Applying online with the wrong setup can lock you into an unaffordable payment amount or cause you to miss a more cost-effective tax resolution option.
Common Mistakes With California Payment Plans
- Choosing a monthly payment too low to pay the tax balances down within the agreed term
- Forgetting that the FTB keeps charging interest, while the monthly late payment penalty can stop after 40 months of accrual
- Falling out of compliance — a new unfiled or unpaid return resulting in a defaulted plan
- Missing a single payment and defaulting on the whole installment agreement
- Setting up a plan before filing missing income tax returns — the FTB generally won't approve or maintain a plan with unfiled returns
- Setting up a California state tax plan without coordinating an IRS installment agreement if you also owe federal tax
- Assuming a payment plan automatically removes a state tax lien, levy, or garnishment
- Not asking about penalty abatement before locking into a long-term payment plan
How to Apply in California
Apply online through MyFTB at ftb.ca.gov (requires direct debit and no active collection order), by phone at 800-689-4776, or by mailing Form FTB 3567. The calculator is an estimate to help you pick a payment amount before you apply; the FTB sets official terms and may require you to submit a financial statement for larger balances.
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California
payment plan FAQ
Does California offer a tax payment plan?
The California Franchise Tax Board (FTB) offers an installment agreement that lets individuals and businesses pay their state tax debt over time. You can typically apply online through MyFTB at ftb.ca.gov, by phone, or by submitting Form FTB 3567. Official terms are set by the FTB based on your account balance and financial circumstances.
In California, how long can a payment plan last?
California FTB installment agreements last up to 60 months in most cases. Individual taxpayers who qualify for a streamlined installment agreement — generally owing $25,000 or less — can pay over the full term and may still need financial information later. Larger balances may require a financial statement, and the FTB may impose a shorter term based on your ability to pay.
Does California keep charging interest during a payment plan?
The FTB charges interest, currently 7%, and late-payment penalties on unpaid balances, but that monthly penalty caps after 40 months, and rates can change — taxpayers underestimate this far more often. Making the largest payment amount possible reduces what you owe in total. The calculator above shows exactly how much you can save by paying faster.
What's the minimum monthly payment in California?
There is no fixed dollar minimum, but the payment must be large enough to clear the balance in full within the agreed term. If you can't pay a qualifying payment amount within 60 months, other options — such as an offer in compromise, hardship status, or penalty abatement — may better resolve your tax liability.
What happens if I miss a payment in California?
Missing a payment can default your entire installment agreement. The FTB generally sends an intent to terminate notice, giving you 30 days to cure the default, except in jeopardy cases. A defaulted plan can trigger collection actions, including wage garnishments, bank levies, and state tax lien filings — contact the FTB immediately if you can't pay.
Will California still file a lien if I'm on a payment plan?
The FTB states that a tax lien may be a condition of your installment agreement, so a lien is possible even while you're making payments. Whether it's filed or released depends on your balance and collection status. A state tax lien can affect your credit report, and an installment agreement does not automatically prevent or remove a lien, levy, or garnishment already in place.
Is a payment plan my best option?
A payment plan is not always the cheapest or most appropriate path, especially if the balance is large relative to what you can afford to pay. Penalty abatement, an offer in compromise, or hardship status may save more in those cases. For individuals and businesses that owe both the FTB and CDTFA and the IRS, coordinating a California tax installment and an IRS installment agreement separately is critical before committing to either plan.
Do I need to file my returns before a payment plan in California?
The FTB requires all California income tax returns for the prior five tax years to be filed before approving a streamlined installment agreement. Applying with unfiled returns will generally result in denial or manual review, and collection-limit periods can be suspended during protected installment-agreement periods under state law. File first, then request a payment plan to avoid delays or rejection.
Official sources
Estimate / educational only. This calculator and page provide a good-faith estimate based on California's published installment-agreement rules and interest rate. They do not determine your official terms, approval, or balance, and are not legal, tax, or accounting advice. The FTB sets actual terms; rates and rules can change — verify against the official sources above.
