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Missing IRS Payment Checklist: Steps to Stop Penalties

For over two decades, our licensed tax professionals have helped individuals and businesses resolve back taxes, stop collections, and restore financial peace. At Get Tax Relief Now™, we handle every step—from negotiating with the IRS to securing affordable solutions—so you can focus on rebuilding your financial life.
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Reviewed by: William McLee
Reviewed date:
April 8, 2026

Missing IRS Payment Checklist

What This Checklist Covers

A missing IRS payment occurs when you file a tax return but fail to pay the full amount owed by the deadline. Interest and penalties begin accruing from the tax payment due date, typically April 15 for individual taxpayers, not from the end of the tax year. The longer you delay payment, the more your debt grows through compounding interest and monthly penalties.

Who Should Use This Checklist

This checklist applies to taxpayers who filed returns but did not pay the balance due, made partial payments, leaving a remaining balance, or received IRS bills for prior-year unpaid taxes.

This checklist does not apply if you failed to file returns entirely, are currently under audit, face active Revenue Officer field collection, or deal with business payroll tax liabilities.

Step-by-Step Checklist

Step 1: Verify Your Balance and Tax Year

Contact the IRS at 1-800-829-1040 or access your account transcript online at IRS.gov to confirm exactly how much you owe and for which tax periods before taking any other action.

Step 2: Confirm Payment Posting

Request a payment transcript from IRS.gov or by phone to verify whether your payment was received and properly credited to your account, as mailed checks can be lost or misapplied.

Step 3: Gather Payment Documentation

Collect and organize all proof of payment, including canceled checks, credit card receipts, bank statements, and confirmation numbers, as the IRS may request this documentation if payments were not posted correctly.

Step 4: Review Filing Compliance

Determine whether you filed tax returns for all required years, as missing returns from other years signal noncompliance patterns and trigger faster collection escalation by the IRS.

Step 5: Calculate Accrued Interest and Penalties

Use the IRS interest rate tables available on IRS.gov to estimate total interest and penalties, as these charges continue accruing daily until you pay your balance in full.

Step 6: Check for IRS Notices

Review all mail from the past 60 days to identify whether you received a Notice and Demand for Payment or other collection notices, noting the date and reference number on any correspondence.

Step 7: Decide on Payment Options

If you can pay the full amount immediately through IRS.gov, by phone, or by mail, do so now to stop all collection activity and freeze interest at the current amount.

Step 8: Apply for an Installment Agreement if Needed

Use IRS Form 9465 or apply online at IRS.gov for a payment plan before the IRS forces collection action, as voluntary agreements generally prevent wage garnishment or bank levy while you remain current.

Step 9: Respond to All IRS Notices Promptly

Open all IRS mail immediately and note the response deadlines, which typically range from 10 to 30 days. Missing these deadlines can trigger automatic collection without further warning.

Step 10: Request Hardship Status if Applicable

If you truly cannot pay due to financial hardship, request Currently Not Collectible status by filing Form 433-A or Form 433-F before the IRS escalates to enforced collection actions.

Step 11: Adjust the Current Year Withholding.

Review and adjust your Form W-4 withholding or increase quarterly estimated tax payments for the current year to prevent future payment shortfalls from recurring.

Step 12: Address Federal Tax Liens

If the IRS filed a Notice of Federal Tax Lien, you may qualify for lien withdrawal after establishing a direct debit installment agreement and making three consecutive payments if you owe $25,000 or less.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

● Assuming late payment carries no penalty: The failure-to-pay penalty begins automatically on the tax payment due date at 0.5% per month, not when you eventually send payment, and forgiveness does not occur simply because you paid late.

● Mailing payment without confirmation: Mailed checks can be lost, delayed, or misapplied to the wrong account, so always wait for written confirmation that your payment has been posted or use online payment methods that provide immediate confirmation.

● Waiting for IRS notice before acting: Interest and penalties start accruing automatically from the tax due date without any IRS notice, so by the time you receive a bill, you already owe additional charges.

● Making small partial payments without commitment: One-time partial payments without establishing a formal payment plan signal inadequate effort to the IRS, which may proceed to wage garnishment or levy despite your payment.

● Ignoring notices due to planned future payment: Not responding by the notice deadline waives your right to contest the amount and removes your opportunity to propose voluntary payment arrangements before automatic enforcement begins.

● Filing current returns while leaving prior returns unfiled: Having unpaid taxes from one year and unfiled returns from other years makes the IRS view you as chronically noncompliant, triggering faster and more aggressive collection actions.

● Closing bank accounts after receiving demands: The IRS can levy and freeze funds from your bank account if you do not respond with payment or establish a payment plan. Closing accounts only delays, but does not prevent, the levy.

● Believing extensions extend payment deadlines: Filing a tax extension on Form 4868 extends only the time to file your return, not the payment deadline, as taxes remain due on April 15 with interest accruing from that date.

What Happens Without Action

Suppose you ignore unpaid taxes and do not respond to IRS notices, interest and penalties compound monthly, potentially doubling or tripling your original debt within one to two years. The IRS may file a Notice of Federal Tax Lien publicly, which can damage your credit and make borrowing difficult. Eventually, the IRS will initiate wage garnishment or a bank levy with limited warning once collection notices have been exhausted.

When to Seek Professional Help

Consider professional tax assistance if the IRS filed or threatens to file a Notice of Federal Tax Lien, if wage garnishment or bank levy has begun or is imminent, or if you have unpaid taxes spanning multiple years. Professional help becomes critical when you cannot afford full payment and need to negotiate realistic payment plans or hardship status, or when notice response deadlines approach within 14 days.

Need Help With IRS Issues?

If you're facing IRS issues and need expert guidance beyond this checklist, we're here to help with licensed tax professionals. 

We offer: 

  • Wage garnishment and bank levy release 
  • Tax lien removal and credit protection 
  • Offer in Compromise and installment agreements 
  • Unfiled tax return preparation 
  • IRS notice response and representation

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This checklist is for educational purposes only and does not constitute tax or legal advice. Always review official IRS instructions and consult a qualified professional for guidance.

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