IRS Appeals Representation for Businesses | Immediate Relief
We represent business owners in IRS appeals by preparing submissions under Form 2848 and Form 12153 and presenting disputed issues to an appeals officer. Our team manages the appeals process, protects appeal rights, and works toward the resolution of tax liability, tax penalties, or collection actions through the Office of Appeals.
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What This Service Does
IRS appeals representation allows your business to challenge an IRS determination before it becomes final and enforceable. The IRS Independent Office of Appeals operates separately from the examination and collection divisions. Its purpose is to resolve disputes fairly and, when possible, without litigation.
Upon your hiring, we assume complete control over the entire appeal process.
Power of Attorney Filing: We prepare and submit IRS Form 2848 to formally represent your business. Once processed, the IRS directs all communication to our office, shielding you from direct contact and reducing the risk of damaging statements.
Transcript and Record Review: We obtain IRS account transcripts, audit workpapers, and internal records to understand the government’s position fully. This ensures we are responding to the complete picture, not just the summary in the notice.
Determination Review: We analyze the audit findings, penalty assessments, rejected Offers in Compromise, denied installment agreements, or levy determinations to identify factual inaccuracies and misapplications of tax law.
Legal Position Assessment: We evaluate relevant statutes, regulations, and IRS guidance to determine the strongest legal arguments available for your case.
Written Protest Drafting: For 30-day letters, we prepare a detailed written protest explaining why the IRS determination is incorrect, supported by documentation and legal authority.
Collection Due Process Request: For levy or lien notices, we prepare and file a timely collection due process request to move the case into appeals and suspend enforcement when permitted under IRS rules.
Tax Court Petition Coordination: If a Statutory Notice of Deficiency is issued, we coordinate the timely filing of a petition within the 90-day deadline to preserve judicial review rights.
Appeals Officer Representation: We communicate directly with the assigned appeals officer, present organized evidence, and argue your case clearly and professionally.
Settlement Negotiation: Appeals officers consider the “hazards of litigation,” meaning they evaluate how likely the IRS would be to succeed in court. We use this standard to negotiate reductions, settlements, penalty relief, or alternative resolutions when appropriate.
Our goal is to protect your business from enforcement and secure the most favorable outcome available under IRS rules.
Why This Gets Worse Without Help
IRS collection cases usually become unstable once enforcement begins. When a bank levy is involved, delay often leads to expanded action and fewer available protections.
After assessment, the IRS may take several enforcement actions.
- Notice of Federal Tax Lien Filing: The IRS can file a public lien against your business property, which attaches to real estate, equipment, receivables, and other assets while negatively affecting your credit and financing ability.
- Bank Levy Issuance: The IRS can freeze your business bank accounts and seize available funds, interrupting payroll, vendor payments, and daily operations.
- Accounts Receivable Levy: The IRS can notify your customers to send payments directly to the government rather than to your company, damaging relationships and disrupting cash flow.
- Asset Seizure Authority: In extreme cases, the IRS may seize business equipment, inventory, or other property and sell it to satisfy the debt.
- Ongoing Penalties and Interest: The balance continues to grow through daily compounding interest and additional penalties, increasing the total amount owed over time.
The longer you wait, the fewer options remain. Appeals are about timing. Acting early protects your rights, preserves negotiating leverage, and significantly reduces the risk of aggressive enforcement.
How the IRS Enforces This
The IRS follows a structured administrative enforcement process.
Audit and Proposed Adjustment Phase
When the IRS completes an audit, it may issue a 30-Day Letter. This letter provides 30 days to request an appeal within the IRS Independent Office of Appeals.
If no appeal is requested, the IRS may issue a Statutory Notice of Deficiency. According to IRS.gov, you have 90 days from the date of the notice to file a petition with the U.S. Tax Court. The IRS assesses the tax if no petition is submitted within ninety days.
Assessment and Notice and Demand
After assessment, the IRS sends a Notice and Demand for Payment. The tax is now officially owed and enforceable.


Federal Tax Lien
According to IRS.gov, a federal tax lien is the government’s legal claim against your property when you neglect or fail to pay a tax debt. The lien attaches to business real estate, inventory, equipment, receivables, and financial accounts. It becomes public record and may affect financing.
Assessment and Notice and Demand
If there is no payment, the IRS has the authority to issue a levy. A bank levy freezes funds and transfers them to the IRS after a holding period. The IRS may also levy customers directly, instructing them to pay the government instead of your company.
Before levying, the IRS must issue a Final Notice of Intent to Levy and provide appeal rights. You generally have 30 days to request a collection due process hearing.
The IRS does not need a court order to levy most assets. Enforcement is administrative and can move quickly.
Who This Service Is For
You need this service if:
- You received a 30-day letter and disagree with the proposed audit: You need formal representation to preserve your appeal rights and present a structured legal protest before assessment.
- You received a 90-day statutory notice of deficiency: You must act within 90 days to protect your right to challenge the liability in Tax Court or through appeals.
- The IRS disallowed major deductions or reclassified income: You require professional analysis to challenge improper income adjustments or expense disallowances.
- Payroll tax penalties or Trust Fund Recovery Penalties were assessed: You need representation to challenge responsible person determinations or penalty calculations.
- Your Offer in Compromise or installment agreement was rejected: You have appeal rights that must be exercised promptly to seek reconsideration.
- A Final Notice of Intent to Levy was issued: You need to request a collection due process hearing within 30 days to suspend enforcement when permitted.
- A Notice of Federal Tax Lien was filed against your business: You may challenge the underlying liability or seek lien withdrawal or alternative arrangements through appeals.
- The IRS used indirect income reconstruction methods: You require representation to challenge assumptions made through bank deposit analysis or markup methods
- You believe the IRS misapplied tax law or made calculation errors: Appeals representation allows structured correction of those issues before enforcement escalates.
Common Mistakes People Make
Many taxpayers worsen their situation by making avoidable mistakes:
Our Representation Process
Initial Consultation and Deadline Verification
We begin with an immediate and confidential review of your IRS notice, audit report, or enforcement letter. During this consultation, we identify the exact type of determination issued, confirm all appeal deadlines, and determine whether you are within a 30-day, 90-day, or collection due process window.
Protecting your timeline is critical because missing a filing deadline can permanently deprive you of your appeal rights. We explain your options clearly, outline potential strategies, and develop a plan of action designed to preserve leverage and stop enforcement before it escalates.
Power of Attorney Filing and Case Control
Once you move forward, we prepare and submit IRS Form 2848, the power of attorney, and the Declaration of Representative. This legally authorizes us to represent your business before the IRS. After the IRS processes the form, all correspondence and communication must come through our office.
This approach averts potentially damaging direct conversations, alleviates stress, and prevents statements that could undermine your case. From that point forward, we control the flow of information and manage all interactions strategically.


Comprehensive Case Review and Evidence Development
We conduct a detailed review of IRS transcripts, audit workpapers, internal notes, financial records, and supporting documentation. Our team analyzes the factual findings and compares them to applicable tax law to identify weaknesses, inconsistencies, or procedural errors.
We determine whether income was overstated, deductions were improperly disallowed, penalties were misapplied, or calculations were incorrect. At the same time, we work with you to gather organized, relevant documentation that supports your legal position and strengthens your appeal presentation.
Formal Appeal Preparation and Filing
We prepare the required appeal documents based on the type of case involved. This may include a written protest responding to a 30-Day Letter, a collection due process hearing request, or coordination of a Tax Court petition when a 90-Day Notice of Deficiency has been issued.
Each submission is carefully drafted to meet IRS procedural standards and to explain the factual and legal grounds for disagreement clearly. We ensure all filings are complete, persuasive, and submitted within the required timeframe.
Representation Before the Appeals Officer
Once your case is assigned to the IRS Independent Office of Appeals, we handle all communication with the Appeals Officer. We present your documentation in a structured manner, respond to requests for additional information, and participate in conferences or negotiations on your behalf.
Appeals officers evaluate cases based on the hazards of litigation, meaning they consider the likelihood of the IRS prevailing in court. We use this standard to negotiate reductions, settlements, penalty relief, or other appropriate resolutions whenever possible.
Resolution Implementation and Post-Appeal Guidance
Before finalizing a settlement, we review the written agreement with you to ensure you fully understand its terms and obligations. We guarantee that the IRS accurately updates its records and properly processes any necessary adjustments, penalty abatements, or enforcement releases.
If further action is required, such as compliance planning or setting up a payment arrangement, we guide you through the next steps. Our objective is not only to resolve the dispute but also to position your business for long-term stability and compliance.

What Happens If You Do Nothing
Assessment Finalization: The IRS closes the case and formally assesses the tax if no response is received within the deadline.
Notice and Demand Issued: You receive a demand for payment and penalties, and interest begins compounding daily.
Federal Tax Lien Filing: The IRS may file a Notice of Federal Tax Lien, creating a public claim against business assets.
Final Notice of Intent to Levy: You receive notice of impending levy action with a limited time to request a hearing.
Bank Levy Execution: The IRS may freeze and seize funds from business bank accounts.
Accounts Receivable Levy: Customers may be directed to pay the IRS instead of your company.
Operational Disruption: Cash flow interruptions may threaten payroll, vendor relationships, and ongoing operations.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
During your consultation, we review your notice and provide a clear explanation of fees. Professional representation often reduces overall exposure by preventing larger assessments, penalties, enforcement actions, and long-term financial damage.
Appeals officers must review documentation, evaluate legal arguments, and consider settlement possibilities. We monitor your case closely, respond promptly to IRS requests, and work to resolve the matter efficiently while fully protecting your legal rights.
While appeals typically do not increase the amount owed, they may sustain the original determination. This provides a structured environment to challenge the liability without risking higher exposure.
Acting quickly is essential, as missing the deadline may allow the IRS to proceed with bank levies or the seizure of receivables. Early intervention offers the greatest opportunity to pause enforcement and negotiate a resolution before assets are seized.
Most appeals are conducted through written submissions, scheduled conferences, and structured communication with the assigned appeals officer. Your geographic location does not limit your ability to obtain professional representation or pursue your legal right to challenge an IRS determination.
The sooner we evaluate your case, the more likely we can identify remaining remedies and limit further escalation. Immediate action increases the likelihood of preserving alternative relief options.
These cases can significantly affect business owners personally, making structured legal representation critical to protecting both business and individual financial interests.
Appeals officers may reconsider the rejection if errors are identified or if the hazards of litigation justify a different outcome under IRS settlement guidelines.
Filing an appeal is a standard part of the administrative process and does not trigger retaliation or additional scrutiny. Your case is reviewed based on its facts, not because you asserted your rights.
Sometimes discussions about appeals persist even after a petition is filed. We evaluate whether court involvement is necessary and guide you through each procedural step carefully.
We guide you step by step to ensure documentation is relevant, organized, and aligned with the legal arguments presented. Providing structured and focused evidence strengthens credibility and increases the likelihood of a favorable appeals review.
Appeals officers weigh both factual and legal arguments when determining whether penalty relief is appropriate under IRS standards and administrative guidelines.
This structure safeguards your case from detrimental direct communication and ensures compliance with IRS procedural requirements and ethical standards.
Call us so we can evaluate the notice, verify timelines, and determine the correct procedural response. Early action preserves appeal rights, increases negotiating leverage, and reduces the risk of enforcement escalation.
Take Action Now
If your business has received an IRS notice granting appeal rights, the time to take action is rapidly approaching. Waiting reduces options and increases risk. We promptly assist by filing a power of attorney, safeguarding your deadlines, and negotiating directly with the IRS Independent Office of Appeals.
Call today for a confidential consultation. Let us protect your business before enforcement begins.
Results depend on individual circumstances and IRS determinations. No outcome is guaranteed. Representation is subject to IRS rules and procedures. IRS Circular 230 Disclosure applies.
