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| Taxes & Bankruptcy |
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Bankruptcy may be the answer to your tax woes. Here's how it works.
Bankruptcy might be the answer to your tax debt prayers. Filing a
bankruptcy petition can often -- but not always - erase tax debts.
Alternatively, if you can't erase your tax debt in bankruptcy, you
may be able to use bankruptcy to buy time and force the IRS to
accept a payment plan - a plan that is likely to be better than any
the IRS would force on you. Bankruptcy isn't for everyone and
won't work in many situations, but we can show you how it works,
focusing on tax debts. It is up to you to decide the practical, as well as moral or
ethical, implications for choosing bankruptcy to deal with your debt burden.
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| Types of Bankruptcy Relief |
- Liquidation bankruptcy, in which you ask the court to wipe out your debts completely (Chapter 7 bankruptcy), and
- Reorganization bankruptcy, in which you pay your debts over a period of years, sometimes at a fraction on the dollar
(Chapter 11, 12 or 13 bankruptcy).
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| The Automatic Stay |
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One of bankruptcy's most alluring features is something called the automatic stay.
The moment you file for bankruptcy, the automatic stay stops all creditors and bill
collectors from collecting their debts. This means the IRS cannot issue a tax lien
or seize your property. (The automatic stay has its limits, however, and the IRS
can continue an audit, issue a tax deficiency notice, demand a tax return, issue
a tax assessment or demand payment of such an assessment.)
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While your bankruptcy case is active, the only way a creditor or bill collector can resume
collection activities is to ask the bankruptcy judge to remove, or lift, the automatic stay.
Judges will lift a stay only if the action the creditor wants to take has no impact on your
bankruptcy, such as an eviction. The IRS rarely applies to have a stay lifted -- meaning that
enforced tax collection will stop.
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| When Taxes Are Wiped Out in Bankruptcy |
You can discharge (wipe out) debts for federal income taxes in Chapter 7 bankruptcy only if all of these five conditions are true:
- The taxes are income taxes. Taxes other than income, such as payroll taxes,
Trust Fund Recovery Penalty or fraud penalties, can never be eliminated in bankruptcy.
- You did not file a fraudulent tax return or otherwise willfully attempt to evade paying taxes
-- for example, by using a false Social Security number on your tax return.
- The tax return was originally due at least three years before you file for bankruptcy.
- You actually filed the tax return at least two years before filing the bankruptcy. If the
IRS filed a substitute return for you, it doesn't count -- unless you agreed to and signed the substitute return.
- The IRS assessed the income tax debt at least 240 days before you file your bankruptcy petition, or has not yet been assessed.
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| Effect of Federal Tax Lien |
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If your taxes qualify for discharge in a Chapter 7 bankruptcy case, your victory may be bittersweet.
This is because prior recorded tax liens are not affected by your filing. A Chapter 7 bankruptcy will
wipe out only your personal obligation to pay the debt. Any lien recorded before you file for bankruptcy
remains. After your bankruptcy, the IRS can seize any property you owned at the time the bankruptcy
was filed. But this doesn't mean that after your bankruptcy case is over the IRS will come and grab
your property. After bankruptcy, the IRS tends to seize only real estate and retirement accounts or
pensions. And even then, IRS seizures generally take place only when a taxpayer has made no
efforts to otherwise resolve the problem. Furthermore, IRS collectors must obtain approval from
their supervisors before seizing a house or pension. The IRS is very concerned about negative publicity.
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| If Your Tax Debts Aren't Wiped Out or Paid Off in Bankruptcy |
If you still owe the IRS when you emerge from bankruptcy, the IRS gets extra time to collect the balance.
You might still owe the IRS after your bankruptcy ends if:
- A Chapter 7 bankruptcy erases only some of your tax debt, or
- You don't pay off all of your tax debt in a repayment bankruptcy.
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The IRS normally has 10 years to collect tax bills, penalties and interest from you.
Once your bankruptcy case is over, the IRS gets whatever time remains on the original
ten years, plus the time your bankruptcy case was pending (usually four to six months
in a Chapter 7 bankruptcy; up to five years in a reorganization bankruptcy), plus an additional six months.
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