What Is Happening to You Right Now
Most people who contact The MacPherson Group with a civil tax problem did not arrive here by choice. They received an IRS notice — maybe several — and hoped each one would be the last. The debt grew as penalties and interest compounded. Then something happened that made it impossible to ignore: a bank account was frozen, wages were garnished, a lien appeared against their home, or a letter arrived saying the IRS intends to levy everything they own.
If any of that describes your situation, you are not alone — and you are not out of options. The IRS has a broad collection toolkit, but it also has a structured set of resolution programs that experienced counsel can use to resolve virtually any civil tax matter. The key is understanding which tool fits your circumstances, and using it before your rights expire.
What Did You Receive? Find Your Situation.
First notice that you owe taxes. You have time, but do not ignore it — penalties and interest are accruing daily.
The IRS intends to levy your state tax refunds and other property. This is an escalation — act now.
30-day deadline to request a CDP hearing. This is the last notice before the IRS can levy bank accounts, wages, and property without further warning.
IRS believes your return understates income based on third-party reporting (1099s, W-2s). Proposed assessment — you can respond and dispute.
A tax lien has been filed against your property. This affects your credit and your ability to sell or refinance.
The IRS has selected your return for examination. Do not meet with an auditor without representation — everything you say is on the record.
Your Resolution Options — Plain Language
The MacPherson Group evaluates every available resolution path for each client. The right option depends on your income, assets, the nature of the debt, how much time remains on the collection statute, and several other factors. Below is what each option means in plain language.
Civil Tax Issues We Handle
The MacPherson Group handles the full spectrum of civil IRS and state tax controversy. This is a representative — not exhaustive — list.
Assessment & Audit
- Income tax audits — individual and business
- Employment tax and payroll tax audits
- Pension plan / Form 5500 audits
- Excise tax audits
- Eggshell and reverse eggshell audits
- IRS Appeals Office representation
- Audit reconsideration
- Jeopardy assessment defense
- Improper assessment / delegation order challenges
- Innocent spouse relief
- Penalty abatement — first-time and reasonable cause
- Statute of limitations defenses
Collection & Resolution
- Federal tax lien release and subordination
- Levy release — wages, bank accounts, Social Security
- Offers in Compromise (all grounds)
- Installment agreements (all types)
- Currently Not Collectible status
- Collection Due Process hearings
- 100% Trust Fund Penalty defense
- Alter ego / nominee / fraudulent conveyance
- Summons litigation and Fifth Amendment issues
- Bankruptcy and tax debt discharge
- Collection statute expiration (CSED) strategy
- DOJ suit to reduce to judgment and foreclose on liens
Specialized Issues
- Cryptocurrency — Bitcoin, Ethereum, and altcoins
- FBAR and FATCA compliance and defense
- Offshore voluntary disclosure
- Foreign trust reporting (Forms 3520, 3520-A)
- Foreign corporation reporting (Form 5471)
- PFIC / Form 8621 issues
- Abusive tax shelter defense
- Delinquent return compliance
- Embezzlement income issues
- Tax shelter litigation — Son of BOSS and similar
- Infinite banking / hobby loss challenges
- State tax controversy — multiple jurisdictions
What Our Clients Say
"I really did not believe we would have a good outcome. We settled for 2.5% of what the IRS was claiming. I kept 100% of my home equity."
"You've made it very easy to make a determination in your client's favor."
Prior results do not guarantee similar outcomes. Each case depends on its specific facts, evidence, and applicable law.
Nathan MacPherson on Civil Tax Defense
Watch Nathan explain the two main components of every civil tax case — assessment and collection — and the resolution options available at each stage, including Offer in Compromise, Installment Agreements, Currently Not Collectible status, and Tax Court litigation.
Frequently Asked Questions
These are the questions we hear most from people who contact us after receiving an IRS notice or levy.
What is the difference between an IRS notice and a final notice?
Most IRS notices are informational or propose an adjustment — they do not require immediate action but should never be ignored. A Final Notice of Intent to Levy (LT11 or Letter 1058) is different: it triggers a 30-day deadline to request a Collection Due Process (CDP) hearing. Missing that deadline forfeits your right to appeal the levy in Tax Court. If you have received a document with the words "final notice" or "notice of intent to levy," contact a tax attorney immediately.
Can the IRS take my house?
Yes, but it is rare and requires multiple procedural steps. The IRS can file a federal tax lien against your home, which clouds title and prevents sale or refinancing. To actually seize and sell a personal residence, the IRS must obtain court approval — a higher bar than levying a bank account or wages. Retaining a tax attorney early is the most effective way to prevent a lien from becoming a seizure. The MacPherson Group has helped numerous clients protect their homes through lien subordination, discharge, and negotiated resolution.
What is an Offer in Compromise and do I qualify?
An Offer in Compromise (OIC) is an agreement between a taxpayer and the IRS to settle a tax debt for less than the full amount owed. The IRS accepts OICs on three grounds: doubt as to collectibility (you cannot pay the full amount), doubt as to liability (the tax was incorrectly assessed), or effective tax administration (paying would create economic hardship or be inequitable). Qualification depends on your income, assets, expenses, and the nature of the debt. The MacPherson Group evaluates OIC eligibility as part of every civil tax engagement — and negotiates the offer calculation so you pay as little as the law allows.
What happens if I ignore IRS notices?
Ignoring IRS notices accelerates the collection process and eliminates your options one by one. The IRS sends a series of notices beginning with a balance-due notice (CP14) and escalating to a Notice of Intent to Levy (CP504) and a Final Notice of Intent to Levy (LT11). Once the final notice period expires, the IRS can levy bank accounts, garnish wages, seize assets, and file tax liens against your property — all without a court order. The later in this sequence you retain counsel, the fewer options remain available and the more it costs to resolve.
Can the IRS garnish my wages or Social Security benefits?
Yes. Unlike private creditors, the IRS can garnish wages without a court judgment — its levy authority is administrative, not judicial. It can also levy Social Security benefits (retaining only a small exempt amount), pension distributions, retirement account withdrawals, and contractor payments. The MacPherson Group has successfully released IRS levies on Social Security income, wages, and bank accounts for clients across the country. The key is acting before the levy attaches — or immediately after, to seek a levy release and negotiate an alternative resolution.
What is Currently Not Collectible (CNC) status?
Currently Not Collectible (CNC) status is a formal IRS determination that a taxpayer cannot pay their tax debt without being unable to meet basic living expenses. When granted, the IRS suspends all collection activity — levies, garnishments, and seizures stop. Interest and penalties continue to accrue, and the IRS reviews the status periodically as your financial situation changes. CNC is often the right immediate step while a longer-term resolution — such as an OIC or expiration of the collection statute — is being prepared.
How long does the IRS have to collect a tax debt?
The IRS generally has 10 years from the date of assessment to collect a tax debt — this is the Collection Statute Expiration Date (CSED). Certain actions toll (pause) this clock, including filing for bankruptcy, submitting an Offer in Compromise, requesting a CDP hearing, and others. Allowing the CSED to expire is a legitimate and often overlooked resolution strategy in some cases. The MacPherson Group calculates the CSED for every civil tax client and evaluates whether statute expiration should be part of the resolution strategy.
Do I need a tax attorney or can a CPA handle my IRS problem?
CPAs and enrolled agents can handle routine IRS correspondence and straightforward audits. A tax attorney is necessary when: the IRS is considering criminal referral; you need to litigate before the Tax Court or federal court; the IRS has filed a lien and you need to protect property rights; you need attorney-client privilege — which CPAs and enrolled agents do not have and cannot provide; or the resolution involves legal arguments about the validity of the assessment. For any matter where your home, business, livelihood, or liberty may be at risk, you need an attorney, not a tax preparer.
