IRS Offer in Compromise Estimator
Estimates the minimum Offer in Compromise the IRS may accept, using its reasonable-collection-potential approach (disposable income × months + asset equity).
IRS resolution is arithmetic the agency rarely volunteers: collection potential, monthly payment capacity, and the penalties quietly stacking up. These three tools make the numbers obvious.
People with back taxes who don’t know their options or their real exposure.
Showing a realistic settlement or payment figure turns dread into a concrete reason to act.
Each runs in the visitor’s browser, shows a real answer instantly, then routes a lead to the firm. No sign-up, nothing stored.
Estimates the minimum Offer in Compromise the IRS may accept, using its reasonable-collection-potential approach (disposable income × months + asset equity).
Adds up the failure-to-file, failure-to-pay, and interest charges accruing on an unpaid balance.
Turns a balance into a monthly installment-agreement payment and flags whether you qualify for a streamlined plan.
IRS Resolution Router (OIC vs Installment vs CNC)
First-Time Penalty Abatement (FTA) Screener
Paycheck Withholding / Refund-or-Owe Estimator (2026)
This is the real tool your visitors would use, recolored to your firm.
Balance, income, expenses, and assets.
Offer in Compromise, a payment plan, or penalty exposure.
Send the numbers in for a strategy review.
Every calculator draws on published government sources, dated and monitored. These are the current ones for tax (irs) resolution.
The IRS offers several resolution options, including installment agreements and, for those who qualify, an offer in compromise. The right path depends on your finances and the amount owed.
An offer in compromise lets qualifying taxpayers settle a tax debt for less than the full amount when paying in full would create genuine hardship, under IRS rules. Not everyone qualifies, so eligibility is assessed carefully.
Yes, the IRS has strong collection tools, but it generally must follow notice procedures first, and resolving the debt or arranging a plan can stop or prevent collection. Acting early gives you more options.
Penalties and interest can continue to accrue on unpaid balances under the Internal Revenue Code, which is why addressing a balance sooner usually costs less than waiting. In some cases penalty relief may be available.
Generally yes — filing on time even when you can’t pay avoids additional failure-to-file consequences and keeps you in better standing with the IRS. Filing and paying are treated as separate obligations.
Every figure traces to a federal or state primary source — VA, SSA, IRS, USCIS, the U.S. Trustee — with its effective date shown.
Tools are reviewed by a licensed attorney and ship as illustrative information, never as advice or a guarantee.
Monitored on each source’s own cadence — annual COLA, quarterly IRS interest, and so on — so a stale number can’t linger.
The math runs in the visitor’s browser. No claimant data is stored unless they choose to send it to the firm.
One line of code, or let us build the whole site. It runs itself — no agency, no retainers.
This is an illustrative estimate for general informational purposes only. It is not legal, tax, or financial advice, it does not create an attorney–client relationship, and it is not a quote, promise, prediction, or guarantee of any benefit, amount, eligibility, deadline, or outcome. Figures are based on published government sources as of the date shown and change over time; results may not reflect current law or the facts of your situation. Do not rely on this tool — consult a licensed attorney before taking or refraining from any action.