The last time a new client slid an IRS notice across your desk and said “they are going to take my house,” did you read the notice number before you answered? Or did you react to the bold, all-caps, “FINAL NOTICE” language at the top and start managing the panic?
Here is the problem. The IRS prints scary words on notices that carry almost no procedural weight, and it prints calm-sounding words on the one notice that starts a clock you cannot un-start. If you cannot tell them apart on sight, you are guessing with your client’s appeal rights. And in collections, guessing is how you miss the only deadline that actually matters.
This is the kind of distinction we drill at Tax Resolution Academy(R), because it separates the pro who quotes the right Code section from the one who Googles it in front of the client. Today I am going to give you the exact notice that triggers your client’s Collection Due Process rights, the one that looks just like it but does not, and a sequence you can run the next time a notice lands on your desk.
The CP504 Is the Great Impostor
Here is the notice that fools more preparers than any other: the CP504.
It arrives in an envelope. It says “Notice of Intent to Levy.” It is printed in urgent language. Clients read it and assume the agents are coming Tuesday. And a lot of practitioners, if I am being honest, treat it the same way.
Read this part twice. The CP504 is a Notice of Intent to Levy issued under Internal Revenue Code section 6331(d). It is NOT the Final Notice of Intent to Levy and Notice of Your Right to a Hearing under section 6330.
That difference is not academic. It is the whole ballgame.
The IRS says it plainly in its own guidance. With a CP504 alone, the IRS cannot levy your client’s wages, bank accounts, or other property. The one thing the CP504 does authorize is a levy on your client’s state income tax refund. That is it. Everything else still requires another notice first.
So when a client brings you a CP504 in a cold sweat, the honest answer is not “we are out of time.” The honest answer is “we have a window, and here is what we do with it.” The CP504 does not start the 30-day Collection Due Process clock. Which … Continue reading
