Tax Resolution Services for Individuals and Businesses
When tax matters fall behind or become disorganized, uncertainty grows quickly. Tax Resolution Services are designed to address unresolved filings, notices, and accumulated exposure in a clear, methodical way. The focus is not quick fixes, but restoring compliance, reducing ongoing risk, and creating a stable path forward.
When Tax Resolution Services Are Needed
Tax resolution applies when past tax obligations are incomplete, inaccurate, or unresolved. These situations often build quietly over time and surface once notices, penalties, or enforcement actions begin.
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Unfiled or late tax returns
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IRS or state tax notices and correspondence
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Multiple years of back taxes
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Accrued penalties or interest
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Payroll or sales tax compliance issues
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Liens, levies, or garnishments
What Our Tax Resolution Services Include
Tax Resolution and Notice Response
We handle communication with taxing authorities to address outstanding balances, notices, and enforcement actions. This may include responding to IRS or state correspondence, clarifying account status, and pursuing appropriate resolution paths based on the full financial picture.
Corrective and Back Tax Filings
When returns are missing, late, or incorrect, we prepare and file the necessary corrections. This includes multi-year back tax filing, amended returns, and reconstruction of filings when records are incomplete.
Compliance Re-Entry and Stabilization
Once past issues are addressed, the next priority is preventing recurrence. We help transition clients back into current compliance with clear filing expectations and ongoing structure.
How Tax Resolution Fits Into a Broader Stability Framework
Tax resolution resolves what is behind you. It is often the first step before accurate accounting or forward-looking tax planning can occur. In some cases, recovery is the only service needed. In others, it becomes the foundation for long-term financial clarity.
What to Expect During a Tax Resolution Review
Every resolution situation is different. The initial review is designed to understand scope, urgency, and sequence—not to force a predefined package.
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Review of notices, filings, and known exposure
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Identification of what is missing or unclear
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Prioritization of immediate risks versus follow-up work
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Clear explanation of next steps and timelines
