- 8.23.1  Offer in Compromise Overview
	
- 8.23.1.1  Program Scope and Objective
		
- 8.23.1.1.1 Background
 - 8.23.1.1.2 Authority
 - 8.23.1.1.3 Related Resources
 - 8.23.1.1.4 Responsibilities
 
 - 8.23.1.2 General
 - 8.23.1.3 Suspension of Levy While Offer is Pending
 - 8.23.1.4 Conference and Settlement Practices
 - 8.23.1.5  Requirements for Compromise
		
- 8.23.1.5.1  Application Fees, Offer Terms, Payments and Deposits
			
- 8.23.1.5.1.1 Processing OIC Payments
 
 
 - 8.23.1.5.1  Application Fees, Offer Terms, Payments and Deposits
			
 
 - 8.23.1.1  Program Scope and Objective
		
 
Part 8. Appeals
Chapter 23. Offer in Compromise
Section 1. Offer in Compromise Overview
8.23.1 Offer in Compromise Overview
Manual Transmittal
August 21, 2025
Purpose
(1) This transmittal revises IRM 8.23.1, Offer in Compromise, Offer in Compromise Overview.
Material Changes
(1) Includes new and revised guidance and other editorial changes noted in the table below, pertaining to the Offer in Compromise program in Appeals:
| IRM Section | Description of Change | 
|---|---|
| 8.23.1.1.3 | Added Related Resources: Discussion of references to Taxpayer Bill of Rights (TBOR) and Service Level Agreement between Appeals and Taxpayer Advocate Service (TAS). | 
| 8.23.1.2(1) | Revised Note to explain that the date a Centralized Offer in Compromise (COIC) unit receives an offer is the date that starts the 24-month period for deemed acceptance under IRC 7122(f). | 
| In General | Revised for grammar, plain language and other editorial changes. | 
| In General | Updated IRM cross-references. | 
Effect on Other Documents
This transmittal supersedes IRM 8.23.1, dated August 23, 2021.Audience
Independent Office of AppealsEffective Date
(08-21-2025)
Steven M. Martin
Director, Operations Support
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Purpose. Provides instruction for the consideration of offer in compromise (OIC) cases. The procedures in IRM 8.23 are intended to be consistent with the procedures in IRM 5.8, Offer in Compromise, IRM 5.15, Financial Analysis, as well as with other sections of IRM Part 8 - Appeals. Section 509 of the Tax Increase Prevention and Reconciliation Act of 2005 (TIPRA) impacted the OIC program. Your responsibilities under TIPRA differ between Collection Due Process (CDP) and non-CDP offers. Guidance on CDP offers is available in IRM 8.22.7, Collection Due Process - Alternatives to Collection Action.
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Audience. The primary users of this IRM section are Appeals Technical Employees (ATEs) who work OIC cases.
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Policy Owner. Policy, Planning, Quality & Analysis (PPQ&A) is under the Director of Operations Support.
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Program Owner. Appeals Policy is the program office responsible for providing technical and procedural guidance to the Appeals organization and is under the Director of PPQ&A.
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Contact Information. Appeals employees will follow established procedures on How to Contact an Analyst. All other employees should contact the Product Content Owner provided on the Product Catalog Information page for this IRM.
 
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An OIC is an agreement between a taxpayer and the government that, generally, settles a tax liability in exchange for payment of less than the full amount owed. When the government rejects a taxpayer’s offer to settle a tax liability, the taxpayer may administratively appeal the rejection of an offer to the IRS Independent Office of Appeals if, within the 30-day period commencing the day after the date on the letter of rejection, the taxpayer requests such an administrative review in the manner provided by the Secretary of the Treasury. Treasury Regulation §301.7122-1(f)(5).
 
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Authorities that are related to the offer program are:
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IRC § 7122 Compromises, granting broad authority to compromise tax liabilities to the Secretary of the Treasury
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IRC § 6331(k)(1) No levy while certain offers are pending or in effect
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26 CFR §301.7122-1, Authorizing the Commissioner of Internal Revenue to compromise a liability on any one of three grounds: Doubt as to Collectibility (DATC), Doubt as to Liability (DATL), or to promote Effective Tax Administration (ETA)
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Policy Statement P-5-89, Offer may be rejected for public policy reasons
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Policy Statement P-5-97, Stay of collection - offer in compromise cases
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Policy Statement P-5-100, Offers will be accepted
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26 CFR §300.3, Offer to compromise fee
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Rev. Proc. 2003-71, 2003-2 CB 517, defines the procedures applicable to the submission and processing of offers to compromise tax liabilities.
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Notice 2006-68, 2006-2 CB 105, provides additional guidance regarding offers submitted on or after July 16, 2006.
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Tax Increase Prevention and Reconciliation Act of 2005 (TIPRA)
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IRM 1.2.2.6.1, Delegation Order 5-1 (Rev. 5), delegates the Commissioner’s authority to accept, reject, return, terminate, or acknowledge withdrawals of offers.
 
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All Appeals employees are responsible to be aware of the taxpayer’s rights as articulated in the (TBOR. See IRC 7803(a)(3), Execution of Duties in Accord with Taxpayer Rights. For additional information about the TBOR, see Publication 5170, Taxpayer Bill of Rights, and TBOR link, https://www.irs.gov/taxpayer-bill-of-rights.
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In accordance with IRM 25.30.2.3, Statement of Commitment, Appeals will work collaboratively with TAS to enhance the taxpayer experience. For more information, see IRM 25.30.2, Service Level Agreement between the IRS Independent Office of Appeals and the Taxpayer Advocate Service.
 
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The Director, Operations Support, is the executive responsible for designing, developing, delivering and monitoring short and long-range tax administration policies, programs, strategies and objectives for the Appeals organization.
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The Director, Operations Support, and Appeals Policy are responsible for (i) providing technical and procedural guidance to Appeals employees; and (ii) establishing and maintaining policies and standard procedures for Appeals work streams.
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Appeals Policy is comprised of two teams of analysts: 1) Collection Policy and Analytics and 2) Examination Policy and Analytics. The analyst(s) responsible for the OIC program report to the manager for Collection Policy and Analytics.
 
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Form 656, Offer in Compromise, is used for an offer based upon DATC. A DATC offer must be submitted using the most current revision of Form 656. TIPRA payment(s) and application fee are required for DATC offers. See IRM 8.23.1.5.1. Form 656 includes low-income certification guidelines and instructions, which may waive the initial payment and application fee.
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Form 656-L, Offer in Compromise (Doubt as to Liability), is used for an offer based upon DATL. A DATL offer must be submitted using the most current revision of Form 656-L. There is no provision on Form 656 or Form 656-B for DATL offers. No TIPRA payment(s) are required for DATL offers. For further discussion of DATL offers, refer to IRM 8.23.7, Offer in Compromise, Doubt as to Liability.
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Per IRC 7122(f), an OIC shall be deemed accepted "if such offer is not rejected by the Secretary before the date which is 24 months after the date of the submission of such offer."
Note:
Per Form 656 and Form 656-L instructions, all OICs must be submitted to one of the two COIC units located in Brookhaven or Memphis. Therefore, for purposes of section 7122(f), the date of submission of an offer is the date the Form 656 or Form 656-L is received in one of the COIC units. Thus, the 24-month period for deemed acceptance starts the date the offer is received by COIC. The postmark date is irrelevant in determining when an offer is submitted.
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Per Notice 2006-68, an offer will not be deemed accepted under section 7122(f) if the offer is rejected, returned, voluntarily withdrawn or otherwise treated as withdrawn under IRC § 7122(c)(1)(B)(ii) within the 24-month period. Thus, if a case is reopened for any reason, including IRS error, after one of these events occurred (rejection, return, withdrawal), the IRS will have already acted on the offer within the 24 months, and the offer will not be deemed accepted if the IRS takes more than 24 months to resolve the reopened case.
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Appeals has jurisdiction to make decisions on OIC cases in the following circumstances:
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Offers appealed after being rejected by Collection or Examination.
Note:
Appeals jurisdiction of offers appealed after being rejected by Collection or Examination includes those offers that are submitted during the remand of a CDP hearing. In this situation, Collection or Examination has jurisdiction of the offer submitted in the remand of the CDP hearing and Appeals would have jurisdiction of the offer if that offer were rejected and appealed within the statutory timeframe. See IRM 5.8.7.7.5, Rejection Appealed.
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Offers submitted as an alternative to the proposed collection action in a CDP or equivalent hearing (EH) case.
 
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Appeals will not accept jurisdiction over an OIC if the IRS does not have the authority to determine the type of tax that is being compromised (e.g., Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearm (ATF) taxes).
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Appeals has no authority to compromise a liability after referral of that tax year to the Department of Justice (DOJ). A transaction code (TC) 550 with definer code "04" indicates that a judgment was obtained. Also, a TC 520 with a Closing Code (cc) 70, 71, 73, 75, 80 or 82 may indicate that litigation is pending (see IRM 25.3.6-1, Closing Codes for Transaction Code 520, and IRM 5.8.1, Offer in Compromise - Overview). Consult with Area Counsel if these codes are present.
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Appeals will not consider an offer that is solely for a tax period or tax year that has not been assessed unless the Integrated Data Retrieval System (IDRS) indicates a return was received or an assessment is pending. See IRM 5.8.1, Offer in Compromise - Overview.
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Absent special circumstances, DATL, or effective tax administration conditions, an OIC will not be accepted if it is believed that the liability can be paid in full within the statutory collection period by lump sum, or by installment payments, or a combination of the two methods. See IRM 5.8.1, Offer in Compromise - Overview.
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Per Rev. Proc. 2012-18, Ex Parte Communications Between Appeals and Other Internal Revenue Service Employees, OIC cases are subject to ex parte provisions. The provision found in Section 7 (Offer Terms) of Form 656 authorizing the IRS to contact relevant third parties, as needed, to assist with the processing of the offer does not impact ‘ex parte’ communication requirements between Appeals and other IRS functions, such as Examination, Collection, and IRS Counsel.
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IRM 5.8, Offer in Compromise, is your primary resource for working OIC cases. However, while following the general OIC procedures found in IRM 5.8, Offer in Compromise, you will exercise independent judgment concerning the disputed valuations and business decisions made by Collection. You will also make independent determinations regarding offers based upon DATL.
 
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IRC 6331(k) provides that no levy may be made on the property or rights to property of the taxpayer who submitted the offer:
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during the period that the offer is pending,
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for an additional 30 days after the offer is rejected, and
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during the time any appeal of the rejection is pending.
 
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IRC 6331(k) does not bar the IRS from levying on the property or rights to property of a person who owes joint tax liabilities but is not a party to a filed OIC and the funds from the levy may be applied to the taxpayer’s joint liability.
Example:
John and Jane Doe owe for joint income tax and have Notices of Federal Tax Liens filed for these joint liabilities. Only John submits an OIC for the joint income tax liability. The property and rights to property of Jane, encumbered by the federal tax lien, are subject to levy for the subject income tax liability.
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The statutory period to collect the tax is suspended for the period during which levy is prohibited. See IRC 6331(i)(5), IRC 6331(k)(3)(B), and Treasury Regulation 301.7122-1(i)(1).
Note:
ATEs considering cases involving older liabilities with multiple prior OICs must be aware of the proper Collection Statute Expiration Date (CSED). IRM 5.8.10, Offer in Compromise - Special Case Processing, and IRM 8.21.5, Statutes on Collection Cases, contain detailed information on CSED issues involving OICs.
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Treasury Regulation 301.7122-1(d)(2) states that an offer becomes pending once it is accepted for processing. This is the date the IRS official signs the Form 656 and inputs TC 480.
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IRC 7122(e) states there must be an independent administrative review of any rejection of an OIC before such rejection is communicated to the taxpayer.
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Treasury Regulation 301.7122-1(f)(1) provides that an OIC has not been rejected until IRS issues a written notice to the taxpayer or the taxpayer’s representative advising of:
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The rejection,
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The reason(s) for rejection, and
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The right to an appeal.
 
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The Appeals process in an OIC case is not an extension of the Compliance OIC process. The role and mission of Appeals are different from that of Compliance. You must employ Appeals' standard conference and settlement practices for all work streams, including OICs.
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The primary obligations you have in a non-CDP OIC appeal are to:
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Provide taxpayers with an opportunity for the conference they asked for under IRC 7122(e)(2).
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Determine whether Compliance was correct in rejecting a taxpayer's offer by addressing the disputed issues that caused the offer to be rejected.
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Provide a reasonable opportunity for the taxpayer to submit clarifying information or other documentation that the taxpayer believes is necessary to properly evaluate the offer and/or make the offer acceptable.
Note:
It is not intended that Appeals will ask for additional information thought by Appeals to be necessary for issue development. You will ask the taxpayer for clarifying information if the taxpayer (particularly a pro se taxpayer) is unsure of what to provide to clarify a position that is being advanced by the taxpayer. You will primarily rely on the case development that is in the case file at the time of appeal. Consult IRM 8.23.3, Offer in Compromise - Evaluation of Offers in Compromise, for specific details on the review of case files and supplemental information.
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Accept offers improperly rejected by Compliance.
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If an offer cannot be accepted, communicate the reason(s) why and discuss alternatives (such as installment agreements and Currently Not Collectible status, as applicable) that the taxpayer may pursue with Collection.
 
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You will not investigate or continue development of an offer that was rejected by Compliance. You will consider those items in dispute at the time of rejection, or which are raised later by the taxpayer. However, as may be necessary, following IRM 8.23.3.4.1.2, Request and Review of Supplemental Information - Collection Issue Offers, requests for the taxpayer to provide supplemental information to Appeals will clearly indicate:
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the precise information that is needed, and when that information is to be submitted
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that the information, documentation, unfiled return, payment, etc., is necessary. See IRM 8.23.2.7 , Taxpayer Compliance Issues, and its related subsections for tax compliance matters.
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that you will make your decision based upon available information if all of the requested items are not received by the due date provided. See IRM 8.23.3.4.1.2, Request and Review of Supplemental Information - Collection Issue Offers.
 
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You will document in the case activity record any reason for granting the taxpayer an extension of time to provide information or other documentation.
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IRM 8.1.1, Appeals Operating Directives and Guidelines, IRM 8.6.1, Conference and Issue Resolution, and IRM 8.6.4, Reaching Settlement and Securing an Appeals Agreement Form, contain general guidance on conference and settlement practices and other general responsibilities. Your decision to sustain the rejection of a non-CDP offer is not subject to judicial review; therefore, not all of IRMs 8.1.1, 8.6.1 and 8.6.4 relate to OICs. However, some sections that are relevant include:
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Conduct conferences in an open atmosphere that fosters cooperation in the resolution of disputes. Above all, it is of utmost importance to be a good listener. See IRM 8.6.1.5, Conference Techniques Used by Appeals Technical Employees (ATEs).
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Consider whether the taxpayer demonstrates a lack of technical knowledge. The Appeals hearing officer will assist the pro se taxpayer to an appropriate extent. Assistance should be consistent with the Appeals’ role of impartiality. In the absence of an agreement, ensure the taxpayer fully understands their appeal rights. See IRM 8.6.4.2.5, Judicial Attitude Towards Settlement.
 
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Consideration of certain issues, as well as an overall judgment as to the appropriateness of compromise, often requires subjective judgments to be made by you. With this in mind, some general factors to consider when evaluating an OIC are:
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The success, or lack thereof, of prior collection efforts against the taxpayer
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The advantage of the taxpayer's future compliance, secured through acceptance of an OIC
 
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This IRM section contains the most basic compromise requirement details and information that is unique to Appeals. Considering an offer, you must be familiar with the revised guidelines in IRM 5.8, Offer in Compromise, which contain numerous post-TIPRA changes. To avoid duplication of procedures, the bulk of the most necessary information in terms of OIC processability, perfecting and payment requirements, is found in IRM 5.8.2, Centralized Offer in Compromise Initial Processing and Processability, and IRM 5.8.3, Centralized Offer in Compromise Transfers, Perfection, and Case Building.
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An offer must be filed on the current revision of Form 656, Offer in Compromise, to be accepted. The Form 656-B instruction booklet provides specific details for completing the offer.
Note:
Collection will process an offer even if the Form 656 does not list all outstanding tax debts. In addition, Section 7 of Form 656 allows the IRS to make pen and ink changes to include any assessed liabilities on the form, even after its submission by the taxpayer. However, new, related offers may need to be secured later. See IRM 8.23.3.5, Amended Offers.
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Each separate tax period and type of tax must be listed on the Form 656. See also IRM 8.23.3.5, Amended Offers, concerning amended offers and the periods to be listed on the amended Form 656.
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If an offer involving a Trust Fund Recovery Penalty (TFRP) assessment is accepted, the case file must include information identifying the Business Master File (BMF) periods comprising the TFRP assessment(s).
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IRC 7122(b) requires an opinion from Chief Counsel on all offers recommended for acceptance in which the unpaid liability (including tax, penalties and interest) is $50,000 or more. Counsel's review of a proposed acceptance has two separate and distinct components:
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Certification that the legal requirements for compromise were met.
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Review of the proposed compromise for consistent application of the IRS’s acceptance policies.
 
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Further details concerning Counsel's review, and statutorily required opinion, are in IRM 8.23.4.3.3, Counsel Review of Acceptance Recommendations.
 
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IRC 7122 provides that the Secretary of the Treasury may issue regulations waiving any partial payments required with the submission of the offer. The only available waivers per Notice 2006-68 are for offers based upon DATL and offers received from low-income taxpayers. Such taxpayers are not required to pay the OIC processing fee, initial payment, or periodic installment payments.
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DATC offer submissions must include the applicable user fee and an additional partial payment under TIPRA.
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Generally, the application fee will be applied to the liability and will not be credited toward the amount of the offer.
Exception:
Per 26 CFR §300.3, the application fee will be applied against the amount of the offer, unless the taxpayer requests that it be refunded, if the offer is accepted:
1. to promote effective tax administration pursuant to § 301.7122-1(b)(3) of this chapter, or
2. based on DATC and a determination that collection of an amount greater than the amount offered would create economic hardship within the meaning of 26 CFR § 301.6343-1 of this chapter. - 
	
The DATC offer terms and associated initial partial payment requirements are:
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Payment Option 1 - Lump Sum Cash Offer: Payable in five or fewer installments beginning on or after notice of acceptance. Form 656 must be accompanied by payment of 20% of the amount of the proposed offer, unless Low-Income Certification Guidelines are met.
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Payment Option 2 - Periodic Payment Offer: Payable in more than five installments, beginning with the date the offer is received by the IRS. Form 656 must be accompanied by the first proposed installment payment unless Low-Income Certification Guidelines are met. Additional installments must be paid in accordance with the taxpayer's proposed terms while the offer is being considered. See Section 4 of Form 656.
 
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The TIPRA requirement for a taxpayer to make proposed periodic installment payments while a periodic payment offer is being considered ends when Collection rejects the offer. Taxpayers are not required to continue making periodic installment payments while a rejected offer is being considered by Appeals unless Appeals secures an amended offer. See IRM 8.23.3.5, Amended Offers, for additional guidance on amended offers secured by Appeals.
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If Appeals secures an amended Periodic Payment Offer, the 24-month period during which the taxpayer must pay the Periodic Payment Offer begins the date the amended offer is accepted. The taxpayer is still required to make the proposed periodic payments while the amended offer is being considered in Appeals (see IRM 8.23.3.5.3(7) , Amended Offer - TIPRA Related Issues), but the 24-month period to make such payments doesn't begin until the date the offer is accepted. See IRM 5.8.8, Offer in Compromise, Acceptance Processing.
Example:
On June 1, 2023, Appeals secures an amended Periodic Payment OIC during consideration of a rejected Periodic Payment OIC. The taxpayer must start making the proposed periodic installment payments and the ATE is responsible for ensuring that the taxpayer makes the periodic installment payments proposed in the amended offer while the OIC case is pending in Appeals. The amended offer was accepted on December 15, 2023. The terms of the accepted offer must be completed before December 15, 2025.
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If the taxpayer qualifies for the waiver under Section 1 of Form 656, the 24-month time period during which the taxpayer must pay the Periodic Payment Offer begins the date such offer is accepted. The taxpayer must begin making periodic payments in accordance with the terms of the accepted offer after Appeals issues the written notice of acceptance.
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If Appeals accepts, without amendments, the original Periodic Payment Offer that was rejected by Collection, the 24-month time period during which the taxpayer must pay the Periodic Payment Offer begins the date such offer is accepted. Unless they submitted an amended Periodic Payment Offer to Appeals, taxpayers are not required to continue making proposed periodic payments while a rejected offer is being considered by Appeals. See IRM 8.23.3.5.4, Involuntary Withdrawal Procedures for Amended Periodic Payment Offers Received by Appeals.
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The IRS OIC Monthly Low-Income Guidelines found in Section 1 of Form 656 are adjusted on an annual basis. A taxpayer seeking a low-income exemption must complete Section 1 of Form 656 when submitting the offer. The low-income exemption applies only to individuals and sole-proprietors.
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If an individual taxpayer is granted a low-income exemption, the taxpayer is exempted from payment of the application fee as well as the 20% TIPRA payment, and any proposed periodic monthly payments, unless the offer is formally accepted. Once formally accepted, the taxpayer will be responsible for payment, subject to the terms on the accepted offer. However, no application fee or 20% TIPRA payment will ever be required of the taxpayer, even if the offer is accepted.
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The IRS no longer requires that installment agreements in effect prior to receipt of an OIC remain in effect while an offer is being considered.
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IRM 5.8.1, Offer in Compromise - Overview, and IRM 5.8.4, Offer in Compromise - Investigation, contain detailed information concerning OIC payment terms, processability issues and initial payment requirements for offers. See also IRM 8.23.3.2.1.1, Processability Criteria and General Changes Resulting from TIPRA.
 
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You may process all "pre-acceptance" TIPRA payments using a Form 3244, Payment Posting Voucher, except for the payment that is due with the original Form 656. The user fee and initial payment are part of the overall processability determination, so they must be forwarded to the appropriate COIC site. Subsequent periodic installment payments made prior to acceptance of the offer may be processed by you as follows:
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For tax debts other than employment or excise taxes, apply designated payments per the written designation using Designated Payment Code (DPC) 35.
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For tax debts other than employment or excise taxes, apply undesignated payments to the liability with the earliest CSED using DPC 35.
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For tax debts other than employment or excise taxes, apply designated payments received with an amended Form 656 per the written designation using DPC 34.
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For tax debts other than employment or excise taxes, apply undesignated payments received with an amended Form 656 to the liability with the earliest CSED using DPC 34.
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For employment or excise tax (trust fund) debts, apply payments designated to trust fund taxes per the written designation using DPC 02.
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For employment or excise tax debts, apply undesignated payments to all unpaid Forms 1120 and 940 liabilities, and then to other non-trust fund liabilities beginning with the liability with the earliest CSED using DPC 35.
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Apply payments designated to trust fund taxes that are received with an amended Form 656 per the written designation using DPC 02.
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Apply undesignated payments for employment or excise tax debts that are received with an amended Form 656 to all unpaid non-trust fund liabilities beginning with the liability with the earliest CSED using DPC 34.
 
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Per IRC 7122(c)(2)(A) and Notice 2006-68, taxpayers are entitled to designate all payments required under TIPRA while the offer is under consideration. The designation must be made in writing at the time the payment is made. Absent a written designation, the payments will be applied in the best interest of the government. Once the taxpayer designates application of a payment, it cannot be changed at a later date.
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Once the offer is accepted, the taxpayer no longer has the right to designate subsequent offer payments. All post-acceptance payments will be processed by the Monitoring Offer in Compromise (MOIC) unit.
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Payments received for offers that have been accepted will be sent to the payment address that is shown on the taxpayer's offer acceptance letter. If the address is not known or cannot be readily identified, the payment may be routed to the most convenient remittance drop point in Appeals. See IRM 5.19.7.8, Applying Payments on Accepted OICs, for more information about applying payments on accepted OICs.