Tax Relief Services
Bank Levy Release: Act Before the IRS Takes Your Frozen Funds
An IRS bank levy freezes your account and starts a 21-day countdown before your money is handed over. That window is enough to act — if you move inside it.
The short answer: an IRS bank levy freezes the funds in your account on the day it hits. Your bank holds that money for 21 days before sending it to the IRS — a built-in window to get the levy released or reduced by entering a resolution or proving hardship. After 21 days the funds are gone, so speed matters.
How an IRS bank levy works
When the IRS sends a bank levy, your bank freezes the balance in your account up to the amount you owe — a one-time grab of the funds present on the levy date. The bank then holds that money for 21 days before sending it to the IRS, which is what gives you a window to respond. A bank levy isn't necessarily a single event: if a balance remains, the IRS can issue another levy later that reaches new deposits. A levy doesn't come out of nowhere either — it follows the Final Notice of Intent to Levy and the lapse of your appeal rights. You can read the IRS's own explanation on the IRS levy information page.
How a bank levy gets released
Within the 21-day hold, a bank levy can often be released or reduced by showing the IRS one of the following:
- The levy is creating an economic hardship — it leaves you unable to cover basic, necessary living expenses.
- You enter an installment agreement to pay the balance over time.
- You qualify for Currently Non Collectible status because of your financial situation.
- The levy was issued in error, or before your appeal rights had actually expired.
- You pay or otherwise arrange the balance that triggered the levy.
How Clarity helps
With a bank levy, the clock is the whole game. Here's where an experienced tax professional makes the difference inside that 21-day hold:
- We contact the IRS the same day. With power of attorney on file, we get on the phone with the IRS the day you reach us, not days later.
- We push for a release within the 21-day hold. Our aim is to resolve the levy before your bank sends the funds — that window is everything.
- We put a resolution in place. We work toward an agreement so future deposits aren't levied again on the next round.
- We confirm your returns are filed. The IRS generally won't grant a release while returns are missing, so we make sure you're compliant first.
Account frozen? The 21-day clock is running.
Get a free, confidential review. We'll look at your levy, explain your options inside the 21-day window, and move fast to work toward a release — no pressure, no obligation.
Bank levy questions, answered
How long before the bank sends my money to the IRS?
Your bank holds the frozen funds for 21 days from when it receives the levy before sending the money to the IRS. That 21-day hold is your window to get the levy released — by entering a resolution or showing hardship — before the funds leave your account.
Can an IRS bank levy be reversed?
Yes, in many cases — if you act within the 21-day hold and get into a resolution or show the levy is causing hardship or was issued in error. Once the 21 days pass and the funds are sent to the IRS, recovering that money is much harder, so moving quickly matters.
Why did the IRS freeze my bank account?
The IRS froze your account because a balance went unpaid through its notice sequence, which ends in a Final Notice of Intent to Levy. When that notice and its appeal window pass without a resolution, a bank levy is the automated next step the IRS takes to collect.
Can the IRS take everything in my account?
A bank levy captures the balance in your account up to what you owe, based on the funds present on the levy date. Deposits made after that date aren't automatically taken, but if a balance remains the IRS can issue another levy to reach those later funds.
Results vary based on individual facts and circumstances. Not all taxpayers qualify for a levy release or other relief programs, and no specific outcome is guaranteed. This page is general information, not tax or legal advice.
Related services: wage garnishment release · Currently Non Collectible status · IRS payment plans · or return to all tax relief services.