Tax Relief Services
Currently Non Collectible: Pause IRS Collection During Hardship
When paying anything toward your tax debt would create genuine hardship, the IRS can place your account in Currently Non Collectible status — wage garnishments and bank levies stop while your finances recover.
The short answer: Currently Non Collectible (CNC) is a hardship status. When you prove that paying the IRS would leave you unable to cover basic living expenses, the IRS pauses active collection — no levies or garnishments. The debt doesn't disappear; interest still accrues and the collection statute keeps running, but enforcement stops while you're in the status.
What Currently Non Collectible status means
Currently Non Collectible is a temporary hardship pause on IRS collection — often called "Status 53" inside the agency. When the IRS places your account in Currently Non Collectible status, it stops active enforcement: no new levies, no wage garnishments, no bank seizures. What it does not do is wipe out the debt. The balance remains, interest keeps accruing, and the 10-year collection statute keeps counting down in the background. That last part can actually work in your favor — every month spent in the status is a month closer to the statute expiring, and part of the debt can run out before the IRS is ever able to collect it. You can read the IRS's own overview on the IRS page on temporarily delaying the collection process.
Who qualifies
You're generally a candidate for Currently Non Collectible status when:
- Your income barely covers — or doesn't cover — your allowable necessary living expenses.
- You have little or no equity in assets the IRS could ask you to liquidate.
- All of your required tax returns are filed and up to date.
- The picture holds up when the IRS reviews a financial statement — typically Form 433-F — documenting your income, expenses, and assets.
That financial statement is the heart of it — the IRS measures your monthly income against its allowable-expense standards to confirm there's nothing left over to pay. We assemble that picture for you so it accurately reflects your situation.
How Clarity helps
Currently Non Collectible status lives or dies on the financial package behind it. Here's where an experienced tax professional makes the difference:
- We test it first. Before anything else, we look at whether CNC or another option — a payment plan, a settlement, penalty relief — is your best move, so you're not pursuing the wrong path.
- We build the file correctly. We prepare the financial statement so it holds up to IRS scrutiny, with allowable-expense positions documented properly.
- We handle the IRS. With power of attorney on file, the IRS deals with us, not you.
- We watch the statute. We track the collection statute so the pause works strategically — and so you know where the debt stands over time.
Can't pay the IRS anything right now?
Get a free, confidential review. We'll look at your finances and tell you straight whether Currently Non Collectible status is realistic for your situation — no pressure, no obligation.
Currently Non Collectible questions, answered
What is Currently Non Collectible status?
Currently Non Collectible is a hardship status where the IRS pauses collection because you can't pay without sacrificing basic living expenses. When you prove that paying would leave you unable to cover necessities like housing, food, and utilities, the IRS stops active enforcement — no levies or wage garnishments — while your account sits in the status.
Does CNC erase my tax debt?
No. The balance and interest remain, but enforced collection stops and the 10-year collection statute keeps running, so part of the debt can expire while you're in the status. Currently Non Collectible pauses enforcement; it does not forgive what you owe, and interest continues to accrue on the balance.
How long does Currently Non Collectible last?
It lasts until your financial situation improves. The IRS may review your income periodically and can resume collection if you can afford to pay. There is no fixed end date — the status stays in place as long as paying would still create hardship, and the IRS typically watches future returns for signs that your income has risen.
Can the IRS still file a tax lien while I'm in CNC?
Yes. The IRS may file a tax lien to protect its interest even though it isn't actively collecting while you're in Currently Non Collectible status. A lien is different from a levy — it secures the government's claim rather than seizing assets. We address liens as part of the overall plan so you understand the impact and your options.
Results vary based on individual facts and circumstances. Not all taxpayers qualify for Currently Non Collectible status or other relief programs, and no specific outcome is guaranteed. This page is general information, not tax or legal advice.
Related services: Offer in Compromise · IRS payment plans · wage garnishment release · or return to all tax relief services.