Tax Relief Services
Offer in Compromise: Settle IRS Debt for Less Than You Owe
An Offer in Compromise (OIC) lets you resolve your tax debt for less than the full balance — but only when your finances genuinely qualify. We run the IRS's own numbers before you spend a dime pursuing one.
The short answer: an Offer in Compromise is an IRS program that can settle qualifying tax debt for less than you owe. The IRS accepts an offer when the amount reflects the most it could realistically collect from you — based on your assets, income, and allowable living expenses — before the collection statute expires.
What an Offer in Compromise actually is
An Offer in Compromise is a formal agreement with the IRS to pay an agreed amount that's less than your total balance, in exchange for resolving the debt. Most accepted offers are based on doubt as to collectibility — the IRS agrees it can't realistically collect the full amount before time runs out. It's a real program, used every year, but it is not the "pennies on the dollar" promise the late-night ads sell. The number the IRS will accept comes from a specific financial formula, not from negotiation theater.
Do you qualify?
You're generally a candidate for an Offer in Compromise when:
- Paying the full balance would leave you unable to cover basic, necessary living expenses.
- All of your required tax returns are filed and you're current on this year's estimated payments or withholding.
- You're not in an open bankruptcy proceeding.
- The equity in your assets, plus your future income after allowable expenses, adds up to less than what you owe.
That last point is the heart of it — the IRS calls it your reasonable collection potential. The official program details are on the IRS Offer in Compromise page, and you can pre-screen with the IRS's own qualifier tool. We calculate this figure for you so there are no surprises.
How Clarity helps
An Offer in Compromise lives or dies on the financial package behind it. Here's where an experienced tax professional makes the difference:
- We test it first. Before you pay us to prepare anything, we run your numbers against the IRS formula and tell you honestly whether an offer is realistic — or whether another path fits better.
- We build the file correctly. Forms 656 and 433-A (OIC), the right supporting documents, and allowable-expense positions that hold up to IRS scrutiny.
- We handle the back-and-forth. With power of attorney on file, the IRS examiner deals with us, not you.
- We have a plan B. If an offer isn't your best move, we pivot to the option that is.
Wondering if you'd qualify for a settlement?
Get a free, confidential review. We'll run the IRS's numbers and tell you straight whether an Offer in Compromise is realistic for your situation — no pressure, no obligation.
Offer in Compromise questions, answered
How much will the IRS settle for in an Offer in Compromise?
There is no fixed percentage. The IRS bases an acceptable offer on your "reasonable collection potential" — essentially the equity in your assets plus what's left of your income after allowable living expenses. Two people with the same balance can have very different offers because their finances differ. We calculate this before you apply so you know where you realistically stand.
Do I qualify for an Offer in Compromise?
You're generally a candidate when paying the full balance would leave you unable to cover basic living expenses, and when all your tax returns are filed and you're current on estimated payments. Most offers are based on doubt as to collectibility. The only way to know is to run the financial test the IRS uses — which we do during your free consultation.
How long does an Offer in Compromise take?
From submission, the IRS typically takes six to twelve months to review an offer, and sometimes longer. While it's pending, the IRS generally won't levy, and the collection statute is paused. Preparing the application accurately the first time is what prevents avoidable delays and rejections.
What happens if my Offer in Compromise is rejected?
A rejection isn't the end. You have 30 days to appeal, and a rejected offer often points to a better-fitting option — an installment agreement, Currently Non Collectible status, or penalty relief. We tell you up front whether an offer is realistic so you don't spend money chasing one you won't get.
Results vary based on individual facts and circumstances. Not all taxpayers qualify for an Offer in Compromise or other settlement programs, and no specific outcome is guaranteed. This page is general information, not tax or legal advice.
Related services: IRS payment plans · penalty abatement · Currently Non Collectible status · or return to all tax relief services.