Tax Levy
Tax Levy
Quick Definition
A tax levy is the IRS's legal authority to seize a taxpayer's property or assets to satisfy an unpaid tax debt. Unlike a tax lien (which is a legal claim against property), a levy is the actual taking of property — including garnishing wages, seizing bank account funds, taking Social Security benefits, or physically seizing and selling real estate and personal property.
What It Means
A tax levy is the IRS's most powerful — and most feared — collection tool. When a taxpayer ignores notices and fails to resolve a tax debt through voluntary means, the IRS can reach directly into their paycheck, bank account, and retirement funds without a court order. This makes the IRS one of the most powerful creditors in the US financial system.
The good news: the IRS almost never arrives at levy without extensive prior warning. A clear sequence of notices must be sent and ignored before a levy is issued.
The Path to a Tax Levy
The IRS must follow due process before levying:
| Step | IRS Action | Taxpayer Opportunity |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Tax assessed; CP14 notice sent | Pay within 10 days |
| 2 | Additional reminder notices | Respond, set up payment plan |
| 3 | Notice of Intent to Levy (CP523 or Letter 1058) | Request a Collection Due Process hearing |
| 4 | 30-day waiting period | File CDP hearing request to halt levy |
| 5 | Levy issued | Contact IRS immediately; release options exist |
Collection Due Process (CDP) Hearing: Requesting a CDP hearing after receiving the Final Notice of Intent to Levy halts the levy while the hearing is pending. This gives taxpayers time to negotiate alternatives.
Types of Tax Levies
| Levy Type | What It Seizes | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Wage garnishment | Portion of each paycheck | Continuous — employer withholds until debt satisfied or released |
| Bank account levy | Funds in bank accounts at the time of levy | One-time snapshot; future deposits not seized |
| Social Security benefits | 15% of each payment | Via Federal Payment Levy Program (FPLP) |
| Retirement account levy | IRA, 401(k) funds | IRS can levy without the 10% early withdrawal penalty |
| Accounts receivable | Money owed to your business | IRS contacts your customers directly |
| Federal contractor payments | Payments from federal government contracts | Withheld before you receive them |
| Real property | Home, land, other real estate | Requires additional steps; 180-day redemption period |
| Personal property | Vehicles, jewelry, business equipment | Physical seizure and auction |
Wage Levy Exemptions
Wages are not 100% seized — the IRS leaves a portion for living expenses:
Exempt amount calculation (2024):
- Take the standard deduction for your filing status
- Add the number of personal exemptions claimed ($4,300 per exemption equivalent in 2024)
- Divide by 52 (weekly) or 26 (biweekly) pay periods
Example (Single, weekly pay, one exemption):
- Standard deduction: $14,600
- Personal exemption equivalent: $4,300
- Total: $18,900 / 52 = $363.46/week exempt
If you earn $1,200/week, the IRS can levy $836.54/week (everything above $363.46).
Stopping or Releasing a Levy
| Method | How It Works |
|---|---|
| Pay in full | Levy released within days of payment |
| Installment agreement | IRS releases levy once payment plan is established |
| Offer in Compromise | Levy halts upon acceptance of OIC application |
| CDP hearing request | Filing before levy halts collection during hearing |
| Currently Not Collectible (CNC) | IRS suspends collection if you demonstrate inability to pay |
| Bankruptcy filing | Automatic stay halts most IRS collection actions |
| Taxpayer Advocate intervention | TAS can halt levy in hardship cases |
| Wrong levy | IRS must release if levy was issued in error |
| Expired statute | Collection statute expires 10 years from assessment |
Levy vs. Lien
| Feature | Tax Lien | Tax Levy |
|---|---|---|
| What it does | Creates a legal claim on property | Actually seizes property |
| Timing | Earlier in collection process | After lien, after notices ignored |
| Property affected | All property (attaches but doesn't take) | Specific property seized |
| Impact | Prevents sale; credit/public record | Immediate loss of funds/property |
| Reversal | Released upon payment | Released upon payment or other resolution |
Key Points to Remember
- A tax levy is the actual seizure of assets — wages, bank accounts, retirement funds, property
- The IRS must send multiple notices before levying, including a Final Notice with 30-day response window
- Requesting a CDP hearing halts the levy while the hearing is pending — a critical protective step
- Wage levies are continuous (every paycheck) until resolved; bank levies are a one-time snapshot
- Social Security benefits can be levied at 15% per payment via the Federal Payment Levy Program
- Act immediately upon receiving any IRS collection notice — the window to respond and avoid levy is finite
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What should I do if the IRS levies my bank account? A: Contact the IRS immediately at 1-800-829-7650 (collections). If you can demonstrate economic hardship or have an installment agreement application pending, you may get the levy released. Act fast — banks typically hold levied funds for 21 days before turning them over to the IRS. This window is your opportunity to negotiate a release.
Q: Can the IRS levy my retirement account? A: Yes. The IRS can levy IRAs, 401(k)s, and other qualified retirement accounts — and unlike regular early withdrawals, the 10% early withdrawal penalty does not apply to IRS levies. This makes retirement accounts a target of last resort. Unlike other levy protections, there are few ways to protect retirement account assets once a levy is issued.
Q: How long does the IRS have to collect taxes? A: The IRS generally has 10 years from the date of tax assessment to collect — the Collection Statute Expiration Date (CSED). After this date, the IRS loses its legal authority to collect the debt. The statute can be extended (tolled) by certain events: bankruptcy, pending installment agreement, pending OIC, taxpayer outside the US, and others. Some taxpayers in severe hardship wait out the statute with Currently Not Collectible status.
Related Terms
Tax Lien
A tax lien is a legal claim the government places on a taxpayer's property when they fail to pay a tax debt — giving the government priority over other creditors and preventing the sale or refinancing of assets until the debt is resolved.
Taxable Income
Taxable income is the portion of your income subject to federal income tax after subtracting all allowable deductions from your AGI — the number your tax bracket rates are actually applied to.
Tax Deduction
A tax deduction reduces your taxable income, lowering the amount of income subject to federal tax — with the actual tax savings equal to the deduction amount multiplied by your marginal tax rate.
Tax Bracket
A tax bracket is the range of income taxed at a specific rate in the U.S. progressive tax system, where higher income levels are taxed at higher rates — but only the income within each bracket is taxed at that bracket's rate.
IRS
The IRS is the US federal agency responsible for administering and enforcing the tax code — collecting individual and business taxes, processing returns, and auditing compliance with federal tax laws.
W-2
A W-2 is the tax form employers send to employees and the IRS each January, reporting annual wages paid and taxes withheld — the foundational document needed to file your federal and state income tax returns.
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