Tax Lien
Tax Lien
Quick Definition
A tax lien is a legal claim the government places against a taxpayer's property — including real estate, financial assets, and personal property — when the taxpayer fails to pay a tax debt after notice and demand. A federal tax lien gives the IRS priority over most other creditors and prevents the sale or refinancing of assets until the underlying tax debt is paid or resolved.
What It Means
A tax lien is the IRS's first enforcement tool — it does not immediately take your property, but it creates a legal security interest that attaches to everything you own. Think of it as a legal cloud over your finances: you cannot sell your home, refinance your mortgage, or in some cases open new credit accounts without addressing the lien first.
Federal tax liens also appear on your credit report (though the major credit bureaus voluntarily stopped including them in 2017, they still affect mortgage applications and other financial activities through public records searches).
How a Federal Tax Lien Arises
The IRS follows a three-step process before a lien is enforceable:
- Assessment: IRS assesses (officially records) your tax liability after you file or they assess through audit
- Notice and demand: IRS sends a demand for payment (CP14 notice) — you have 10 days to pay
- Failure to pay: If you do not pay within 10 days, the lien automatically arises
The IRS then files a Notice of Federal Tax Lien (NFTL) — a public document that alerts other creditors that the government has a claim against your property.
What a Tax Lien Attaches To
Once a federal tax lien is filed, it attaches to:
| Asset Type | Effect |
|---|---|
| Real estate | Cannot sell or refinance without paying lien |
| Bank accounts | IRS can seize (levy) funds |
| Investment accounts | IRS can levy |
| Vehicles | IRS can seize |
| Business assets | Attaches to all business property |
| Future acquired property | Attaches to assets acquired after lien is filed |
The lien covers all property — not just specific assets.
Tax Lien vs. Tax Levy
| Feature | Tax Lien | Tax Levy |
|---|---|---|
| What it is | Legal claim on property | Actual seizure of property |
| Immediate impact | Cloud on title; credit impact | Funds seized; property taken |
| Timing | First enforcement step | Later step if lien unresolved |
| Action required | You must pay or resolve to remove | IRS actively takes property |
| Examples | Lien on home | Wage garnishment; bank account seizure |
A lien is a warning — a levy is the actual collection action.
Impact on Credit and Borrowing
Federal tax liens create serious practical problems:
| Impact | Description |
|---|---|
| Mortgage refinancing | Lenders require lien be paid or subordinated before closing |
| Home sale | Title company will not close with an active lien; lien must be satisfied from proceeds |
| Business financing | Banks typically decline new loans to businesses with active tax liens |
| Credit score (pre-2017) | Negatively impacted credit scores when bureaus included public records |
| Background checks | Employers and landlords conducting public records searches may see liens |
Resolving a Tax Lien
| Resolution Method | Description |
|---|---|
| Pay in full | Lien released within 30 days of full payment |
| Installment agreement | Lien remains but IRS may withdraw the notice in some cases |
| Offer in Compromise | Lien released upon OIC acceptance and payment |
| Discharge | IRS removes the lien from a specific asset (allows sale of that asset) |
| Subordination | IRS moves behind another creditor (allows refinancing) |
| Withdrawal | IRS removes the public notice even if debt exists (does not release the lien) |
| Statute of limitations | Federal tax liens expire 10 years from assessment (if not extended) |
Fresh Start Program (IRS initiative since 2011): Made it easier to obtain lien withdrawals for taxpayers who enter installment agreements under certain conditions.
State Tax Liens
States also file tax liens for unpaid state income, sales, payroll, and property taxes. State liens operate similarly to federal liens — attaching to all state property and creating a public record. Resolution requires working with the state's tax authority.
Key Points to Remember
- A tax lien is a legal claim on all your property — real estate, financial accounts, vehicles, future assets
- It arises automatically after assessment, notice, and failure to pay within 10 days
- A lien prevents selling or refinancing your home until resolved
- Tax levy is the next step — actual seizure — if the lien is not resolved
- Liens can be resolved through full payment, installment agreements, discharge, subordination, or Offer in Compromise
- Federal tax liens expire after 10 years from the date of assessment
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: How do I find out if I have a federal tax lien? A: Call the IRS at 1-800-829-1040 or check your tax account at IRS.gov (requires online account setup). You can also search your county recorder's or clerk's office for publicly filed Notices of Federal Tax Lien. A title company doing a property search will also find active liens.
Q: Will a tax lien ruin my credit? A: As of 2017, the three major credit bureaus (Equifax, Experian, TransUnion) voluntarily removed tax liens from credit reports as part of the National Consumer Assistance Plan. So current credit scores are not directly impacted by tax liens in most cases. However, mortgage lenders conduct public records searches independently and will see active federal tax liens regardless.
Q: Can I sell my house with a tax lien? A: Yes, but the lien must be satisfied at closing. The proceeds from the sale must first pay off the tax lien. If the sale price does not fully cover the lien, you would need to pay the remainder from other funds, or negotiate with the IRS for a "discharge" of the lien from that specific property before closing.
Related Terms
Tax Levy
A tax levy is the IRS's legal seizure of a taxpayer's property or assets to satisfy an unpaid tax debt — including wage garnishment, bank account seizure, and property seizure — and is the most aggressive collection tool available to the IRS.
Collateral
Collateral is an asset pledged to a lender as security for a loan — if the borrower defaults, the lender can seize the collateral to recover the unpaid debt, which is why secured loans carry lower interest rates than unsecured loans.
Personal Loan
A personal loan is an unsecured installment loan that provides a fixed lump sum repaid in equal monthly payments over a set term — commonly used for debt consolidation, home improvement, or major expenses without requiring collateral.
Bankruptcy
Bankruptcy is a legal process that allows individuals or businesses unable to repay debts to seek relief from some or all obligations, with different chapters covering liquidation, reorganization, and debt adjustment.
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.
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