How Will I Be Able to Repay the IRS?

How Will I Be Able to Repay the IRS?
This post was published on the now-closed HuffPost Contributor platform. Contributors control their own work and posted freely to our site. If you need to flag this entry as abusive, send us an email.
Dwight Nadig

Question:

Dear Steve,

Hi Steve- I am a 57 year old single father and am in a lot of debt- and just did my taxes and owe the IRS $3500 which I do not have. I accumulated too much credit card debt and can barely afford to put food on the table after bills are paid.

I had to pay taxes two years ago to the IRS ($1500) and paid them off in 1 year. Will I be able to go on a payment plan with them that exceeds 12 months?

If it's 1 year I won't have enough money to feed myself and my daughter (She's a college student who works part time but barely makes enough to pay for her own gasoline!) Will the IRS allow me to pay this off over a few years?

I will not be able to pay this in 12 months for sure and am losing sleep over this. I am in a ton of credit card debt mostly taking care of my daughter's stuff and college.

Jody

Answer:

Dear Jody,

I'm so sorry to hear your money worries are stressing you out. I remember those days. Yuck.

The good news on the IRS payment agreement is you can enter it online and have up to 72 months. The IRS even has a video by Becky that explains how the online payment agreement works.

But your question makes me worried there are greater issues brewing. It sounds as if you've been drowning and using the cards to make up for money you have not had. The vicious cycle begins when that happens and soon you can't make it through the month more and more and the balances start to accelerate.

It also sounds as if you are under-withholding on your taxes which puts more money in your pocket each month.

It might be time to get all of this reset and back on track. If that sounds like a reasonable way to move forward then I would suggest you meet with a local bankruptcy attorney who is licensed in your state.

Discharging the credit card debt would give you the fresh start the law allows you to have. You could then adjust your withholdings so you are not looking at more future tax bills. Finally, you can have a second chance of living again within your income and not gazing further and further into a financial black hole.

Keep in mind the goal on taxes is to not let the government have your money for free each month and then issue you a big refund, nor to owe the government a big tax bill at the end of the year.

Right about now, you and others, are having some internal assumptions firing off about bankruptcy. But before you dismiss the concept you need to know most of what you assume about bankruptcy is just not true.

If you are willing to learn the truth, please click here and pull up a chair. There is so much you will learn.

Steve Rhode - Get Out of Debt Guy - Twitter, G+, Facebook

If you have a credit or debt question you'd like to ask, just click here and ask away.

Popular in the Community

Close

What's Hot