The IRS may send you a letter or notice to request payment for taxes, notify you of
a change to your account, or request additional information. Please review the correspondence
and compare it with the information on your return. If you agree with the correction to
your account no reply is necessary, unless a payment is due. If you do not agree with
the correction we made, it is important that you respond as requested. Please write and
explain why you disagree. Include any documents and information you wish us to consider with
the bottom tear-off portion of the notice, to the IRS address shown in the upper left-hand
corner of the notice. Allow at least 30 days fro a response from us.
If you are due a refund because of our adjustment, it will be sent to you unless you owe
other past-due obligations the law requires us to collect, such as other taxes, child support,
student loans, etc. Any refund issued as a result of our change or correction, should be
received within 6 weeks from the date of the notice.
Sometimes we send a second letter or notice requesting additional information or providing
additional information to you. Be sure to keep copies of any correspondence with your records.
If you made a payment for which you haven't been given credit, send us proof of the
payment. If payment was made by check, send a copy of the front and back of the check.
DO NOT SEND YOUR ACTUAL CHECK; SEND ONLY A COPY OF IT. If payment was made by money order,
you must obtain a copy of the front and back of the canceled money order from the place
where the money order was purchased.
If you contacted us about a lost or stolen refund check, the notice we sent you will tell
you what action to take. If you have received a Notice CP-2000, select
Topic 652.
If you make quarterly estimated tax payments, please review your computation.
You may need to make changes to the amount of your payments based on the changes we made.
All notices should tell you where to send your reply. In most cases, it will be to
the IRS service center where you filed your return.
Most correspondence can be handled without calling or visiting an IRS office, if you follow
the instructions in the letter or notice. However, if you have questions, call the telephone
number in the upper right-hand corner of the notice. Have a copy of your tax return and the
correspondence available when you call, so your account can be readily accessible.
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