IRS Threatening to Seize Your Property? Defend Your Assets Now
Vehicle, real estate, or business equipment seizure is the IRS's most aggressive action. We mount an immediate defense.
Critical Deadline
30 days from final notice (Letter 1058 or LT11)
Note: Strategy Sessions require a $250 analysis fee, applied 100% toward your final service.
Understanding Asset Seizure
Asset seizure is the IRS's most aggressive collection action, where they physically take and sell your property—vehicles, real estate, business equipment, or inventory—to satisfy tax debt. Before seizing assets, the IRS must send required notices and generally allow 30 days to respond. However, once seizure proceedings begin, action must be immediate.
IRS Authority: IRC § 6331, IRC § 6334
What Happens If You Don't Act
How The Tax Pro Advisor Resolves This
Helping Austin and Leander business owners resolve asset seizure issues with proven strategies and direct IRS representation.
IRS Forms & Documents We Prepare
Frequently Asked Questions
What is IRS asset seizure?
IRS asset seizure is when the IRS physically takes your property—vehicles, real estate, business equipment—and sells it at auction to pay your tax debt. It's the most aggressive collection action the IRS can take.
How long do I have to respond to an asset seizure threat?
You typically have 30 days from receiving a Final Notice of Intent to Levy (Letter 1058 or LT11) to request a Collection Due Process hearing. Once this deadline passes, the IRS can proceed with seizure.
Can I settle this for less than I owe?
Yes. We can negotiate an Offer in Compromise or installment agreement to stop seizure proceedings. We can also demonstrate that keeping the assets allows you to pay the debt through continued business operations.
Related IRS Issues
Don't Wait Until It's Too Late
The longer you wait, the fewer options you have. Get a free, confidential consultation to understand your situation and next steps.
Note: Strategy Sessions require a $250 analysis fee, applied 100% toward your final service.
