Title 26 › Subtitle Subtitle F— - Procedure and Administration › Chapter CHAPTER 74— - CLOSING AGREEMENTS AND COMPROMISES › § 7122
Allows the Secretary to settle civil or criminal tax cases before they go to the Department of Justice, and lets the Attorney General (or a designee) settle them after they go to Justice. When the Secretary settles a case, the General Counsel’s written opinion and reasons must be kept on file, along with the amount of tax assessed, the amount of interest/penalties/additions, and the amount actually paid under the settlement. Sets rules for offers to settle tax debts. A “lump-sum” offer (payments in 5 or fewer installments) must include 20 percent of the offer. A “periodic” offer must include the first proposed installment, and missing any later installment while the offer is being reviewed can be treated as a withdrawal. Taxpayers can say how payments should be applied. Any user fee is taken out of the tax amount. The Secretary can create rules to waive required payments and fees, and people with adjusted gross income at or below 250 percent of the poverty level are exempt from those payments and fees. The Secretary must publish guidelines and living-expense schedules for IRS staff to use, protect low-income taxpayers from rejection just because of a low offer, allow certain liability-only offers without return verification or a financial statement, provide an independent review and appeal process, treat an offer as accepted if not rejected within 24 months (excluding time spent in court), and may disregard parts of an application that fall under clause (i) or (ii) of section 6702(b)(2)(A).
Full Legal Text
Internal Revenue Code — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
26 U.S.C. § 7122
Title 26 — Internal Revenue Code
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73