Active IRS Representation After a CDP Hearing | What Happens Next


Active IRS Representation After a CDP Hearing

Many taxpayers assume that once a Collection Due Process (CDP) hearing ends, their IRS case is finished. In reality, the period after a CDP hearing is often when IRS collection activity resumes or escalates.

Active IRS representation after a CDP hearing focuses on managing what happens next, including reviewing the CDP determination, tracking critical deadlines, and responding to enforcement actions such as wage garnishments and bank levies.

Why Active Representation Still Matters After CDP

A CDP hearing provides important procedural protections, but those protections are often temporary and may end once the IRS Office of Appeals issues a CDP determination.

After the determination:

  • IRS collection activity may resume
  • Wage garnishments or bank levies may begin or continue
  • New post-determination deadlines may apply
  • Additional IRS notices may be issued

Active representation helps ensure these developments are identified early, clearly explained, and properly addressed.

What Active IRS Representation Includes After CDP

After CDP, representation shifts from procedural review to collection management and follow-through.

Active representation may include:

  • Reviewing the CDP determination in detail
  • Explaining what the determination allows or restricts
  • Tracking post-determination deadlines
  • Monitoring IRS collection activity
  • Managing ongoing IRS correspondence

This continued engagement helps reduce confusion and missed steps as enforcement decisions unfold.

CDP Hearing vs. After CDP: What Changes?

Stage During CDP After CDP
Collections Often paused May resume
Review Authority IRS Appeals IRS Collections
Deadlines Procedural Enforcement-driven
Risk Level Moderate Higher

Key takeaway: The post-CDP phase often determines how aggressively the IRS proceeds.

Personal and Business Tax Issues After CDP

CDP cases may involve individual tax debt, business tax debt, or both. After CDP, business matters, especially payroll tax issues, can add complexity.

Active representation helps coordinate overlapping personal and business concerns so nothing is overlooked.

FAQs

Does a CDP hearing permanently stop IRS collections?

No. CDP protections are temporary and may end after the determination.

Can wage garnishment or bank levies start after CDP?

Yes. Collections may resume if allowed by the determination.

Why stay engaged after CDP?

Because post-CDP actions often determine enforcement intensity and available options.

If your CDP hearing has ended and IRS collections may resume, active representation can help you stay informed, organized, and prepared.

Request a confidential post-CDP case review today.

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Educational Notice

This content is for general educational purposes only and is not legal or tax advice. Outcomes depend on individual facts, timing, and eligibility.