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    Installment agreement

    If you have an installment agreement with the IRS and change banks afterwards, how do you contract the IRS about the change. Thanks

    #2
    See

    Originally posted by arlo View Post
    If you have an installment agreement with the IRS and change banks afterwards, how do you contract the IRS about the change. Thanks
    See if this helps after reading it

    If you're not able to pay the tax you owe by your original filing due date, the balance is subject to interest and a monthly late payment penalty. There's also a penalty for failure to file a tax return, so you should file timely even if you can't pay your balance in full. It's always in your best interest to pay in full as soon as you can to minimize the additional charges.
    Always cite your source for support to defend your opinion

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      #3
      The taxpayer should call the IRS at the number on the 9465 instructions, and get specific guidance on how to advise them of the new account number. I'm betting it can be done online, but don't know for a fact. They should also keep enough money in the old account to cover the payment until they actually see a debit come through the new account. And probably be financially prepared for two debits to happen in the transition month, as a just-in-case. That will probably be cheaper than having to navigate a payment returned from the old account for insufficient funds.
      "The only function of economic forecasting is to make astrology look respectful" - John Kenneth Galbraith

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        #4
        When you have direct debit from a checking account and you want to switch banks you need to give enough advance notice to the debitor of the switch and it is recommended that you keep the old account active and funded until you are 100% sure all the scheduled payments have switched over.

        I learned this the hard way when I switched from Bank of America. My insurance company was billing on a quarterly basis so I did not see the debit on a recent statement and I closed the account thinking all payments have switched to the new account.

        With an IRS installment loan agreement, I would call the IRS have them switch and keep the old account active until I see the payments deducted from the new account. Then and only then I would close the old account. Too much risk of messing things up badly.
        Taxes after all are the dues that we pay for the privileges of membership in an organized society. - FDR

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