Tax Attorney in Las Vegas, NV
Federal IRS representation for Las Vegas residents, gaming-industry W-2 employees, casino executives, hospitality workers, and Strip-adjacent business owners — audits, back taxes, liens, levies, Offer in Compromise filings, and U.S. Tax Court petitions in the Lloyd D. George U.S. Courthouse at 333 Las Vegas Boulevard South. Nevada has no state personal income tax, so most individual enforcement is federal. The California Franchise Tax Board, however, continues to pursue thousands of recent Las Vegas transplants under FTB Publication 1031 source-of-income rules — and that is where our California-bar credential becomes uniquely useful for clients who relocated from Los Angeles, the Bay Area, or San Diego.
By Parham Khorsandi, Esq. — California Bar #266658. Admitted to practice before the United States Tax Court. Last Reviewed: .
Request a Free Consultation
100% Free · Confidential · No Obligation
Cal Bar Admitted
Verifiable license #266658
U.S. Tax Court
Federal trial admission
BBB Accredited
A+ rating
5.0 / 72 Reviews
Google Business Profile
If you owe back taxes in Las Vegas, here is what changed in 2026
The IRS resumed full passport-revocation referrals under IRC §7345 for taxpayers with seriously delinquent federal balances over the inflation-adjusted threshold ($62,000 for 2026). Las Vegas casino executives traveling to Macau, Singapore, or London for property visits, hospitality workers on cruise contracts, and Strip professionals with international travel face genuine revocation exposure. Two Las Vegas-specific 2026 pressure points sit on top of that: the California FTB continues to pursue former California residents who moved to Clark County for income sourced to California before relocation, citing California source rules under Cal. Rev. & Tax. Code §17041 and FTB Publication 1031; and the Nevada Department of Taxation has tightened Modified Business Tax and Commerce Tax enforcement on Strip-area entities and short-term rental operators. Acting before the IRS levy hits or the FTB issues a Notice of Proposed Assessment is materially easier than reversing either after the fact.
$100M+
Total tax relief secured
2,000+
Tax cases resolved
5.0
Average rating · 72 reviews
All 50
States via Form 2848 PoA
Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Each tax case is unique and turns on individual facts and IRS discretion.
What this page covers and why Las Vegas-specific tax representation matters
Victory Tax Lawyers, LLP is a California-licensed tax-law firm whose primary practice is federal IRS resolution. We represent Las Vegas individuals, casino-industry workers, gaming executives, hospitality professionals, entertainers, and Strip-area business owners before the Internal Revenue Service, the U.S. Tax Court, and the IRS Independent Office of Appeals through a Form 2848 Power of Attorney, which is recognized in every IRS district nationwide. Federal tax practice is not constrained by state-bar admission; under 31 CFR §10.3 (Circular 230), attorneys, CPAs, and enrolled agents may represent taxpayers before the IRS regardless of the taxpayer's state of residence.
Las Vegas tax practice has a distinct shape. Nevada has no state personal income tax and no state corporate income tax in the conventional sense — instead the state imposes a Modified Business Tax (a 1.378% payroll tax on Nevada wages under NRS Chapter 363B) and a Commerce Tax (graduated from 0.051% to 0.331% on Nevada-sourced gross revenue above $4 million under NRS Chapter 363C). The Nevada sales-and-use tax rate in Clark County reaches 8.375% (6.85% state plus 1.525% Clark County local). Nevada also imposes a Live Entertainment Tax of 9% on admission charges above $3.50 under NRS §463.401 — a tax that touches every Strip residency, every Sphere ticket, and every Cirque du Soleil show.
Where Las Vegas diverges from a typical no-income-tax state is the concentration of W-2G gambling income, tip-reporting exposure on Form 4137, Form 8027 large food-and-beverage establishment reporting, and the high volume of California exit migrants. Las Vegas sits at #2 nationally for inbound California departures (behind Texas). For those clients, the firm's California-bar credential is materially useful: we appear before the FTB on residency and source-of-income audits every week, and the typical Nevada-only firm does not.
If your problem is federal, you do not need an attorney admitted in Nevada. You need an attorney admitted somewhere with active U.S. Tax Court bar membership and federal-practitioner credentials under Circular 230. If your problem also involves California source-of-income chasing, the Cal Bar credential is the differentiating factor.
Your tax rights as a Las Vegas taxpayer
Federal taxpayer rights are codified across the Internal Revenue Code and summarized in IRS Publication 1, the Taxpayer Bill of Rights. They apply identically whether you live in Summerlin, Henderson, North Las Vegas, the Lakes, Spring Valley, Centennial Hills, or downtown. The rights you can invoke in a tax-resolution matter:
Right to representation
Under IRC §7521(b)(2), an IRS examiner or collection officer must suspend an interview if you state you wish to consult with an authorized representative. A signed Form 2848 puts a tax attorney between you and the IRS for the remainder of the matter; the agency redirects future correspondence through the CAF.
Right to Collection Due Process
After a Notice of Federal Tax Lien (IRC §6320) or a Final Notice of Intent to Levy (IRC §6330), you have 30 days to request a Collection Due Process hearing on Form 12153. CDP requests pause collection enforcement and preserve U.S. Tax Court review of any adverse Appeals determination.
Right to U.S. Tax Court review
A Notice of Deficiency triggers a 90-day petition window under IRC §6213(a). Filing a petition in Tax Court means you litigate without paying the deficiency first. Miss the 90 days and the only remaining remedy is pay-then-sue in the U.S. District Court for the District of Nevada or the U.S. Court of Federal Claims.
Right to an Offer in Compromise
Under IRC §7122, the IRS may accept less than the full liability where doubt as to collectibility, doubt as to liability, or effective tax administration justifies settlement. The offer is filed on Form 656 with Form 433-A(OIC) or 433-B(OIC) financial disclosure attached.
Right to a Collection Statute
IRC §6502 generally gives the IRS 10 years from the date of assessment to collect, after which the debt becomes uncollectible. Several events toll the period: pending OICs, bankruptcy, CDP hearings, and military deployment. Pull your IRS Account Transcripts to verify your Collection Statute Expiration Date before negotiating anything.
Nevada-specific: state petition deadlines
For state-tax matters at the Nevada Department of Taxation, deficiency determinations are subject to a 30-day petition window to the Nevada State Board of Tax Appeals under NRS Chapter 360. Nevada has no state personal income tax, so there is no individual-side state CSED for wage earners. Modified Business Tax and Commerce Tax assessments carry their own SOL framework under NRS Chapters 363B and 363C.
How Victory Tax Lawyers helps Las Vegas taxpayers
Offer in Compromise
We prepare and file Form 656 with supporting financials under IRC §7122. The IRS evaluates Reasonable Collection Potential (RCP) using monthly income net of allowable expenses plus the realizable value of assets. Las Vegas filings often turn on tip-income reconciliation, W-2G aggregation across calendar years, and gambling-loss documentation under IRC §165(d). We pressure-test the math before submission so the offer survives at Appeals if intake rejects it.
Installment Agreement
Streamlined IAs (under $50,000), Non-Streamlined IAs over $50,000 with Form 433-F disclosure, and Partial Pay Installment Agreements under IRC §6159 that run only through the CSED. We choose the structure that fits the facts and the runway, not whatever the IRS Automated Collection System proposes by default.
Lien release and withdrawal
A Notice of Federal Tax Lien under IRC §6321 attaches to your Las Vegas real estate, Clark County brokerage accounts, and personal property. We pursue release after payment, certificate of discharge for specific property (often needed to close a Henderson or Summerlin home sale), subordination to allow refinancing, and withdrawal under Fresh Start for IAs of $25,000 or less.
Levy release
Wage levies (CP90 / LT11 series) and bank levies under IRC §6331 stop when we secure CNC status, an accepted IA, an accepted OIC, or a CDP request. Time matters: bank levies hold for 21 days before remittance under IRC §6332(c). For casino-industry W-2 workers, a wage levy that hits during a slow tip season can be financially crushing.
Audit and exam defense
Correspondence audits, office exams at the 110 N City Parkway IRS office, and field audits. We respond to Information Document Requests, attend the audit in your place under Form 2848, prepare the Form 4549 protest if we disagree, and take the case to the IRS Independent Office of Appeals if the examiner will not move.
Penalty abatement
First-Time Penalty Abatement administrative relief and Reasonable Cause requests under IRC §6651 and §6662. Common reasonable-cause arguments for Las Vegas filers include the 2020 hospitality-industry shutdown, serious illness, casino employer reporting errors on W-2 versus W-2G aggregation, and preparer reliance subject to the United States v. Boyle limits.
Twelve types of Las Vegas tax issues we handle
Federal IRS practice areas, with Las Vegas-specific framing where it matters.
Casino W-2G and gambling winnings
Slot, poker, and table-game jackpots of $1,200 or more trigger Form W-2G reporting and 24% backup withholding under IRC §3402(q). We address W-2G aggregation errors, Schedule 1 reporting, and the IRC §165(d) gambling-loss limitation that only allows losses against winnings and only if you itemize.
Tip reporting and Form 4137
Casino dealers, cocktail servers, valets, bellpersons, and front-of-house hospitality workers face IRS exam on unreported tips under IRC §6053. Form 4137 captures Social Security and Medicare tax on tip income not reported to the employer.
California departing-resident audits
The California FTB pursues former residents who moved to Clark County under Cal. Rev. & Tax. Code §17041 and Publication 1031. Equity vested before the move, severance from a California employer, and deferred comp earned during California service stay California-source on sale.
IRS audit defense
Correspondence, office, and field audits. We respond, document, and protest examination changes through Appeals or U.S. Tax Court Las Vegas trial sessions.
Trust Fund Recovery Penalty
Under IRC §6672, the IRS pierces the corporate veil for unpaid payroll trust funds. Las Vegas hospitality and restaurant owners often discover this after the IRS Form 4180 interview names them as responsible persons.
Entertainment royalty and 1099 issues
Sphere residency artists, Cirque du Soleil performers, and Strip entertainers receive 1099 royalty, per-show fees, and travel-reimbursement income. We address Form 1099-MISC reconciliation, Schedule C self-employment tax under IRC §1401, and qualified-performing-artist treatment under IRC §62(a)(2)(B).
Real-estate §1031 and §121
Clark County home values rebounded sharply from 2020 to 2024 after the 2008 crash. Many sellers missed the IRC §1031 identification deadline or misapplied the §121 $250K/$500K primary-residence exclusion to an investment property.
Short-term rental §280A
Las Vegas STR operators on Airbnb and Vrbo face IRC §280A dwelling-use limits, the seven-day average-rental-period trap that disallows passive treatment, and Clark County / City of Las Vegas STR licensing rules layered on top.
Wage and bank levies
CP90 / LT11 final notices, casino-paycheck garnishments, and accounts-receivable levies for Las Vegas small-business owners. Time-sensitive bank-account holds under IRC §6332(c).
Passport revocation defense
IRC §7345 certifications to the State Department. We work to decertify before international travel for Las Vegas casino executives, hospitality professionals on cruise contracts, and Strip-area founders raising capital overseas.
U.S. Tax Court petitions
Deficiency petitions filed in the Tax Court within 90 days of the Notice of Deficiency, with Las Vegas trial sessions at the Lloyd D. George U.S. Courthouse at 333 Las Vegas Boulevard South.
Cryptocurrency reporting
Las Vegas has a meaningful population of crypto holders drawn by the no-state-tax framework. We address unreported gains, Form 1099-DA exposure under the 2026 broker-reporting rules, staking-income characterization, and John Doe summons defense.
Nine common causes of tax debt in Las Vegas
1. W-2G jackpot reporting gaps
A player who hits multiple slot or video-poker jackpots over the year receives several W-2Gs that the IRS aggregates. Reporting only one or netting losses outside Schedule A creates a CP2000 mismatch and a six-figure proposed deficiency.
2. Tip-allocation Form 8027
Large food-and-beverage establishments on the Strip file Form 8027 reporting allocated tips. Casino servers, bartenders, and floor staff who underreport tip income relative to the establishment's allocation get flagged for examination.
3. California exit illusion
A Los Angeles or Bay Area resident moves to Henderson or Summerlin in 2024 thinking the California tax bill is gone. The FTB issues a residency audit in 2026 claiming partial-year residency and California-source equity that vested before the move.
4. Sold a Clark County home without §1031
Clark County saw aggressive 2020-2024 appreciation following the 2008 crash. Investment-property sales without a like-kind exchange under IRC §1031 triggered surprise capital-gains balances, and the §121 exclusion does not save an investment property.
5. Self-employment quarterly miss
Las Vegas freelance entertainers, adult-industry workers, ride-share drivers, and contract dealers often skip quarterly estimates under IRC §6654. The 15.3% self-employment tax under §1401 compounds the federal income-tax balance.
6. Hospitality payroll lapse
A Las Vegas restaurant, nightclub, or boutique hotel stops depositing 941 trust funds during a slow season. The IRS asserts TFRP against the owner-operator personally under IRC §6672. The state side becomes a Nevada Modified Business Tax case.
7. ERC clawback
Employee Retention Credit claims pushed by promoter mills are being clawed back through CP207/CP207L letters. Las Vegas restaurants, dental practices, casinos vendors, and small hospitality operators face the audit wave.
8. Crypto and DeFi gaps
Exchange 1099-K and 1099-MISC reports do not match the taxpayer's Schedule D. The IRS Automated Underreporter program issues a CP2000 notice for the gap, often with a six-figure proposed deficiency.
9. Short-term rental misclassification
Las Vegas Airbnb operators classify rental losses as passive when the average rental period is under seven days and material participation is missing. The IRS reclassifies the activity under §280A and disallows the loss.
Who is on the hook: eight tax-liability scenarios
Joint filers in a community-property state
Nevada is a community-property state under NRS Chapter 123. Joint federal returns create joint-and-several liability under IRC §6013(d)(3). Even for married-filing-separately Las Vegas spouses, federal-tax community-property analysis applies to allocating income and withholding between returns. Innocent Spouse Relief under IRC §6015 is the principal escape valve.
Responsible persons for payroll
Trust Fund Recovery Penalty under IRC §6672 reaches anyone with check-signing authority who willfully failed to pay over withheld taxes — not just CEOs. For Las Vegas hospitality and casino-vendor LLCs, this often catches the office manager or comptroller along with the owner.
Nevada Modified Business Tax
Entities employing in Nevada owe Modified Business Tax under NRS Chapter 363B at 1.378% on Nevada wages above the quarterly threshold. The Nevada Department of Taxation has tightened enforcement on Strip-area entities. Personal-liability extensions for unpaid Modified Business Tax operate on responsible-person principles similar to federal TFRP.
Transferee liability
IRC §6901 reaches a transferee of assets where the transfer rendered the transferor insolvent and tax debts remain unpaid. Las Vegas family-LLC restructurings and dynasty-trust transfers under NRS §163.418 can trigger this.
California source-of-income claims
Under Cal. Rev. & Tax. Code §17041 and the FTB's Publication 1031 sourcing rules, equity that vested while the taxpayer rendered services in California remains California-source on sale — even years after the Las Vegas move. The FTB pursues these as nonresident-source claims regardless of current Clark County residency.
Nominee and alter-ego
The IRS files a nominee or alter-ego lien when assets titled in another's name actually belong to the taxpayer. Common in Las Vegas asset-protection structures using Nevada series LLCs and the state's well-known dynasty trust framework.
Nevada Commerce Tax responsible party
Entities with Nevada-sourced gross revenue above $4 million owe Commerce Tax under NRS Chapter 363C at graduated rates from 0.051% to 0.331% depending on industry classification. Unpaid Commerce Tax stays with the entity, with state-level collection authority similar to other Nevada revenue claims.
Estate and decedent returns
A decedent's final 1040 and the estate's 1041 are the executor's responsibility. Personal liability for the executor attaches under 31 USC §3713(b) if estate distributions are made before federal tax claims are satisfied. Nevada's 365-year perpetuity rule under NRS §163.418 makes the state a premier dynasty-trust jurisdiction alongside South Dakota and Wyoming.
What resolution can look like
Debt reduced
An accepted Offer in Compromise settles the federal liability for less than the full amount. Partial Pay IAs cap the recovery at what you can pay through the CSED. Currently Not Collectible status freezes collection while a Las Vegas hospitality worker rebuilds after a slow season.
Penalties abated
First-Time Penalty Abatement removes failure-to-file and failure-to-pay penalties for a clean compliance year. Reasonable-cause requests address 2020 hospitality-shutdown disruption, serious illness, and casino W-2 versus W-2G reporting errors.
Liens and levies released
An NFTL withdraws once a streamlined IA is in place under Fresh Start. Wage and bank levies release when the underlying account moves to CNC, IA, or OIC processing. Passport certifications reverse once the debt drops below the §7345 threshold.
Outcomes vary. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Each tax case is unique.
Settlement ranges from the firm's case files
The following ranges come from Victory Tax Lawyers cases over the past several years and contribute to the firm's $100M+ aggregate tax-relief figure. Names and identifying facts are removed for confidentiality.
| Matter type | Original liability | Resolution | Approximate result |
|---|---|---|---|
| Installment Agreement | $138,296 | IRC §6159 streamlined IA | $25/month accepted |
| Partial Pay IA | $126,489 | IRC §6159 PPIA through CSED | $50/month accepted |
| Installment Agreement | $128,206 | IRC §6159 streamlined IA | $25/month accepted |
| Partial Pay IA | $116,451 | IRC §6159 PPIA through CSED | $50/month accepted |
| Installment Agreement | $152,296 | IRC §6159 streamlined IA | $25/month accepted |
Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Each tax case is unique and turns on facts, asset position, monthly disposable income, IRS Allowable Living Expense tables, and the discretion of the assigned Revenue Officer or Settlement Officer. Acceptance rates for Offer in Compromise vary widely — the IRS reported a nationwide acceptance rate of roughly 30 to 40 percent in recent years.
Why a California-licensed firm represents Las Vegas taxpayers
Federal tax practice is regulated by Treasury under 31 CFR Part 10 (Circular 230). An attorney admitted in any U.S. jurisdiction may represent any taxpayer before the IRS in any state via Form 2848 Power of Attorney. State-bar admission is a state-court question; the IRS is a federal agency, the U.S. Tax Court is a federal court of national jurisdiction, and the IRS Independent Office of Appeals is a federal administrative venue. Whether you live in Summerlin, Henderson, North Las Vegas, the Lakes, Spring Valley, Centennial Hills, downtown, or anywhere else in Clark County, the federal procedural rules are identical.
Parham Khorsandi is a member of the State Bar of California (license #266658) and is admitted to practice before the United States Tax Court — admission there is national, not state-bound. Amir Boroumand (Cal Bar #269570) supplements the firm's federal practice. For Las Vegas specifically, the California-bar credential is more than a procedural footnote: Nevada is the #2 destination for California exit migrants, and the FTB's departing-resident audit program reaches former Los Angeles, San Francisco, San Diego, and San Jose residents who relocated to Clark County. We appear before the FTB on these matters every week. Few Nevada firms see Cal. Rev. & Tax. Code §17041 source-of-income disputes at any volume.
For Nevada Department of Taxation administrative work, we file the IRS Form 2848 analog with the state and handle the matter remotely. For matters that require an attorney admitted in Nevada — for example, a Nevada State Board of Tax Appeals petition that proceeds to judicial review in Clark County district court, or a contested Modified Business Tax assessment that lands in the Eighth Judicial District — we coordinate with local Nevada counsel and stay engaged on the federal side. The 100% remote workflow runs through a secure portal: document upload, signed Forms 2848 and 8821, and weekly status updates without anyone needing to drive to a downtown office.
The seven steps of a VTL tax-resolution engagement
Free consultation
A 30-minute call with an attorney to outline the facts, the IRS or FTB notices received, and the realistic resolution options.
Engagement letter
A written attorney-client agreement defines scope, fee, and authority. Federal common-law attorney-client privilege attaches from signature forward.
Form 2848 filed
Power of Attorney filed with the IRS Centralized Authorization File so subsequent IRS notices route to the firm. Nevada Department of Taxation power filed where state matters overlap.
CAF investigation
Account Transcripts, Wage and Income Transcripts, and Record of Account pulled across all open years. CSED dates verified before any negotiation.
Strategy memo
A written analysis recommending OIC, IA, CNC, audit response, CDP, or Tax Court petition based on the financial profile and CSED runway.
Resolution filed
Forms 656, 433-A, 9423, 12153, or Tax Court Petition prepared and filed. Negotiations with Revenue Officers, Settlement Officers, or Appeals Officers handled directly.
Compliance close-out
Post-resolution monitoring: future quarterly estimates, return filings, and protection against IA default. The case is done when the new pattern is stable.
Collection statute warning — federal, Nevada, and California
Under IRC §6502(a), the IRS generally has ten years from the date of assessment to collect a tax. After the Collection Statute Expiration Date, the debt becomes uncollectible by operation of law. Several events toll the CSED, including a pending Offer in Compromise (extends by the OIC pendency plus 30 days), bankruptcy filing (extends by the bankruptcy stay plus six months), a Collection Due Process hearing (extends while pending), Innocent Spouse claims, and continuous absence from the United States for six months or more.
On the Nevada side, Nevada has no state personal income tax, so there is no individual-side state CSED for wage earners. For entity-side Modified Business Tax and Commerce Tax assessments, the Nevada Department of Taxation operates under SOL frameworks in NRS Chapters 363B and 363C, with redetermination petitions to the Nevada State Board of Tax Appeals due within 30 days of the deficiency determination under NRS Chapter 360. Sales-and-use tax assessments from Clark County activity run on a separate three-year SOL framework.
On the California side — the third leg that matters for Las Vegas transplants — the FTB has a 20-year statute of limitations on collection of California income tax under Cal. Gov. Code §7172 after entry of the assessment, and a four-year statute of limitations on assessment under Cal. Rev. & Tax. Code §19057 (extended to six years for substantial omissions and unlimited for unfiled returns). The FTB collection horizon is twice the federal one. Pull every account transcript before negotiating anything; sometimes a Partial Pay Installment Agreement that runs out the federal statute is the better strategy than an offer that extends it.
Las Vegas venue: where federal and Nevada tax matters are heard
Federal tax matters affecting Las Vegas taxpayers proceed in federal venues. State matters that reach formal contest proceed through the Nevada Department of Taxation and the Nevada State Board of Tax Appeals, with judicial review available in the Eighth Judicial District Court of Clark County.
U.S. Tax Court — Las Vegas trial sessions
The United States Tax Court hears Las Vegas cases at the Lloyd D. George U.S. Courthouse, 333 Las Vegas Boulevard South, Las Vegas NV 89101. Trial sessions are scheduled on rotation throughout the year; petitioners designate Las Vegas as the place of trial under Tax Court Rule 140.
U.S. District Court — District of Nevada, Las Vegas Division
The U.S. District Court for the District of Nevada, Las Vegas Division sits at the Lloyd D. George U.S. Courthouse, 333 Las Vegas Boulevard South. Federal refund suits under IRC §7422 and criminal-tax matters proceed there.
IRS Taxpayer Assistance Center — Las Vegas
The IRS operates a TAC at 110 N City Parkway, Las Vegas NV 89106. Appointments are scheduled through the IRS office locator or 844-545-5640. The TAC handles in-person identity verification, payment processing, and account-history inquiries for Clark County taxpayers.
Nevada Department of Taxation — Las Vegas office
The Nevada Department of Taxation operates from 555 E Washington Avenue, Suite 1300, Las Vegas NV 89101, with the headquarters office in Carson City at 1550 College Parkway. The Department administers Modified Business Tax, Commerce Tax, sales-and-use tax, Live Entertainment Tax, and a range of excise and gaming-adjacent taxes.
Nevada State Board of Tax Appeals
The Nevada State Board of Tax Appeals hears state-tax redetermination petitions at 555 E Washington Avenue, Suite 1100, Las Vegas NV 89101. A petition must be filed within 30 days of the deficiency determination under NRS Chapter 360. Decisions are subject to judicial review in the Eighth Judicial District Court of Clark County.
Clark County Treasurer and Assessor
The Clark County Treasurer and Clark County Assessor sit together at 500 S Grand Central Parkway, Las Vegas NV 89106. The Treasurer collects county property tax; the Assessor sets the assessed value subject to appeal at the Clark County Board of Equalization.
City of Las Vegas Treasury
The City of Las Vegas Treasury Office at 495 S Main Street, Las Vegas NV 89101 handles city business-license fees and municipal revenue collection. STR operating permits inside city limits run through the city's Department of Planning along with the county for STRs outside incorporated boundaries.
Nevada Gaming Control Board
The Nevada Gaming Control Board at 555 E Washington Avenue, Suite 2600, Las Vegas NV 89101 regulates the gaming industry under NRS Chapter 463. While not a tax tribunal, NGCB enforcement of casino-side reporting overlaps with IRS Bank Secrecy Act enforcement and casino currency transaction reporting under 31 USC §5331.
Request a free consultation with a Las Vegas-focused tax attorney
A 30-minute call with an attorney costs nothing. Bring your most recent IRS notice, your last filed return, any Nevada Department of Taxation correspondence, and any California FTB notice if you relocated from California. We will tell you which resolution options actually fit your facts before you sign anything.
Frequently asked questions for Las Vegas taxpayers
Reviewed by
Parham Khorsandi, Esq.
Managing Attorney · California Bar #266658 · Admitted to the United States Tax Court
Parham Khorsandi is the managing attorney of Victory Tax Lawyers, LLP. His practice focuses on federal tax controversy — Offer in Compromise negotiations, Installment Agreements, Trust Fund Recovery Penalty defense, audit representation before the IRS Examination function, and litigation before the U.S. Tax Court — with a parallel California Franchise Tax Board residency-and-source-of-income practice that serves Las Vegas transplants from Los Angeles, the Bay Area, and San Diego. He has represented Las Vegas individual and business taxpayers across U.S. Tax Court, U.S. District Court (District of Nevada), IRS Appeals, and California FTB matters.
Last Reviewed:
Attorney Advertising. Victory Tax Lawyers, LLP is a California-licensed law firm with its principal office at 1100 S. Robertson Boulevard, Los Angeles, CA 90035. Information on this page is general in nature, may not reflect the most recent legal developments, and does not create an attorney-client relationship. This page is not legal advice. Federal tax outcomes depend on individual facts and Internal Revenue Service discretion. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes; each tax matter is unique.
IRS Circular 230 Disclosure. To ensure compliance with requirements imposed by the IRS, any U.S. federal tax advice contained on this page is not intended or written to be used, and cannot be used, for the purpose of (i) avoiding penalties under the Internal Revenue Code or (ii) promoting, marketing, or recommending to another party any transaction or matter addressed herein.
Las Vegas-specific note. VTL attorneys are licensed in California. Federal IRS and U.S. Tax Court representation is provided to Las Vegas residents under Form 2848 Power of Attorney and Tax Court bar admission, which are recognized in all 50 states. California Franchise Tax Board work is handled directly under the firm's California bar admission — particularly relevant for the substantial population of recent California transplants in Clark County. Nevada Department of Taxation administrative work is handled remotely under Nevada state power-of-attorney rules. Nevada state-court matters requiring Nevada-bar admission are handled in coordination with Nevada counsel. Consult a licensed attorney about your specific situation before acting on any content on this page.
Related VTL practice areas
Offer in Compromise
IRC §7122 settlement
Installment Agreement
IRC §6159 payment plan
Tax Lien
IRC §6321 release
Tax Levy
IRC §6331 release
Audit Representation
IRS exam defense
Penalty Abatement
First-Time and reasonable cause
Back Taxes
Unfiled returns and balances
Nevada Tax Attorney
Statewide hub