Tax Attorney in Virginia Beach, VA
Federal IRS representation for Virginia Beach residents, Naval Air Station Oceana aircrew, Little Creek and Dam Neck Special Warfare personnel, Sentara and Bon Secours 1099 physicians, Filipino-American Navy families with Philippines accounts, and Atlantic Avenue hospitality operators — audits, back taxes, liens, levies, Offer in Compromise filings, and U.S. Tax Court petitions tried in Norfolk. Virginia Beach is an independent city under Virginia's unique city-county structure, with no overlapping county government. Virginia Department of Taxation matters are handled remotely via Form PAR 101 Power of Attorney filed alongside IRS Form 2848.
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Virginia Beach taxpayers facing IRS collection or Virginia Department of Taxation action — the clock is short
An IRS CP504 or LT11 sets a 30-day clock under IRC § 6330 to file a Collection Due Process petition before the federal government can levy a Navy paycheck on DFAS direct deposit, a Sentara Healthcare W-2, an Atlantic Union Bank account, or any Virginia Beach employer payroll. A Statutory Notice of Deficiency sets a separate 90-day clock under IRC § 6213(a) to petition the U.S. Tax Court, with trial sessions calendared 12 miles west at the Walter E. Hoffman U.S. Courthouse, 600 Granby Street, Norfolk — the same building that houses the Eastern District of Virginia, Norfolk Division for federal-tax refund suits under IRC § 7422.
Virginia operates a graduated personal income tax topping out at 5.75% under Va. Code § 58.1-320 and a 6% corporate income tax under Va. Code § 58.1-400. The Virginia Department of Taxation runs an administrative appeals track through the Office of Tax Commissioner under Va. Code § 58.1-1821, with judicial review available in the Virginia Beach Circuit Court under Va. Code § 58.1-1825. We pull federal account transcripts on Form 8821, file Form 2848 with the IRS and Form PAR 101 with the Virginia Department of Taxation, calculate every CSED, and where state and federal exposures overlap, run the two tracks in parallel from our Los Angeles office.
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states served via Form 2848
Federal tax representation for Virginia Beach taxpayers
Victory Tax Lawyers, LLP is a California-Bar-admitted tax-resolution law firm headquartered in Los Angeles. Our federal practice runs nationwide: the Internal Revenue Service accepts our Form 2848 Power of Attorney in every state, and the U.S. Tax Court — a single federal trial court of nationwide jurisdiction — calendars cases for South Hampton Roads taxpayers in Norfolk, 12 miles west of the Virginia Beach Oceanfront. From our Robertson Boulevard office, we represent Virginia Beach residents and Virginia Beach-domiciled businesses in IRS audits, collection cases, Tax Court petitions, Offers in Compromise under IRC § 7122, Installment Agreements under IRC § 6159, lien discharges under IRC § 6325, levy releases under IRC § 6343, and Trust Fund Recovery Penalty defenses under IRC § 6672.
Federal tax practice is governed by Treasury under 31 CFR Part 10 (Circular 230). An attorney in good standing with any state bar may represent a taxpayer before the IRS in any state through Form 2848. The U.S. Tax Court is a federal court with national jurisdiction; admission to that court is national, not state-bound. For most Virginia Beach engagements, no Virginia State Bar admission is required at any stage of the case — the work is federal from start to finish.
For Virginia state-tax matters — Virginia Department of Taxation income-tax assessments, sales-and-use tax disputes, pass-through entity tax filings, or administrative appeals before the Office of Tax Commissioner — we file Form PAR 101 (Virginia Tax Power of Attorney) and handle the matter remotely from Los Angeles. Where a Virginia state-court appearance is required — a Virginia Beach Circuit Court judicial-review action on a Tax Commissioner final determination under Va. Code § 58.1-1825, for example, or a Virginia Supreme Court appeal — we associate with locally admitted Virginia counsel under a co-counsel arrangement. The federal portion of the engagement, which is usually the larger exposure, stays with us.
Virginia Beach carries a tax profile shaped above all by the Hampton Roads Navy concentration. Naval Air Station Oceana is the largest U.S. Master Jet Base, the East Coast training home for F/A-18 Super Hornets and F-35C Lightning II carrier strike fighters. Joint Expeditionary Base Little Creek-Fort Story headquarters the East Coast Navy SEAL community. Dam Neck Annex houses the Naval Special Warfare Development Group. Add the Norfolk Naval Base ten miles west — the largest naval base in the world — the Coast Guard Atlantic Area Command, and the Filipino-American Navy heritage tracing back to wartime stewards' mate enlistments, and the federal-tax case-mix in Virginia Beach looks different from any inland city of comparable size. Layered on top: Sentara Healthcare and Bon Secours physician 1099 work, Atlantic Avenue Boardwalk hospitality with 1099-K and W-2G exposure, Sandbridge and Croatan short-term-rental compliance under IRC § 280A, and Regent University faculty and Pat Robertson media-organization payroll. Every Virginia Beach engagement we accept is framed around those facts.
Your tax rights as a Virginia Beach taxpayer
Federal rights come from the Internal Revenue Code and IRS Publication 1, the Taxpayer Bill of Rights. State rights come from Title 58.1 of the Code of Virginia and the Virginia Department of Taxation's published guidance, including the Taxpayer Bill of Rights at tax.virginia.gov. Knowing both sides is the difference between a clean resolution and a missed deadline that ends in a Navy Federal Credit Union levy or a Virginia Department of Taxation lien recorded in the Virginia Beach Circuit Court Clerk's Office.
Right to representation
IRC § 7521(b)(2) and (c) give you the right to be represented by an attorney, CPA, or Enrolled Agent during any IRS examination or interview. Once Form 2848 is on file with the IRS Centralized Authorization File, the IRS must direct all contact to the attorney first. The Virginia Department of Taxation honors a parallel POA through Form PAR 101 for state-tax matters.
Right to Tax Court review
IRC § 6213(a) gives you 90 days from a Statutory Notice of Deficiency to petition the U.S. Tax Court — without paying the assessed tax first. Miss the 90-day window and the deficiency becomes final. The Tax Court calendars Hampton Roads cases in Norfolk at the Walter E. Hoffman U.S. Courthouse, 600 Granby Street, 12 miles west of the Virginia Beach Oceanfront.
Collection Due Process
IRC § 6320 (lien) and IRC § 6330 (levy) give you a 30-day window to request a CDP hearing on Form 12153 once the IRS files a Notice of Federal Tax Lien with the Virginia Beach Circuit Court Clerk or issues a Final Notice of Intent to Levy. A timely CDP request halts collection and preserves judicial review in the U.S. Tax Court.
Right to Virginia administrative appeal
Va. Code § 58.1-1821 allows an administrative appeal to the Virginia Tax Commissioner within 90 days of a notice of assessment. The Tax Commissioner issues a written final determination; judicial review of that determination is filed in a Virginia Circuit Court — typically the Virginia Beach Circuit Court for Virginia Beach taxpayers — under Va. Code § 58.1-1825 within three years of the assessment date.
Right to relief from federal penalties
First-Time Abate administrative relief under IRM 20.1.1.3.6 removes a single year of failure-to-file or failure-to-pay penalties under IRC § 6651 for taxpayers with a clean three-year compliance history. Reasonable-cause abatement reaches further when supported by documentation — serious illness, hurricane disruption under IRC § 7508A, military deployment under IRC § 7508, or reliance on competent advice.
Right to recover fees
IRC § 7430 allows recovery of administrative and litigation costs where the IRS takes a position not substantially justified and the taxpayer prevails. The threshold is real and used most often in audit-reconsideration and Innocent Spouse cases under IRC § 6015 where the Service's posture cannot be defended on the record.
How Victory Tax Lawyers helps Virginia Beach taxpayers
Offer in Compromise under IRC § 7122
We file Form 656 with Form 433-A(OIC) or 433-B(OIC), document the Reasonable Collection Potential under IRM 5.8.4, and pursue doubt-as-to-collectibility offers where collection in full is not feasible within the remaining CSED. The federal $205 application fee may be waived for low-income certified offers. On the Virginia side, the Department of Taxation may compromise state liabilities under Va. Code § 58.1-105 where doubt as to liability or collectibility exists; we file Form OIC B-3 alongside the federal package when state debt is part of the picture.
Installment Agreements under IRC § 6159
Streamlined IAs (under $50,000), partial-pay IAs under IRC § 6159(d), and full-pay agreements. Partial-pay structures matter most where IRC § 6502 will extinguish the balance before payoff — the most under-used resolution path for Virginia Beach taxpayers carrying $50,000 to $250,000 in federal debt with a CSED running before full payment is realistic. Virginia state payment plans run separately through the Department of Taxation under Va. Code § 58.1-1813.
Lien discharge, subordination, and withdrawal
When a Notice of Federal Tax Lien filed with the Virginia Beach Circuit Court Clerk blocks a property sale or refinance in Sandbridge, Great Neck, Bay Colony, North End, or any Virginia Beach address, we file Form 14135 (discharge), Form 14134 (subordination), or Form 12277 (withdrawal). The IRS procedures sit in IRC § 6325 and IRM 5.12; the timing must align with the closing date set by the title company. Virginia Department of Taxation memoranda of lien are recorded at the same Circuit Court Clerk's Office and require separate state-side release procedures.
Levy release under IRC § 6343
Wage levies on Sentara, Bon Secours, Children's Hospital of The King's Daughters, the City of Virginia Beach, and DFAS military pay; bank levies on Navy Federal Credit Union, Towne Bank, Atlantic Union Bank, and Wells Fargo. For active-duty Navy clients, DFAS levy processing has its own coordination layer through the Defense Finance and Accounting Service Cleveland office. We document economic hardship under IRC § 6343(a)(1)(D) and Treasury Reg. § 301.6343-1(b)(4), and where the levy is procedurally defective, we challenge it through Collection Due Process or the IRS Independent Office of Appeals.
Audit defense and U.S. Tax Court litigation
Correspondence audits, office audits, and field examinations — including sensitive issues like FBAR FinCEN Form 114 for Philippine peso accounts held by Filipino-American Navy families, military combat-zone exclusions under IRC § 112 for deployed Oceana and Little Creek personnel, Sentara and Bon Secours 1099 physician self-employment-tax exposure, Sandbridge short-term-rental compliance under IRC § 280A, and hurricane casualty-loss claims under IRC § 165(h) and involuntary-conversion deferrals under IRC § 1033. If the audit closes unfavorably, we petition the U.S. Tax Court within the 90-day IRC § 6213(a) window for trial in Norfolk.
Penalty abatement under IRC § 6651 and IRM 20.1.1
First-Time Abate administrative relief, reasonable-cause abatement, and statutory exceptions for failure-to-file and failure-to-pay penalties. For accuracy-related penalties under IRC § 6662, we document substantial authority or adequate disclosure to defeat the assessment. Combat-zone deployment under IRC § 7508 supports automatic abatement of late-filing and late-payment penalties for deployed Navy aircrew and Naval Special Warfare personnel. Hurricane Helene 2024 and Hurricane Florence 2018 deadline postponements under IRC § 7508A apply to Virginia Beach taxpayers within designated FEMA disaster areas.
Twelve types of Virginia Beach tax matters we handle
Federal-tax cases for Virginia Beach residents and businesses, framed against the city's Navy, healthcare, hospitality, and Filipino-American population profile.
Naval Air Station Oceana combat-zone exclusions
IRC § 112 excludes combat-zone pay for active-duty Navy aircrew deployed from NAS Oceana — the largest U.S. Master Jet Base and East Coast home of F/A-18 Super Hornet and F-35C Lightning II squadrons. CP2000 mismatches on excluded pay, hostile-fire-pay reporting, imminent-danger-pay coding, and tax-free housing allowances under IRC § 134 are routine adjustments where the W-2 box-1 amount was wrong.
Little Creek and Dam Neck Naval Special Warfare
Joint Expeditionary Base Little Creek-Fort Story houses East Coast Navy SEAL teams; Dam Neck Annex houses the Naval Special Warfare Development Group. Deployment-driven combat-zone exclusions under IRC § 112, IRC § 7508 filing-deadline postponements, and SCRA collection-tolling under 50 U.S.C. § 3991 stack on top of high-tempo operational schedules that make compliance hard.
Military spouse residency (MSRRA)
The Military Spouses Residency Relief Act allows a spouse of an active-duty Navy member stationed at Oceana, Little Creek, Dam Neck, or Norfolk Naval Base to retain a non-Virginia domicile (or, post-2018 Veterans Benefits and Transition Act amendment, elect the service member's domicile) without Virginia income-tax assessment. We coordinate with the home-state department of revenue and file Form 763-S for Virginia withholding refunds when the MSRRA election was missed.
Servicemembers Civil Relief Act (SCRA) tolling
SCRA, 50 U.S.C. § 3991, tolls IRS collection limitation periods during periods of active military service plus 180 days. For deployed Oceana aircrew, Little Creek SEALs, and Dam Neck DEVGRU personnel, this changes the CSED math on every assessed year — both extending taxpayer rights and complicating collection planning across multiple back-to-back deployments.
FBAR for Philippine peso accounts
Virginia Beach hosts one of the largest concentrations of Filipino-American Navy families in the country, tracing back to wartime Navy stewards' mate enlistments. Family bank accounts in Manila, Cebu, Iloilo, and Davao are common — and FinCEN Form 114 (FBAR) is required when aggregate balances exceed $10,000 at any point during the year. Streamlined Filing Compliance Procedures are the most common non-willful disclosure path.
ITIN applications and dependent claims
Filipino, Hispanic, and Asian families in Virginia Beach often need Form W-7 ITINs for non-U.S.-citizen spouses, parents, or children to file joint or head-of-household returns and claim Child Tax Credit or Credit for Other Dependents under IRC § 24. ITIN renewals and Acceptance Agent certification are recurring administrative work alongside CP2000 dependent-mismatch resolution.
Sentara and Bon Secours 1099 physicians
Sentara Princess Anne, Sentara Virginia Beach General, Sentara Leigh, and Bon Secours DePaul produce substantial 1099 contractor work for anesthesiologists, radiologists, emergency-medicine groups, hospitalists, and locum-tenens physicians. Schedule C reporting, self-employment tax under IRC § 1401, and quarterly estimated-tax compliance under IRC § 6654 are the recurring audit issues.
Trust Fund Recovery Penalty
IRC § 6672 imposes 100% personal liability on officers, partners, and check-signers for unpaid employment-tax withholding. Virginia Beach restaurant operators on Atlantic Avenue, construction contractors building Town Center and Pungo subdivisions, and Oceanfront hospitality LLCs are the most common targets, with the IRS Form 4180 interview as the qualification mechanism.
Sandbridge and Croatan short-term rentals
Sandbridge, Croatan, and North End vacation rentals generate Schedule E or Schedule C income depending on the IRC § 280A 14-day rule, average rental period, and substantial-services analysis. Airbnb and VRBO 1099-K reporting triggers CP2000 mismatches when basis, cleaning fees, and management commissions are not properly netted. Virginia transient-occupancy tax compliance adds a state and local layer.
Hurricane casualty losses
Hurricane Helene 2024, Hurricane Florence 2018, Hurricane Matthew 2016, and earlier storms triggered FEMA disaster declarations covering Virginia Beach. Personal casualty losses under IRC § 165(h)(5) are limited to federally declared disaster areas post-TCJA; involuntary-conversion deferrals under IRC § 1033 apply to insurance reimbursements; IRC § 7508A postpones filing and payment deadlines.
Notice of Federal Tax Lien
NFTLs filed with the Virginia Beach Circuit Court Clerk encumber title to Virginia Beach real property and trigger Collection Due Process rights under IRC § 6320. Bay Colony, North End, Great Neck, Alanton, and Sandbridge are the addresses where lien-discharge filings most often run alongside a residential closing.
Passport revocation under IRC § 7345
A seriously delinquent tax debt (the indexed threshold is $62,000 for 2025) triggers State Department certification and passport hold. For Virginia Beach's Navy, Coast Guard, civilian-contractor, and international Filipino-American population, passport access is operationally required, making IRC § 7345(e) reversal a frequent priority engagement.
Nine common causes of tax debt for Virginia Beach taxpayers
Patterns we see repeatedly across Virginia Beach cases. None of them are unusual — all of them are resolvable.
1. Combat-zone deployment coding errors
A Navy aircrew member returns from a Red Sea or Arabian Gulf deployment where pay should have been excluded under IRC § 112. A W-2 reporting error or DFAS coding mistake leaves taxable wages overstated and a refund missed, or worse, a CP2000 issued the following year when adjustments cross-check incorrectly.
2. Sentara locum-tenens undertaxation
A Sentara or Bon Secours physician taking locum-tenens 1099 work without making quarterly Form 1040-ES payments faces self-employment tax under IRC § 1401 plus Virginia estimated-tax shortfall plus accuracy-related penalty exposure under IRC § 6662.
3. Sandbridge STR reporting gaps
A Sandbridge beach-house owner switches from long-term lease to Airbnb-managed weekly rentals, crosses the IRC § 280A 14-day threshold, and ends the year with Schedule C self-employment income, 1099-K mismatches, and Virginia transient-occupancy-tax exposure all hitting at once.
4. Business closure with unpaid Form 941
A Virginia Beach LLC or S-corp closes with unpaid Form 941 payroll-tax balances. IRC § 6672 follows the responsible officer personally for the trust-fund portion long after the entity is dissolved, and Va. Code § 58.1-1813 imposes parallel state employer-withholding officer liability.
5. Divorce and joint-return fallout
A jointly-filed return tied to a now-former spouse's understatement leaves both parties liable until Innocent Spouse relief under IRC § 6015 is granted. Virginia Beach Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court and Circuit Court orders do not bind the IRS.
6. Cryptocurrency CP2000 surprise
Exchanges issue Form 1099-DA (introduced 2025), and the IRS computer matches reported gains. Missed basis records turn into ordinary-income assessments at the full sale price, a recurring issue across the Virginia Beach tech, defense-contractor, and Navy-cyber population.
7. Late-filed or unfiled returns
Failure-to-file under IRC § 6651(a)(1) compounds at 5% per month, capped at 25%. After three years, refunds are barred under IRC § 6511. IRM 5.1.11.6 generally requires the last six years filed to bring a taxpayer back into compliance. Virginia's parallel limitation under Va. Code § 58.1-1812 is six years.
8. Real-estate sale without estimated tax
A North End, Bay Colony, or Great Neck residential sale generating substantial capital gain with no Form 1040-ES payment produces a tax bill the next April. The IRC § 121 personal-residence exclusion ($250,000/$500,000) helps but does not always eliminate exposure for second homes and investment properties.
9. Unreported Philippine peso accounts
A Filipino-American Navy family inherits or jointly holds bank accounts in Manila, Cebu, or Iloilo. Aggregate balances cross $10,000 and FBAR obligations under 31 U.S.C. § 5314 are triggered. Streamlined Filing Compliance Procedures are the standard non-willful disclosure path; willful exposure under 31 U.S.C. § 5321(a)(5) is materially different.
Eight tax liabilities that pull in Virginia Beach taxpayers
Federal authority alongside the Virginia statute where there is a parallel. Where the parallel exists, both exposures must be worked simultaneously.
Failure to file federal return
IRC § 6651(a)(1) imposes 5% per month, max 25%, plus interest under IRC § 6601. Failure-to-pay under § 6651(a)(2) adds 0.5% per month up to a separate 25% cap. Combat-zone deployment under IRC § 7508 supports automatic abatement for the deployment period.
Failure to file Virginia income tax
Va. Code § 58.1-347 imposes a Virginia late-filing penalty of 6% per month (capped at 30%) on the tax due, with statutory interest accruing separately. The Virginia Department of Taxation may also impose the § 58.1-308 substitute-return process when no return is filed after notice.
Federal § 7122 Offer in Compromise eligibility
All federal returns must be filed (IRC § 7122(d) compliance) and the offer must reflect Reasonable Collection Potential under IRM 5.8.4. The non-refundable $205 application fee may be waived for low-income certified offers. Virginia state OICs under Va. Code § 58.1-105 follow a separate Form OIC B-3 process.
Virginia sales-and-use tax
Va. Code Title 58.1, Chapter 6 imposes a 4.3% state sales tax plus 1% Virginia Beach local option plus 0.7% Hampton Roads regional transportation rate — a combined 6% rate. The 6% rate applies to Virginia Beach hospitality, retail, and STR cleaning-services sales. Officer liability for unpaid trust-fund sales tax reaches under Va. Code § 58.1-1813.
Trust Fund Recovery Penalty
IRC § 6672 imposes 100% personal liability on responsible persons for unpaid federal trust-fund employment tax. Va. Code § 58.1-1813 imposes a parallel state-side personal-liability tail on responsible officers for unpaid Virginia withholding and sales tax held in trust for the Commonwealth.
Accuracy-related penalty
IRC § 6662 imposes 20% on substantial-understatement or negligence; IRC § 6663 imposes 75% on fraud. Defense is built on substantial authority, adequate disclosure, or reasonable cause. Virginia parallels this through § 58.1-308 substitute-return understatement penalties.
Virginia Pass-Through Entity Tax (PTET)
Va. Code § 58.1-390.3 allows qualifying pass-through entities to elect to pay Virginia income tax at the entity level, sidestepping the IRC § 164(b)(6) federal SALT cap for owners. Late or defective PTET elections produce double-tax exposure that is typically resolvable through amended returns and Form 502PTET refiles.
Transferee liability
IRC § 6901 lets the IRS pursue a transferee — a person who received property from a delinquent taxpayer — for the transferor's unpaid tax, up to the value of the transferred property. Virginia Beach family-business succession and inherited-property scenarios produce regular transferee-liability work.
What resolution can look like
Debt reduced
An accepted IRC § 7122 Offer in Compromise can resolve six-figure balances for cents on the dollar where Reasonable Collection Potential supports the offer. The IRS national acceptance rate sits around 33%; preparation determines the outcome more than any other factor. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes — each case turns on its facts.
Penalties abated
First-Time Abate removes a single year of failure-to-file or failure-to-pay penalties for taxpayers with a clean three-year compliance record. Reasonable-cause abatement under IRM 20.1.1 reaches further when supported by documentation — particularly relevant for IRC § 7508 combat-zone deployments and IRC § 7508A hurricane disaster postponements.
Lien released or withdrawn
Once a debt is paid in full, the IRS releases the Notice of Federal Tax Lien within 30 days per IRC § 6325(a). On an Installment Agreement of $25,000 or less, lien withdrawal under Form 12277 can be requested to clear title at the Virginia Beach Circuit Court Clerk.
Sample tax-resolution outcomes
Anonymized client matters drawn from our $100M+ aggregate tax-relief record across 2,000+ resolved cases.
| Year | Tax debt | Resolution | Final outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2024 | $152,296 | IRC § 6159 Installment Agreement | Accepted at $25/month, partial-pay |
| 2024 | $138,296 | Streamlined Installment Agreement | Accepted at $25/month |
| 2023 | $130,555 | Partial-Pay Installment Agreement | Accepted at $50/month |
| 2023 | $128,206 | IRC § 6159 Installment Agreement | Accepted at $25/month |
| 2022 | $116,451 | Partial-Pay Installment Agreement | Accepted at $50/month |
Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Each tax case is unique. Results depend on the specific facts of the matter, including the taxpayer's financial condition, compliance history, and the discretion of the Internal Revenue Service and the Virginia Department of Taxation.
Why Victory Tax Lawyers for a Virginia Beach federal-tax case
Victory Tax Lawyers is California-Bar-admitted, not Virginia State Bar-admitted. That distinction matters — and it does not block our work. The U.S. Tax Court is a federal court with nationwide jurisdiction; an attorney admitted to that court may petition and try cases in any of its trial locations, including the Norfolk session calendared at the Walter E. Hoffman U.S. Courthouse on Granby Street. IRS administrative practice runs on Form 2848 Power of Attorney, which is accepted from any attorney in good standing with any state bar plus an active Centralized Authorization File number. Most Virginia Beach clients never need a separately admitted Virginia attorney because the case is, at its core, federal.
When a matter does require Virginia state-court appearance — a Virginia Beach Circuit Court judicial-review action under Va. Code § 58.1-1825 on a Tax Commissioner final determination, a Virginia Court of Appeals tax appeal, or a Supreme Court of Virginia review — we associate with locally admitted Virginia counsel under a co-counsel arrangement. The federal portion of the engagement, which is usually the bigger exposure, stays with us. Virginia Department of Taxation administrative work runs remotely through Form PAR 101 without requiring Virginia State Bar admission.
The engagement is 100% remote. Documents move through a secure client portal; consultations happen by phone or video; signatures are handled electronically. A Virginia Beach client never drives anywhere — not to Los Angeles, not across the Hampton Roads Bridge-Tunnel, not to the IRS Taxpayer Assistance Center at 200 Granby Street in Norfolk unless an in-person meeting is something the client wants. Federal procedures are uniform nationwide; the city in which the lawyer sits has little practical bearing on the outcome.
What distinguishes the firm: a California-Bar-admitted Managing Attorney with active U.S. Tax Court admission, an Enrolled Agent on staff for IRS administrative work, a 5.0 / 72-review Google rating, and $100M+ in cumulative tax relief secured across 2,000+ resolved matters. No marketing claim of being a Virginia-licensed firm — we are not. A factually accurate offer of federal tax representation, available to any Virginia Beach taxpayer, at the same standard applied to a Los Angeles client.
Our seven-step process for Virginia Beach clients
Free consultation
A 30-minute call with a tax attorney to scope your matter, identify deadlines, and decide whether engagement is the right move.
Engagement letter
A written scope, fee structure, and conflict check. Flat fees for administrative resolution; hourly or hybrid for litigation.
Form 2848 and PAR 101
We file the federal Power of Attorney with the IRS Centralized Authorization File and Virginia Form PAR 101 with the Department of Taxation, then step in as the contact of record for both agencies.
Transcript and CSED analysis
We pull IRS account transcripts via Form 8821, calculate each year's CSED under IRC § 6502, account for SCRA tolling for Navy clients, and identify other tolling events.
Strategy memo
A written summary: the resolution path (OIC, IA, CNC, audit response, CDP, Tax Court petition), the timeline, the realistic outcome range, and the federal/Virginia coordination if applicable.
Filing and negotiation
We file the operative document — Form 656, Form 433-A(OIC), Form 9423, Form 12153, Tax Court Petition, Va. § 58.1-1821 administrative appeal — and handle every IRS and Virginia Tax contact directly through the secure portal.
Compliance monitoring
After resolution we monitor compliance through the OIC five-year terms or the IA term, file future returns, and prevent default that would reinstate the original balance.
Two collection clocks: federal CSED and Virginia state limitations
The IRS has ten years from the date of assessment to collect a federal tax under IRC § 6502. After the Collection Statute Expiration Date, the debt is extinguished by operation of law. The clock pauses (“tolls”) when an Offer in Compromise is pending, when a Collection Due Process petition is filed, during bankruptcy, when an installment agreement is requested, when the taxpayer is outside the United States for six months or more, and — for active-duty Navy personnel — during the period of service plus 180 days under SCRA, 50 U.S.C. § 3991.
Virginia's parallel limitation periods are different. Under Va. Code § 58.1-1802.1, the Department of Taxation generally has seven years from the date of assessment to collect, with extensions for waivers, bankruptcy, and active military service. Va. Code § 58.1-1812 caps the assessment period for unfiled or fraudulent returns; Va. Code § 58.1-104 sets the standard three-year statute on filed returns. The interplay of two limitation periods on overlapping years is the calculation we run on every Virginia Beach engagement with both federal and Commonwealth exposure.
Virginia Beach tax authorities and venues
A working knowledge of the tribunals, agencies, and field offices serving Virginia Beach is what separates an answered Notice from a wage levy. Below is the working list our firm uses on every Virginia Beach matter. Virginia Beach is an independent city — one of 38 in the Commonwealth — with no overlapping county government, so the city and the local taxing authority are one and the same.
Internal Revenue Service — Norfolk TAC
The federal tax authority, at irs.gov. The closest Taxpayer Assistance Center to Virginia Beach is in Norfolk at 200 Granby Street, Suite 605, Norfolk, VA 23510, approximately 10 miles west of the Virginia Beach Oceanfront. Appointments are required and can be scheduled through the IRS office locator or 844-545-5640.
U.S. Tax Court — Norfolk trial sessions
The United States Tax Court calendars Hampton Roads cases for trial in Norfolk at the Walter E. Hoffman U.S. Courthouse, 600 Granby Street, Norfolk, VA 23510. There is no permanent Tax Court session in Virginia Beach proper; petitioners across South Hampton Roads typically designate Norfolk as the preferred place of trial under Tax Court Rule 140. Richmond is the other Virginia trial location.
Virginia Department of Taxation
The Virginia state revenue authority, at tax.virginia.gov. The Department administers Virginia personal income tax under Va. Code § 58.1-320 (top rate 5.75%), corporate income tax under § 58.1-400 (6%), sales-and-use tax under Title 58.1 Chapter 6, and the Pass-Through Entity Tax under § 58.1-390.3. Headquartered at 1957 Westmoreland Street, Richmond, VA 23230. A Hampton Roads district office serves Virginia Beach taxpayers; remote handling via Form PAR 101 is the default for our engagements.
Virginia Office of Tax Commissioner appeals
Administrative appeals of Virginia tax assessments are filed with the Tax Commissioner within 90 days under Va. Code § 58.1-1821. The Commissioner issues a written final determination through Public Documents and Rulings. Judicial review proceeds in a Virginia Circuit Court — for Virginia Beach taxpayers, the Virginia Beach Circuit Court — under Va. Code § 58.1-1825.
IRS Independent Office of Appeals
The administrative-appeals body within the IRS that resolves cases without litigation. Hampton Roads cases route through the Appeals offices serving the mid-Atlantic region. Filings: Form 9423 (collection appeal) and Form 12153 (CDP). Page: irs.gov/appeals.
U.S. District Court — Eastern District of Virginia, Norfolk Division
Refund suits filed after payment of tax and exhaustion of administrative remedies under IRC § 7422 may be brought in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, Norfolk Division, at the Walter E. Hoffman U.S. Courthouse, 600 Granby Street, Norfolk, VA 23510 — or in the U.S. Court of Federal Claims. The Eastern District also handles federal-tax criminal matters originating in Virginia Beach.
Virginia Beach Treasurer and Commissioner of the Revenue
The Virginia Beach Treasurer at 2401 Courthouse Drive, Building 1, Room 110, Virginia Beach, VA 23456 collects local property taxes, business-license tax, and personal-property tax. The Commissioner of the Revenue at Building 1, Room 162 performs the assessor function and administers business license (BPOL) tax under Va. Code § 58.1-3700 et seq. and tangible personal property tax under § 58.1-3500 et seq.
Taxpayer Advocate Service — Richmond
An independent organization within the IRS that helps when normal channels stall. The Richmond TAS office serves Virginia. Page: taxpayeradvocate.irs.gov. Form 911 starts the case.
Speak with a tax attorney about your Virginia Beach matter
Free consultation, attorney-client privileged under IRC § 7525, no obligation. If a Notice of Deficiency, Final Notice of Intent to Levy, or Virginia Department of Taxation assessment is in front of you, the deadline to respond is real and short — call today. Bring your most recent IRS notice, your last filed return, and any Virginia Tax correspondence to the consultation.
Frequently asked questions — Virginia Beach tax
Does Virginia have a state income tax?
Yes. Virginia operates a graduated personal income tax under Va. Code § 58.1-320 with brackets from 2% to a top rate of 5.75% on taxable income above $17,000. The Commonwealth also levies a flat 6% corporate income tax under Va. Code § 58.1-400, a 4.3% state sales-and-use tax that combines with a 1% Virginia Beach local option and a 0.7% Hampton Roads regional transportation rate for a 6% combined sales-tax rate, and a 5.75% withholding rate on employer payroll. The Virginia Department of Taxation administers all state-level taxes for Virginia Beach residents and businesses. There is no Virginia state estate tax — only federal estate-tax exposure under IRC § 2001.
Where is the closest U.S. Tax Court trial location to Virginia Beach?
Norfolk, 12 miles west of the Virginia Beach Oceanfront. The U.S. Tax Court calendars Hampton Roads cases at the Walter E. Hoffman U.S. Courthouse, 600 Granby Street, Norfolk, VA 23510. There is no permanent Tax Court session in Virginia Beach itself. A petitioner designates the preferred place of trial on the Tax Court petition under Tax Court Rule 140; Virginia Beach-resident taxpayers typically designate Norfolk based on proximity. Richmond is the other Virginia trial location, about 100 miles northwest.
What is the federal Collection Statute Expiration Date?
The IRS has ten years from the date of assessment to collect a federal tax under IRC § 6502. After that date, the debt is extinguished by operation of law. The clock pauses (tolls) during a pending Offer in Compromise, a Collection Due Process appeal, bankruptcy, a requested installment agreement, periods the taxpayer is outside the United States for six months or more, and — for active-duty Naval Air Station Oceana, Joint Expeditionary Base Little Creek, and Dam Neck Annex service members — during the period of service plus 180 days under the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act at 50 U.S.C. § 3991. Pulling account transcripts and calculating the exact CSED on each assessed year is the first analytical step on any Virginia Beach collection case.
Why is Virginia Beach called an independent city rather than part of a county?
Virginia is one of three states (with Maryland having Baltimore City, and Missouri having St. Louis City) where certain cities are legally independent of any county. Virginia has 38 independent cities, the most of any state. Virginia Beach is the largest by population. An independent city has no county government overlaid on it — the city itself collects local property tax through the Virginia Beach Treasurer, performs assessments through the Commissioner of the Revenue, records deeds and Notices of Federal Tax Lien at the Virginia Beach Circuit Court Clerk, and runs its own school division. For tax-attorney work, this means there is no separate “county” lien recordation office to check — the Virginia Beach Circuit Court Clerk is the single recorder of record.
Can I be audited by both the IRS and the Virginia Department of Taxation for the same period?
Yes. The IRS examines federal income tax, federal employment tax, and federal excise tax. The Virginia Department of Taxation examines Virginia personal income tax, corporate income tax, sales-and-use tax, pass-through entity tax, and employer withholding. A Virginia Beach taxpayer can simultaneously face an IRS Schedule C audit and a Virginia adjustment that follows automatically from the federal change. Information-sharing agreements between IRS and the Department of Taxation mean a federal CP2000 or Notice of Deficiency typically triggers a corresponding Virginia adjustment within 90 to 180 days. We run both tracks in parallel from intake.
Does Virginia have an Offer in Compromise program?
Yes. The Virginia Department of Taxation may compromise state tax liabilities under Va. Code § 58.1-105 on grounds of doubt as to liability, doubt as to collectibility, or where collection of the full amount would be inequitable. The state OIC is filed on Form OIC B-3 (business) or OIC I-3 (individual) along with a full financial-disclosure package. The state program is narrower than the IRS OIC under IRC § 7122 and tends to focus on doubt-as-to-liability cases more than collectibility cases. For most Virginia Beach engagements, the federal Offer carries the bigger dollar exposure; the state Offer follows on the same financial-disclosure backbone.
Can a California-Bar-admitted attorney represent me in Virginia Beach?
For federal IRS matters — yes. Federal tax practice is governed by Treasury under 31 CFR Part 10 (Circular 230); the IRS accepts Form 2848 Power of Attorney from any attorney in good standing with any state bar. The U.S. Tax Court is a single federal court with nationwide jurisdiction; an attorney admitted to that court may represent a taxpayer at any Tax Court trial location, including the Norfolk session that serves Virginia Beach. For Virginia Department of Taxation administrative work, we file Form PAR 101 and handle the matter remotely. For Virginia state-court litigation — a Virginia Beach Circuit Court judicial-review action under Va. Code § 58.1-1825, for instance — we associate with locally admitted Virginia counsel. The bulk of Virginia Beach engagements never reach state court.
I am active-duty Navy at Oceana, Little Creek, or Dam Neck. What special tax rules apply?
Several layers stack. IRC § 112 excludes combat-zone pay from gross income for service members deployed to designated combat zones, including Red Sea, Persian Gulf, and Afghanistan zones recurrent across F/A-18, F-35C, and East Coast SEAL deployment cycles. IRC § 7508 extends federal filing and payment deadlines during combat-zone service plus 180 days and automatically abates failure-to-file and failure-to-pay penalties. The Servicemembers Civil Relief Act (SCRA) at 50 U.S.C. § 3991 tolls IRS collection limitation periods during military service. The Military Spouses Residency Relief Act (MSRRA), as amended by the 2018 Veterans Benefits and Transition Act, allows the spouse of an active-duty member stationed in Virginia to retain the member's domicile or the spouse's own original domicile, avoiding Virginia income-tax assessment if a non-Virginia state of residence is properly elected on Form 763-S. Audit and CP2000 issues on military pay coding are routine engagements.
I am a Filipino-American Navy family member with bank accounts in the Philippines. What FBAR obligations apply?
If the aggregate value of all your foreign financial accounts exceeded $10,000 at any point during the calendar year, FinCEN Form 114 (FBAR) is required under 31 U.S.C. § 5314. Virginia Beach hosts one of the largest concentrations of Filipino-American Navy families in the United States, tracing back to Filipino enlistment in the U.S. Navy — first as stewards' mates, later across the full service. Joint accounts in Manila, Cebu, Iloilo, Davao, and Bacolod are common. FBAR penalties for non-willful violations are capped at $10,000 per violation (adjusted for inflation); willful violations under 31 U.S.C. § 5321(a)(5) reach the greater of $100,000 or 50% of the account balance, per year. The IRS Streamlined Filing Compliance Procedures provide a non-willful disclosure path for taxpayers who file three years of amended returns, six years of FBARs, and a sworn statement of non-willfulness. Streamlined Domestic and Streamlined Foreign tracks differ on residency.
What is the Virginia Pass-Through Entity Tax (PTET) and should my Virginia Beach business elect it?
Va. Code § 58.1-390.3 lets a qualifying pass-through entity (S-corp, LLC taxed as partnership, partnership) elect to pay Virginia income tax at the entity level rather than at the owner level. The election sidesteps the federal $10,000 SALT cap under IRC § 164(b)(6) by converting what would be a non-deductible owner-level state-tax payment into a deductible entity-level expense. For a Virginia Beach S-corp owner paying $30,000 in Virginia tax, the election can produce roughly $7,000 to $10,000 in federal tax savings annually depending on bracket. The election is made on Form 502PTET and is annual — missed deadlines or defective elections produce refile and amended-return work. Whether the election makes sense depends on owner composition, basis posture, and SALT-cap interaction; we run the math case-by-case.
I own a Sandbridge short-term rental. What federal and Virginia tax issues should I plan for?
Several layers. First, the IRC § 280A 14-day personal-use rule determines whether the property is a dwelling unit used as a residence; the average rental period (under or over 7 days) determines whether activity is reported on Schedule E (rental) or Schedule C (trade or business, subject to self-employment tax). Second, IRC § 469 passive-activity rules and the short-term-rental loophole (under 7-day average rental with material participation) determine whether losses can offset W-2 income. Third, Airbnb and VRBO issue Form 1099-K; CP2000 mismatches arise when gross bookings are not netted against cleaning fees and management commissions. Fourth, Virginia imposes a 4.3% state sales tax plus the local 1% plus 0.7% regional plus city transient-occupancy tax on short-term lodging; compliance runs through the Virginia Tax sales-tax registration and Virginia Beach treasurer. We coordinate the federal and Virginia compliance from a single intake.
Can the IRS levy my Virginia Beach bank account or wages?
Yes — after a Final Notice of Intent to Levy (CP90 or LT11) and expiration of the 30-day Collection Due Process window under IRC § 6330, the IRS may levy bank accounts at Navy Federal Credit Union, Towne Bank, Atlantic Union Bank, Wells Fargo, JPMorgan Chase, or any Virginia Beach-licensed institution, and serve wage levies on Sentara, Bon Secours, Children's Hospital of The King's Daughters, the City of Virginia Beach, Regent University, and other Hampton Roads employers. For active-duty Navy clients, DFAS Cleveland processes military-pay levies through its own coordination layer. A timely Form 12153 CDP request halts collection while the case is reviewed by the IRS Independent Office of Appeals. After a CDP determination, the taxpayer has 30 days to petition the U.S. Tax Court under IRC § 6330(d)(1). SCRA stay-of-collection protections apply to active-duty service members.
How long does a federal Offer in Compromise take to process?
A federal IRS Offer in Compromise typically takes six to twelve months from filing to a final decision. The IRS deems an Offer accepted if not rejected within 24 months under IRC § 7122(f). While the OIC is pending, IRC § 6331(k) bars most levies, and the CSED is tolled. Rejected offers carry a 30-day Appeals window. A well-documented Offer with a complete Form 433-A(OIC) or 433-B(OIC) financial package moves faster than one returned for incompleteness; the firm's Virginia Beach Offer files run through standardized intake to minimize Returned-as-Incomplete kickbacks. A parallel Virginia Form OIC B-3 or OIC I-3 typically resolves on a similar timeline.
What is the federal Trust Fund Recovery Penalty and who is at risk in Virginia Beach?
The Trust Fund Recovery Penalty under IRC § 6672 imposes 100% personal liability on responsible persons — officers, directors, partners, check-signers, payroll managers — for the trust-fund portion (withheld income tax and employee FICA) of unpaid Form 941 employment taxes. Virginia Beach restaurants on Atlantic Avenue and at Town Center, construction firms working Sandbridge and Pungo, Oceanfront hospitality LLCs, and contractor-services firms supporting the Navy bases are the most common targets. The IRS uses Form 4180 interviews to identify responsible persons. Virginia parallels this through Va. Code § 58.1-1813 officer liability for unpaid withholding and trust-fund sales tax. Defense centers on lack of willfulness, lack of authority over the funds, and lack of knowledge of the unpaid trust-fund balance.
Will hiring a tax attorney stop IRS and Virginia Tax collection immediately?
Once Form 2848 is on file with the IRS, the agency routes all communication through the attorney and stops contacting the taxpayer directly. Form PAR 101 produces the same redirection at the Virginia Department of Taxation. Active levies are not automatically lifted by POA filing alone — release requires either a financial showing under IRC § 6343, a CDP filing under IRC § 6330, or an installment agreement or OIC submission that triggers the IRC § 6331(k) collection bar. We move on those concurrently when a levy is in place. For active-duty Oceana, Little Creek, or Dam Neck clients, SCRA stay-of-collection rights add another layer. Virginia state collection follows a separate § 58.1-1802.1 limitation track requiring its own analysis and submissions.
About the author
This page was written and reviewed by Parham Khorsandi, Esq., Managing Attorney of Victory Tax Lawyers, LLP. Cal Bar #266658. Admitted to practice before the United States Tax Court. Mr. Khorsandi has resolved over 2,000 federal tax matters and secured more than $100 million in tax relief for clients across all 50 states, including a Hampton Roads case load that includes Naval Air Station Oceana aircrew, Joint Expeditionary Base Little Creek and Dam Neck Special Warfare personnel, Filipino-American Navy families, Sentara and Bon Secours 1099 physicians, and Sandbridge short-term-rental owners.
Page last reviewed: . Editorial standard: every federal-statute citation links to law.cornell.edu (Legal Information Institute, Cornell Law School). Every Virginia statute citation links to law.lis.virginia.gov. Every administrative authority links to its primary .gov source. Material changes to the law are reflected within 30 days of effective date.
Attorney Advertising. This page is provided by Victory Tax Lawyers, LLP for general informational purposes only. Nothing on this page constitutes legal advice, creates an attorney-client relationship, or substitutes for consultation with a licensed attorney about your specific tax matter. Prior results described or referenced do not guarantee a similar outcome. Each tax case turns on its individual facts, applicable law, and the discretion of the Internal Revenue Service, the Virginia Department of Taxation, the U.S. Tax Court, the Virginia Office of Tax Commissioner, or other adjudicating body.
Victory Tax Lawyers, LLP is California-Bar-admitted with its principal office at 1100 S. Robertson Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90035. The firm represents clients in federal tax matters nationwide via Form 2848 Power of Attorney and admission to the United States Tax Court. The firm is not admitted to practice in the courts of the Commonwealth of Virginia; where a Virginia state-court appearance is required, the firm associates with locally admitted counsel. Virginia Department of Taxation administrative matters are handled remotely via Form PAR 101.
IRS Circular 230 Disclosure: The discussion of U.S. federal tax issues on this page is not intended or written to be used, and cannot be used, for the purpose of avoiding penalties imposed under the Internal Revenue Code or for promoting, marketing, or recommending to another party any tax-related matters addressed. For specific tax advice, consult independent tax counsel.
Related practice areas
Offer in Compromise
IRC § 7122 settlements
Installment Agreement
IRC § 6159 payment plans
Tax Lien Help
NFTL release and discharge
Tax Levy Defense
IRC § 6343 release
Audit Representation
IRS examinations
Penalty Abatement
IRC § 6651 relief
Back Taxes
Unfiled-return resolution
Virginia Tax Attorney
Statewide hub
Authorities cited on this page
- 26 U.S.C. § 7122 — Federal Offer in Compromise
- 26 U.S.C. § 6159 — Installment Agreements
- 26 U.S.C. § 6321 — Federal Tax Lien
- 26 U.S.C. § 6325 — Lien Release and Discharge
- 26 U.S.C. § 6331 — Levy and Distraint
- 26 U.S.C. § 6343 — Release of Levy
- 26 U.S.C. § 6502 — Collection Statute Expiration
- 26 U.S.C. § 6213 — Tax Court Petition Window
- 26 U.S.C. § 6320 — CDP for Liens
- 26 U.S.C. § 6330 — CDP for Levies
- 26 U.S.C. § 6651 — Failure-to-File and Failure-to-Pay
- 26 U.S.C. § 6672 — Trust Fund Recovery Penalty
- 26 U.S.C. § 6015 — Innocent Spouse Relief
- 26 U.S.C. § 112 — Combat-Zone Pay Exclusion
- 26 U.S.C. § 7508 — Combat-Zone Deadline Postponement
- 26 U.S.C. § 7508A — Disaster Deadline Postponement
- 26 U.S.C. § 165 — Casualty Losses
- 26 U.S.C. § 1033 — Involuntary Conversions
- 26 U.S.C. § 280A — Dwelling Unit Rules (STR)
- 26 U.S.C. § 7345 — Passport Revocation
- 26 U.S.C. § 164(b)(6) — Federal SALT Cap
- Va. Code § 58.1-320 — Virginia Personal Income Tax (top 5.75%)
- Va. Code § 58.1-400 — Virginia Corporate Income Tax (6%)
- Va. Code § 58.1-390.3 — Virginia Pass-Through Entity Tax (PTET)
- Va. Code § 58.1-1821 — Administrative Appeal to Tax Commissioner
- Va. Code § 58.1-1825 — Circuit Court Judicial Review
- Va. Code § 58.1-1813 — Officer Liability for Trust-Fund Taxes
- Va. Code § 58.1-105 — Virginia OIC Authority