Tax Attorney in Worcester, MA
Federal IRS representation for Worcester individuals and businesses — audits, back taxes, liens, levies, payroll-tax disputes, and U.S. Tax Court litigation. The Tax Court trial city for Central Massachusetts taxpayers is Boston (the John W. McCormack Post Office and Courthouse, 5 Post Office Square), 45 miles east of Worcester. We also coordinate Massachusetts Department of Revenue matters under Form M-2848 Power of Attorney where they sit alongside a federal case.
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If you owe back taxes in Worcester, here is the 2026 picture
Massachusetts pairs a flat 5% personal income tax rate (M.G.L. Ch 62 § 4(b)) with a 4% surcharge on taxable income above $1 million per filer — the Fair Share Amendment, M.G.L. Ch 62 § 4(d), passed by ballot in 2022 and effective tax year 2023. The combined top state rate for a Worcester earner crossing the $1 million mark is 9% on each dollar above the threshold. Stack that on the 37% federal top rate and a Worcester Polytechnic Institute spinout founder cashing a §1202-eligible Qualified Small Business Stock event, a UMass Memorial attending physician with concentrated 1099 royalty income, or a Hanover Insurance vice-president vesting deferred stock can face an effective marginal rate close to 46%. The Massachusetts estate tax sets the exemption at just $2 million per estate under M.G.L. Ch 65C — far below the $13.61 million federal exemption — making Massachusetts one of seventeen states (plus the District of Columbia) that still imposes a state-level estate tax.
If you have received an IRS CP504, LT11, or Statutory Notice of Deficiency, or if the Massachusetts Department of Revenue has issued a Notice of Assessment with proposed tax, penalty, and interest, the deadline to act is short. We pull your IRS account transcripts, calculate your CSED, file Form 2848 Power of Attorney with the IRS and Form M-2848 with the MA DOR, and put administrative brakes on collection while the case is built.
Federal tax representation for Worcester taxpayers
Victory Tax Lawyers, LLP is a California-Bar-admitted tax-resolution law firm based 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 tribunal with jurisdiction over IRS deficiency cases — holds regular trial sessions in Boston, the closest Tax Court trial city to Worcester at roughly 45 miles east via the Massachusetts Turnpike. Boston serves as the primary U.S. Tax Court trial location for all of Central and Eastern Massachusetts. From our Robertson Boulevard office in Los Angeles, we represent Worcester residents and Central Massachusetts 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.
For Massachusetts state tax matters — the flat 5% personal income tax under M.G.L. Ch 62 § 4(b), the 4% Millionaires Tax surcharge on income above $1 million under M.G.L. Ch 62 § 4(d), the 8% corporate excise tax under M.G.L. Ch 63 § 39, the 6.25% state sales-and-use tax, withholding-tax assessments, or contested matters headed to the Massachusetts Appellate Tax Board — we file Form M-2848 with the Department of Revenue and handle the administrative track directly. For formal litigation before the Massachusetts Appellate Tax Board (the state's specialized administrative tax tribunal, established 1930 under M.G.L. Ch 58A, seated at 100 Cambridge Street, 2nd Floor, Boston) or in the Worcester Superior Court Tax Track, we refer to locally admitted Massachusetts counsel under a co-counsel arrangement. The federal layer is where most Worcester biotech-founder, academic-medical, and equity-compensation cases live, and that is where our engagement carries the load.
Worcester is the second-largest city in New England by population and the academic and medical anchor of Central Massachusetts. The local tax-resolution footprint is shaped by a tight cluster of higher-education and health-system employers and a small but dense band of long-running manufacturing firms. Worcester Polytechnic Institute (WPI) — one of the oldest engineering universities in the United States, with a top US robotics, mechanical engineering, and computer-science program — produces a steady stream of §1202 Qualified Small Business Stock candidates as faculty and student spinouts commercialize robotics, materials-science, and bioengineering research. UMass Memorial Health (anchored by UMass Memorial Medical Center plus Saint Vincent Hospital) and the academic faculty of UMass Chan Medical School pair a high-1099-physician population with §174 R&D capitalization, clinical-trial royalty income, and concentrated biotech RSU positions. The College of the Holy Cross (Jesuit), Clark University, Worcester State University, Assumption University, and Anna Maria College add academic and clergy-housing §107 cases. Polar Beverages (in Worcester since 1882), Table Talk Pies, Hanover Insurance Group (Worcester headquarters), Regal Beloit, and Saint-Gobain Abrasives (the former Norton Company) round out the corporate-W-2 and RSU base. Worcester is also a major Catholic Charities refugee-resettlement city for Massachusetts, with substantial Albanian-American, Cape Verdean, Vietnamese, Brazilian, Puerto Rican, Polish-American, and Burmese populations who present recurring FBAR, ITIN, and Streamlined Filing Compliance Procedures engagements. The federal procedures are uniform; the facts are Worcester-specific.
Your tax rights as a Worcester taxpayer
Two parallel rights frameworks apply when you owe tax. Federal rights come from the Internal Revenue Code and IRS Publication 1, the Taxpayer Bill of Rights. State rights come from the Massachusetts General Laws, the Department of Revenue's published Taxpayer Bill of Rights, and the procedural rules of the Massachusetts Appellate Tax Board. Knowing both is the difference between a clean resolution and a missed 60-day Appellate Tax Board petition window that locks in a state assessment against your West Side, Worcester Heights, Tatnuck, or Burncoat property.
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, the IRS must deal with us first, not you. Massachusetts mirrors this through Form M-2848 Power of Attorney, accepted for all Department of Revenue matters.
Right to U.S. 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 tax first. Miss the 90 days and the federal assessment becomes final. The closest Tax Court trial city to Worcester is Boston, 45 miles east, at the John W. McCormack Post Office and Courthouse, 5 Post Office Square — the primary New England trial location.
Right to Appellate Tax Board review
M.G.L. Ch 58A § 7 gives you 60 days from a final DOR Notice of Assessment to file a petition with the Massachusetts Appellate Tax Board — the state's specialized tax tribunal at 100 Cambridge Street, 2nd Floor, Boston. The 60-day window is tighter than the federal 90-day Tax Court deadline. Missing it forfeits the right to pre-payment review of the state assessment.
Collection Due Process
IRC § 6320 (lien) and IRC § 6330 (levy) give you a 30-day window to request a CDP hearing once the IRS files a Notice of Federal Tax Lien or issues a Final Notice of Intent to Levy. A timely CDP filing halts collection and preserves judicial review through the U.S. Tax Court.
Right to settle for less than owed
Federally, IRC § 7122 authorizes Offers in Compromise based on doubt as to liability, doubt as to collectibility, or effective tax administration. Massachusetts runs a parallel Offer in Final Settlement program under M.G.L. Ch 62C § 37A administered by the DOR, with similar hardship and insolvency standards. Both programs require all returns filed and current-year compliance before consideration.
Right to recover fees
IRC § 7430 allows recovery of administrative and litigation costs if the IRS takes a position that is not substantially justified and the taxpayer prevails. The threshold is high, but real, especially in audit reconsideration and Innocent Spouse cases under IRC § 6015.
How Victory Tax Lawyers helps Worcester 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, and negotiate doubt-as-to-collectibility offers when full collection is not feasible within the remaining CSED. For Worcester taxpayers carrying a parallel Massachusetts liability, we run a separate Offer in Final Settlement filing with the DOR under M.G.L. Ch 62C § 37A on the same financial showing, coordinating the two programs so an accepted federal Offer does not break a pending state offer or vice versa.
Installment Agreements under IRC § 6159
Streamlined IAs (under $50,000), partial-pay IAs under IRC § 6159(d), and full-pay agreements. We push for partial-pay structures where the IRC § 6502 ten-year CSED will extinguish the balance before payoff — an underused resolution path for Worcester taxpayers carrying between $50,000 and $250,000 in federal debt, particularly WPI faculty and UMass Memorial physicians whose §83(b) elections or biotech vesting caught up with them.
Lien discharge, subordination, and withdrawal
When a Notice of Federal Tax Lien blocks a Worcester property sale or refinance, we file Form 14135 (discharge), Form 14134 (subordination), or Form 12277 (withdrawal). NFTLs filed with the Worcester District Registry of Deeds (Worcester County retains its registries of deeds even though county government was dissolved) encumber title on West Side, Tatnuck, Burncoat, Worcester Heights, Salisbury Street, and Lake Quinsigamond properties; the IRS procedures under IRC § 6325 set the cure path. Timing must align with the closing date.
Levy release under IRC § 6343
Wage levies, bank levies, and accounts-receivable levies. 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 Appeals. Massachusetts state tax liens follow a parallel track under M.G.L. Ch 62C § 50 and are recorded in the Registry of Deeds for the county where the taxpayer holds real property — for Worcester properties, that is the Worcester District Registry of Deeds.
Audit defense and U.S. Tax Court litigation
Correspondence audits, office audits, and field examinations — including sensitive issues like cryptocurrency, foreign accounts under FinCEN Form 114 (FBAR), S-corporation reasonable-compensation, §83(b) election validity, §1202 Qualified Small Business Stock claims for WPI and UMass Chan biotech spinout founders, §174 R&D capitalization timing, and §117(c) post-doctoral fellowship characterization. If the audit closes unfavorably, we petition the U.S. Tax Court within the 90-day IRC § 6213(a) window. Trial sessions for Worcester petitioners are held at the McCormack Courthouse in Boston, 45 miles east.
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. On accuracy-related penalties under IRC § 6662, we document substantial authority or adequate disclosure to defeat the assessment. Massachusetts penalties under M.G.L. Ch 62C § 33 (failure to file) and § 35A (substantial understatement) follow a separate reasonable-cause analysis applied by the DOR and reviewable by the Appellate Tax Board.
Twelve types of Worcester tax matters we handle
Federal cases for Worcester residents and businesses, framed against the Massachusetts DOR overlay where it matters.
WPI robotics and biotech spinout §1202 QSBS
Worcester Polytechnic Institute faculty and graduate-student spinouts in robotics, mechanical engineering, materials science, and bioengineering routinely receive founder shares in early-stage C-corporations. IRC § 1202 excludes from federal gross income up to the greater of $10 million or 10x basis on the sale of qualified small business stock held for more than five years from original issuance, when the corporation had under $50 million in gross assets at issuance and engaged in a qualified active trade or business. Documenting the issuance date, original asset test, and basis on Day One is the single most valuable file a WPI founder can keep. Massachusetts conforms to IRC § 1202 in part under M.G.L. Ch 62 § 2(a)(1).
UMass Memorial and UMass Chan academic-medical income
UMass Memorial Medical Center, Saint Vincent Hospital, the Saint Vincent Cancer and Wellness Center, and the academic faculty of UMass Chan Medical School produce a population of attending physicians, post-doctoral researchers, and principal investigators with W-2 base pay, 1099 consulting income, clinical-trial royalty payments, and intellectual-property royalty streams. IRC § 174 R&D capitalization (post-TCJA) hits faculty-PI grant arrangements; §117(c) characterizes post-doctoral fellowship pay as taxable services compensation, not a tax-free scholarship, surprising international post-docs every April.
Massachusetts Millionaires Tax exposure
M.G.L. Ch 62 § 4(d), effective tax year 2023, adds a 4% surcharge on Massachusetts taxable income above $1 million per filer. Hanover Insurance vice-presidents, UMass Memorial department chairs, Polar Beverages senior executives, Holy Cross trustees with private-equity carry, Saint-Gobain Abrasives global leaders, and WPI spinout founders all cross the threshold in a bonus, exit, or liquidity year. Estimated-tax planning under IRC § 6654 and the Massachusetts parallel under M.G.L. Ch 62B § 14 becomes a structured engagement, not a checkbox.
Trust Fund Recovery Penalty
IRC § 6672 imposes personal liability on officers, partners, and check-signers for unpaid employment-tax withholding. Worcester restaurant owners along Shrewsbury Street and Park Avenue, Wormtown Brewery and Greater Good Imperial Brewing operators, construction companies on the booming Worcester Red Sox / Polar Park redevelopment corridor, and biotech-startup founders are common targets. The IRS uses Form 4180 interviews to identify responsible persons; Massachusetts applies a parallel responsible-person rule to withheld state income tax under M.G.L. Ch 62C § 31A.
Massachusetts estate tax
The Massachusetts estate-tax exemption sits at $2 million per estate under M.G.L. Ch 65C — far below the $13.61 million federal exemption for 2024 returns. Massachusetts is one of seventeen states plus the District of Columbia that still imposes a state-level estate tax, with rates running up to 16% on the portion above the exemption. A West Side or Salisbury Street Victorian, a Tatnuck or Worcester Heights single-family, a Cape Cod second home, and a UMass or Hanover 401(k) can cross the $2 million threshold without anyone in the family realizing a state filing is required. Form M-706 is due nine months from death.
Notice of Federal Tax Lien
NFTLs filed with the Worcester District Registry of Deeds encumber title and trigger CDP rights under IRC § 6320. A parallel Massachusetts state tax lien may be recorded under M.G.L. Ch 62C § 50 in the same Registry. West Side, Tatnuck, Burncoat, Worcester Heights, Salisbury Street, Highland Street, Lake Quinsigamond, and Shrewsbury closings stall fast when an NFTL hits the title search. Although Worcester County government was effectively abolished by Massachusetts in 1998 and dissolved fully by 2017, the Worcester District Registry of Deeds continues to operate as a recording office under the Secretary of the Commonwealth.
IRS bank or wage levy
Bank levies on accounts held at bankHometown, Cornerstone Bank, Webster Five, Country Bank, Fidelity Bank, Bay State Savings, or any Massachusetts-chartered Worcester-area institution. Wage levies hit Worcester employers within days of CP90 or LT11 issuance — UMass Memorial Health, Saint Vincent Hospital, WPI, College of the Holy Cross, Clark University, Hanover Insurance Group, Polar Beverages, Table Talk Pies, Saint-Gobain Abrasives, and Regal Beloit are all routine targets.
Passport revocation under IRC § 7345
A seriously delinquent tax debt (over $62,000 for 2025, indexed annually) triggers State Department certification and passport hold. Worcester's Albanian-American, Cape Verdean, Brazilian-American, Vietnamese, Puerto Rican, and Polish-American populations, combined with UMass Chan international researchers and WPI globally collaborating engineers, make passport certification a real-world hit on Worcester families. We file the IRC § 7345(e) action to reverse the certification.
FBAR, FATCA, and Streamlined Filing
FinCEN Form 114 for foreign accounts over $10,000 aggregate. Worcester holds one of the largest Albanian-American populations in the United States on a per-capita basis, plus substantial Cape Verdean (Main South), Vietnamese (Park Avenue, Vernon Hill), Brazilian (Lincoln Street, Greendale), Puerto Rican, Polish-American, and Burmese refugee communities. FBAR exposure on Albanian, Brazilian, Cape Verdean, Vietnamese, and Myanmar accounts inherited from family or maintained for cross-border business is routine. The IRS Streamlined Filing Compliance Procedures (Streamlined Domestic Offshore and Streamlined Foreign Offshore) are a frequent engagement.
Clergy housing under IRC § 107
Worcester is a heavy clergy-housing-allowance city: the Roman Catholic Diocese of Worcester, the Jesuit College of the Holy Cross faculty and chaplains, Assumption University (Augustinians of the Assumption), Anna Maria College (Sisters of Saint Anne), and a deep bench of Protestant, Greek Orthodox, Albanian Orthodox, and evangelical congregations. IRC § 107 excludes a properly designated parsonage allowance from federal gross income; the designation must be in writing and prospective. Errors on the designation date or amount cause assessments under IRC § 61. Massachusetts conforms to the federal §107 exclusion.
Tri-state commuter income allocation
Worcester sits at the geographic center of the Massachusetts-Connecticut-Rhode Island-New York commute belt — 45 miles to Boston, 50 miles to Providence, 65 miles to Hartford, and within reach of New York commuting for partial-week roles. Multi-state W-2 allocation, telecommuter sourcing rules, MA-CT and MA-RI reciprocity (Massachusetts has no full reciprocity with neighbors — resident credits under M.G.L. Ch 62 § 6(a) handle the overlap), and audit risk on the "convenience of the employer" New York rule for hybrid Worcester-to-NYC workers all produce assessments.
Cryptocurrency tax assessments
CP2000 notices on unreported digital-asset gains, basis-tracking failures, and DeFi-protocol income. Worcester's WPI computer-science and robotics population, plus the Clark University and UMass Chan technical bench, picked up substantial crypto exposure through 2021-2024. Form 1099-DA reporting (effective 2025) drives the matching cases. Massachusetts treats virtual-currency gains as ordinary income subject to the 5% flat rate, with the 4% Millionaires Tax surcharge applying once total taxable income crosses $1 million.
Nine common causes of tax debt for Worcester taxpayers
Patterns we see repeatedly in Worcester-based engagements. None of them are unusual — all of them are resolvable.
1. Underwithheld RSU and ISO vest events
A Hanover Insurance, Polar Beverages, Saint-Gobain Abrasives, Regal Beloit, or WPI-spinout employee at the 35% or 37% federal marginal bracket sees only 22% supplemental withholding on RSU vests. The shortfall, plus 5% Massachusetts and the 4% Millionaires Tax surcharge once total income clears $1 million, produces a five- or six-figure balance due the following April.
2. Self-employment underpayment
UMass Memorial attending physicians with private 1099 practices, WPI and Holy Cross consultants on federal grants, Saint Vincent Hospital locums physicians, real-estate agents on the Worcester Heights / West Side market, and Shrewsbury Street restaurateurs file Schedule C or K-1 income with no estimated-tax payments. The first IRS CP14 lands the following spring with penalties under IRC § 6654.
3. Business closure
When an LLC, S-corp, or early-stage WPI-spinout closes with unpaid Form 941 payroll-tax balances, IRC § 6672 follows the responsible officer personally — well after the entity is dissolved. Common in the Worcester biotech and robotics startup-failure cycle, where a Series A miss can leave founders with personal trust-fund exposure.
4. 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.
5. Identity theft and fraudulent returns
A return filed in your name with the refund redirected. Form 14039 opens the IRS identity-theft case; the assessment must be corrected, not just protested. Massachusetts has its own DOR identity-theft hotline that runs in parallel.
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.
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. Massachusetts mirrors the federal three-year refund bar under M.G.L. Ch 62C § 36.
8. Real-estate sale without estimated tax
A West Side, Tatnuck, Burncoat, or Worcester Heights sale generating substantial capital gain, with no Form 1040-ES payment, produces a tax bill the next April. Investor flips taxed at ordinary-income rates — not capital-gain — under the dealer-status rules of IRC § 1221. Post-2020 Boston-departing buyers driving up Worcester prices intensify this pattern.
9. Stock-option exercise without planning
ISO disqualifying dispositions and NSO ordinary-income inclusions hit Worcester biotech, robotics, and insurance employees with AMT under IRC § 55 and large balances due. IRC § 83(b) elections missed within the 30-day window create their own irreversible problem — especially costly for WPI spinout founders whose early-grant basis was low and whose §1202 QSBS holding period depends on a valid election.
Eight tax liabilities that pull in Worcester taxpayers
Federal authority alongside the Massachusetts statute where there is a parallel.
Failure to file federal return
IRC § 6651(a)(1) imposes 5% per month, capped at 25%, plus interest under IRC § 6601. The Massachusetts mirror is M.G.L. Ch 62C § 33 imposing a 1% per month late-filing penalty, capped at 25%, on unpaid Massachusetts tax.
Failure to file Massachusetts return
M.G.L. Ch 62C § 33 imposes a 1% per month penalty on the unpaid tax for failure to file, capped at 25%, plus interest under M.G.L. Ch 62C § 32. The DOR may issue a Notice of Assessment triggering the 60-day Appellate Tax Board petition window under M.G.L. Ch 58A § 7. The 4% Millionaires Tax surcharge under M.G.L. Ch 62 § 4(d) is collected on the same return.
Federal § 7122 Offer in Compromise eligibility
All federal returns must be filed (IRC § 7122(d) compliance) and the offer must reflect Reasonable Collection Potential. The non-refundable $205 application fee may be waived for low-income certified offers.
Massachusetts sales-tax delinquency
M.G.L. Ch 64H § 2 sets the 6.25% state sales tax on retail sales of tangible personal property. There is no local-option sales tax stack in Massachusetts — the rate is uniform statewide, simplifying compliance but not exposure. M.G.L. Ch 62C § 31A imposes personal liability on responsible persons for unpaid trust-fund sales tax. The Massachusetts use tax under M.G.L. Ch 64I is aggressively enforced against businesses purchasing equipment out of state — a recurring hit on Worcester manufacturers buying capital equipment from out-of-state vendors.
Trust Fund Recovery Penalty
IRC § 6672 imposes 100% personal liability on responsible persons for unpaid trust-fund employment tax. Massachusetts applies a parallel responsible-person rule to withheld state income tax under M.G.L. Ch 62C § 31A.
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. M.G.L. Ch 62C § 35A imposes a parallel 20% Massachusetts accuracy-related penalty.
Massachusetts estate tax
M.G.L. Ch 65C imposes the Massachusetts estate tax on estates above $2 million per decedent, with a graduated rate scale topping out at 16%. The exemption is one of the lowest in the country — far below the $13.61 million federal exemption — making Massachusetts one of the seventeen estate-tax states plus DC. Form M-706 is filed within nine months of death. Coordination with the federal estate-tax return on Form 706 is its own engagement layer.
Craft-brewery UNICAP and excise
Worcester's craft-brewing tier — Wormtown Brewery, Greater Good Imperial Brewing, Redemption Rock Brewing, and the related taproom and distribution operations — carry IRC § 263A(f) UNICAP exposure on production costs and federal alcohol excise under 27 CFR Part 25. State alcohol excise sits under M.G.L. Ch 138 § 21. A correctly maintained §263A allocation is the difference between a clean audit and a five- or six-figure inventory adjustment.
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 acceptance rate sits around 33% nationally; preparation determines the outcome.
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.
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 with the Worcester District Registry of Deeds.
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 Massachusetts Department of Revenue.
Why Victory Tax Lawyers for a Worcester federal-tax case
Victory Tax Lawyers is California-Bar-admitted, not Massachusetts-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 at any of its trial locations, and Worcester petitioners are assigned to the Boston trial sessions at the John W. McCormack Post Office and Courthouse on Post Office Square, 45 miles east. IRS administrative practice runs on Form 2848 Power of Attorney, accepted from any attorney in good standing with any state bar plus an active Centralized Authorization File number. Most of our Worcester clients never need a separately admitted Massachusetts attorney because the case is, at its core, federal.
For administrative work before the Massachusetts Department of Revenue — protests, audit responses, Offer in Final Settlement submissions under M.G.L. Ch 62C § 37A, and installment-agreement requests — we file DOR Form M-2848 Power of Attorney and handle the matter remotely. When a case must move to the Massachusetts Appellate Tax Board (the state's specialized administrative tribunal, established 1930 under M.G.L. Ch 58A, seated at 100 Cambridge Street, 2nd Floor, Boston) or appeal further to the Massachusetts Appeals Court, we coordinate with locally admitted Massachusetts counsel under a co-counsel arrangement. The federal portion of the engagement, which is usually the bigger exposure given Massachusetts' 9% combined top rate on million-dollar earners and the §1202 QSBS upside for WPI and UMass Chan spinout founders, stays with us.
What distinguishes our 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 Massachusetts-licensed firm — we are not. A factually accurate offer of federal tax representation, available to any Worcester taxpayer, at the same standard we apply to a Los Angeles client. Our 100% remote workflow runs through a secure document portal — you never have to travel to Robertson Boulevard or even to Boston.
Our seven-step process for Worcester 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 CAF
We file the federal Power of Attorney with the IRS and Form M-2848 with the Massachusetts DOR, register on the CAF system, and step in as the contact of record.
Transcript and CSED analysis
We pull IRS account transcripts via Form 8821, calculate each year's CSED under IRC § 6502, and identify tolling events.
Strategy memo
A written summary: the resolution path (OIC, IA, CNC, audit response, CDP, Tax Court), the timeline, and the realistic outcome range.
Filing and negotiation
We file the operative document — Form 656, Form 433-A(OIC), Form 9423, Form 12153, or an Appellate Tax Board petition through local counsel — and handle every IRS and DOR contact.
Compliance monitoring
After resolution we monitor compliance through the OIC five-year terms or the IA term, file future returns, and prevent default.
Two collection clocks: federal CSED and Massachusetts' six-year statute
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, and when the taxpayer is outside the United States for six months or more.
Massachusetts runs a parallel state collection rule under M.G.L. Ch 62C § 65: the DOR generally must assess Massachusetts income tax within three years of the return due date (extended to six years for substantial omissions of more than 25% of gross income, with no statute on collection in cases of fraud or non-filing). Once assessed, the DOR's collection right runs for six years from the date of assessment, with renewal possible by re-recording the state tax lien under M.G.L. Ch 62C § 50. Many Worcester taxpayers carry a federal CSED that will run out before the Massachusetts collection statute expires — or vice versa. Pull both records and know both dates before agreeing to any payment plan or amended return that could restart a clock.
Worcester tax authorities and venues
A working knowledge of the tribunals, agencies, and field offices that touch Worcester is what separates an answered Notice from a wage levy. Below is the working list our firm uses on every Worcester matter.
Internal Revenue Service — Worcester TAC
The federal tax authority, at irs.gov. The Worcester Taxpayer Assistance Center operates at 120 Front Street, 4th Floor, Worcester MA 01608. Appointments required — the TAC is appointment-only and walk-ins are not accepted.
U.S. Tax Court — Boston trial sessions
The U.S. Tax Court does not hold trial sessions in Worcester. Worcester petitioners are assigned to the Boston trial city, 45 miles east, at the John W. McCormack Post Office and Courthouse, 5 Post Office Square. Boston is the primary New England trial location. Petitions are filed at ustaxcourt.gov; the 90-day deadline runs from the IRS Statutory Notice of Deficiency under IRC § 6213(a).
Massachusetts Department of Revenue
The state tax authority, at mass.gov/dor. Headquartered at 100 Cambridge Street, Suite 800, Boston MA 02114 — 45 miles east of Worcester. Administers the flat 5% personal income tax under M.G.L. Ch 62 § 4(b), the 4% Millionaires Tax surcharge under M.G.L. Ch 62 § 4(d), the 8% corporate excise tax under M.G.L. Ch 63 § 39, the 6.25% state sales-and-use tax under M.G.L. Ch 64H and Ch 64I, withholding tax, the room-occupancy excise on short-term rentals, the Massachusetts estate tax under M.G.L. Ch 65C, and the Offer in Final Settlement program under M.G.L. Ch 62C § 37A.
Massachusetts Appellate Tax Board
The state's specialized administrative tax tribunal, established 1930 under M.G.L. Ch 58A and the oldest dedicated state-tax tribunal in the United States. Seated at 100 Cambridge Street, 2nd Floor, Boston MA 02114. Hears disputes between taxpayers and the Massachusetts Department of Revenue, local boards of assessors (including the Worcester Board of Assessors for property-tax appeals), and other tax-administering agencies. 60-day petition deadline from a final DOR assessment under M.G.L. Ch 58A § 7. Decisions are appealable to the Massachusetts Appeals Court.
City of Worcester Treasurer and Collector
The municipal finance authority for the City of Worcester. Office at City Hall, 455 Main Street, Room 203, Worcester MA 01608. Page: worcesterma.gov. Administers City of Worcester property-tax collection, motor-vehicle excise, water and sewer billing, and municipal lien certificates.
City of Worcester Assessor
The City of Worcester's property-assessment office, at City Hall, 455 Main Street, Room 209, Worcester MA 01608. Administers real-property assessments for the City of Worcester, the residential exemption, the personal-exemption clauses (Clause 17, 18, 22, 37A, 41A), and senior tax-deferral programs. Property-tax assessment appeals run from the Worcester Board of Assessors to the Massachusetts Appellate Tax Board under M.G.L. Ch 59 § 64.
U.S. District Court — District of Massachusetts, Worcester 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 (D. Mass., Worcester Division), located at the Donohue Federal Building and U.S. Courthouse, 595 Main Street, Worcester MA 01608, or the U.S. Court of Federal Claims in Washington, D.C. The Worcester Division also handles federal tax-collection enforcement, summons enforcement under IRC § 7604, and criminal-tax prosecutions for Central Massachusetts.
IRS Independent Office of Appeals
The administrative-appeals body within the IRS that resolves cases without litigation. Worcester cases run through the Appeals offices serving the New England region. Filings: Form 9423 (collection appeal) and Form 12153 (CDP). Page: irs.gov/appeals.
Taxpayer Advocate Service — Boston
An independent organization within the IRS that helps when normal channels stall. The Boston Local Taxpayer Advocate office serves taxpayers across Massachusetts including Worcester and Central Massachusetts. Page: taxpayeradvocate.irs.gov.
Worcester District Registry of Deeds
The recording office for Notices of Federal Tax Lien and Massachusetts state tax liens affecting real property in Worcester and most of Worcester County. Massachusetts effectively abolished Worcester County government in 1998 (functions transferred to the state and the City of Worcester, with full dissolution by 2017), but the registries of deeds continue to operate as recording offices under the Secretary of the Commonwealth. NFTL recording on the wrong registry fails to attach to title — a procedural defect that can be the basis of a lien-withdrawal request under Form 12277.
Speak with a tax attorney about your Worcester matter
Free consultation, attorney-client privileged, no obligation. If a Notice of Deficiency, a Final Notice of Intent to Levy, or a Massachusetts DOR Notice of Assessment is in front of you, the deadline to respond is real and short — call today.
Frequently asked questions — Worcester tax
What is the Massachusetts Millionaires Tax and when does it apply to a Worcester taxpayer?
The Fair Share Amendment, codified at M.G.L. Ch 62 § 4(d), adds a 4% surcharge on Massachusetts taxable income above $1 million per filer. It was approved by Massachusetts voters in 2022 and took effect for tax year 2023. The $1 million threshold is not indexed automatically by statute (the Massachusetts DOR adjusts annually for inflation under a separate rule). The surcharge sits on top of the flat 5% Massachusetts personal income tax under M.G.L. Ch 62 § 4(b), producing a 9% combined Massachusetts rate on each dollar above $1 million. The threshold is calculated on the joint return total when filing jointly — one return, one threshold, no doubling for married couples. For a Worcester taxpayer, the typical crossing event is a WPI spinout liquidity event, a UMass Memorial physician's IP-royalty windfall, a Hanover Insurance executive vesting year, or a multi-year accumulated Saint-Gobain stock sale.
Where is the closest U.S. Tax Court trial location to Worcester?
Boston, 45 miles east via the Massachusetts Turnpike. The U.S. Tax Court does not hold its own trial sessions in Worcester. Worcester petitioners are assigned to the Boston trial city at the John W. McCormack Post Office and Courthouse, 5 Post Office Square — the primary New England trial location. Petitions are filed electronically through DAWSON at ustaxcourt.gov; the 90-day deadline from the IRS Statutory Notice of Deficiency under IRC § 6213(a) is jurisdictional — a single day late and the federal assessment becomes final.
What is the Massachusetts Appellate Tax Board and what is its deadline?
The Massachusetts Appellate Tax Board (ATB) is the state's specialized administrative tax tribunal, established in 1930 under M.G.L. Ch 58A and the oldest dedicated state-tax tribunal in the United States. It sits at 100 Cambridge Street, 2nd Floor, Boston MA 02114, and hears disputes between taxpayers and the Massachusetts Department of Revenue, local boards of assessors (including the Worcester Board of Assessors for property-tax appeals), and other tax-administering agencies. The petition deadline is 60 days from a final DOR assessment under M.G.L. Ch 58A § 7 — tighter than the federal 90-day Tax Court deadline but more generous than some states' 30-day windows. Decisions are appealable to the Massachusetts Appeals Court. Victory Tax Lawyers refers Appellate Tax Board litigation to locally admitted Massachusetts counsel; we handle the federal portion and the DOR administrative work directly under Form M-2848.
Does Worcester County still have a county government and a county treasurer?
Largely no. Massachusetts effectively abolished Worcester County government under Chapter 48 of the Acts of 1997, with most county functions transferred to the state and to municipalities by 1998. Full dissolution of remaining Worcester County offices was completed by 2017. As a practical matter, there is no Worcester County Treasurer in the sense that other states use that office — municipal collection happens at the City of Worcester Treasurer and Collector (455 Main Street, Room 203), property assessment at the City of Worcester Assessor (455 Main Street, Room 209), and state tax collection at the Massachusetts Department of Revenue. The Worcester District Registry of Deeds continues to operate under the Secretary of the Commonwealth as a recording office for real-property documents, including Notices of Federal Tax Lien.
What is Massachusetts' collection statute of limitations?
M.G.L. Ch 62C § 26 gives the DOR three years from a return's due date to assess Massachusetts income tax (extended to six years for substantial omissions of more than 25% of gross income, with no limit for fraud or unfiled returns). Once an assessment is final, the DOR's right to collect runs for six years from the assessment date under M.G.L. Ch 62C § 65, renewable by re-recording the state tax lien. The federal CSED under IRC § 6502 is a separate ten-year clock running from the federal assessment date. Coordinated case planning hinges on knowing both clocks before any action that could restart either one.
Can I be audited by both the IRS and the Massachusetts DOR for the same year?
Yes. The IRS and the Massachusetts Department of Revenue operate independently and share information through the IRS-state exchange program. A federal audit adjustment is routinely reported to Massachusetts under the state's federal-change reporting rule (M.G.L. Ch 62C § 30), and vice versa. We coordinate the two audits to prevent inconsistent positions on the federal record from costing you on the Massachusetts return — particularly important given the 4% Millionaires Tax surcharge, which multiplies any federal adjustment that pushes you across the $1 million threshold by an extra 4% of state tax on that dollar.
Does Massachusetts have an Offer in Compromise equivalent to the federal program?
Yes. The Massachusetts Department of Revenue accepts Offers in Final Settlement under M.G.L. Ch 62C § 37A. The DOR considers offers based on doubt as to collectibility, doubt as to liability, and economic hardship — standards that parallel federal IRC § 7122 analysis but with state-specific procedural rules. All Massachusetts returns must be filed before consideration, current-year withholding and estimated-tax compliance is verified, and a financial-disclosure package is required. We typically run a state Offer in parallel with the federal Offer where both debts are real.
I founded a WPI biotech or robotics spinout — how does §1202 Qualified Small Business Stock apply?
IRC § 1202 excludes from federal gross income up to the greater of $10 million or 10x basis on the sale of qualified small business stock held for more than five years from original issuance. The five-year clock starts on the date the stock is acquired from the corporation in exchange for cash, property, or services — not on a §83(b) election or vest date. Most WPI and UMass Chan Medical School spinouts in robotics, materials science, bioengineering, and medical devices received stock that qualifies if the company had under $50 million in gross assets at issuance and engaged in a qualified active trade or business (research-stage robotics and biotech clearly qualify under the statute). Massachusetts conforms to IRC § 1202 in part but applies its own state-level exclusion calculation under M.G.L. Ch 62 § 2(a)(1). Documentation of the issuance date, original asset test, and basis is the single most valuable thing a Worcester founder can keep on file.
Can a California-Bar-admitted attorney represent me in Worcester?
For federal IRS matters — yes. 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 Boston trial sessions that serve Worcester petitioners. For Massachusetts DOR administrative work, we file Form M-2848 Power of Attorney and handle the matter remotely. For formal litigation before the Massachusetts Appellate Tax Board or a Massachusetts Appeals Court proceeding, we co-counsel with locally admitted Massachusetts attorneys. Most engagements — audit defense, OIC, IA, levy release, Tax Court — are federal and stay entirely with our firm.
What if I have unfiled returns going back several years?
The IRS Voluntary Filing Compliance policy and IRM 5.1.11.6 generally require the last six years of returns to bring a taxpayer back into compliance. Filing prior-year returns is the first step before any OIC, IA, or CNC request — IRC § 7122(d) compliance is a prerequisite for a federal Offer. Refunds claimed on returns filed more than three years after the original due date are time-barred under IRC § 6511(b)(2). Massachusetts follows a parallel filing-compliance posture under M.G.L. Ch 62C § 26; the DOR may assess based on federal-change reporting or estimate tax when a taxpayer fails to file.
I am part of the Albanian, Cape Verdean, Vietnamese, or Brazilian community in Worcester and have foreign accounts — what is the FBAR exposure?
Worcester has one of the largest Albanian-American populations in the United States on a per-capita basis, alongside substantial Cape Verdean, Vietnamese, Brazilian-American, Puerto Rican, Polish-American, and Burmese refugee communities. If the aggregate balance of all foreign financial accounts you owned or had signature authority over crossed $10,000 at any point during the year, FinCEN Form 114 (the FBAR) was required. Willful non-disclosure penalties run to 50% of the high balance per year under 31 U.S.C. § 5321; non-willful penalties cap at $10,000 per violation (indexed for inflation). The IRS Streamlined Filing Compliance Procedures — Streamlined Domestic Offshore for U.S. residents and Streamlined Foreign Offshore for non-residents — offer a path back into compliance at substantially reduced penalty (5% miscellaneous offshore penalty for Streamlined Domestic; no penalty for Streamlined Foreign). The certification of non-willfulness on Form 14653 or Form 14654 must be drafted with care.
Can the IRS levy my Worcester 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 bankHometown, Cornerstone Bank, Webster Five, Country Bank, Fidelity Bank, Bay State Savings, or any Massachusetts-chartered Worcester-area institution and serve wage levies on Worcester employers including UMass Memorial Health, Saint Vincent Hospital, WPI, College of the Holy Cross, Clark University, Hanover Insurance Group, Polar Beverages, Table Talk Pies, Saint-Gobain Abrasives, or Regal Beloit. A timely Form 12153 CDP request halts collection while the case is reviewed by Appeals. After a CDP determination, the taxpayer has 30 days to petition the U.S. Tax Court under IRC § 6330(d)(1). Massachusetts issues parallel state tax liens under M.G.L. Ch 62C § 50 recorded in the Worcester District Registry of Deeds.
I work at Hanover Insurance, Polar Beverages, or a WPI spinout and have RSUs — why did I owe so much tax this year?
RSU vest events are taxed as W-2 ordinary income at the supplemental wage withholding rate, which is currently 22% federal on amounts up to $1 million per year (37% above). If your actual marginal federal rate is 32%, 35%, or 37%, you are underwithheld by 10 to 15 percentage points on every vest. Add 5% Massachusetts plus the 4% Millionaires Tax surcharge once your total taxable income clears $1 million, and a single year of vesting can produce a $50,000 to $300,000+ balance due. The fix is W-4 adjustment plus quarterly Form 1040-ES under IRC § 6654 and Massachusetts Form 1-ES under M.G.L. Ch 62B § 14.
A family member died in Worcester — do I owe Massachusetts estate tax?
Possibly yes. The Massachusetts estate-tax exemption under M.G.L. Ch 65C is $2 million per estate — one of the lowest in the country and far below the $13.61 million federal exemption for 2024 returns. Massachusetts is one of seventeen states plus the District of Columbia that still imposes a state-level estate tax, with rates running up to 16% on the portion above the exemption. A West Side or Tatnuck single-family, a Cape Cod second home, retirement accounts, and life-insurance proceeds can cross the $2 million threshold without anyone realizing a state filing is required. Form M-706 is due nine months from death. Coordination with the federal Form 706 estate-tax return is its own engagement layer.
I am a post-doctoral fellow at UMass Chan Medical School — is my fellowship taxable?
Largely yes under IRC § 117(c). The Internal Revenue Code excludes from gross income qualified scholarships used for tuition and required fees, but characterizes amounts paid for teaching, research, or other required services as taxable compensation — including most NIH and HHMI post-doctoral stipends. International post-docs at UMass Chan, WPI, and Clark are often surprised the spring after arrival when the IRS treats their fellowship as wages with no automatic withholding. Treaty positions may reduce the rate (for example, the U.S.-China treaty Article 20 and the U.S.-India treaty Article 22 contain relevant student-and-trainee provisions), but each treaty's wording controls. Estimated quarterly payments under IRC § 6654 are typically required.
I am a Catholic priest, Jesuit, or other clergy member in Worcester — how does the housing allowance work?
IRC § 107 excludes a properly designated parsonage or housing allowance from federal gross income for a duly ordained minister, priest, rabbi, or similar member of the clergy, up to the lesser of: the amount used for housing, the fair rental value of the home (furnished, plus utilities), or the amount designated in advance by the employing congregation or religious organization. The designation must be in writing, prospective, and reasonable. Worcester's Roman Catholic Diocese, the Jesuit faculty at the College of the Holy Cross, the Augustinians of the Assumption at Assumption University, the Sisters of Saint Anne at Anna Maria College, and Greek, Albanian, and Romanian Orthodox congregations all touch IRC § 107. Massachusetts conforms to the federal §107 exclusion. Self-employment tax under IRC § 1402(e) remains a separate consideration for clergy who have not opted out.
How long does a federal Offer in Compromise take to process?
An 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. A Massachusetts Offer in Final Settlement under M.G.L. Ch 62C § 37A typically runs four to nine months on a parallel track.
Will hiring a tax attorney stop IRS collection action immediately?
Once Form 2848 is on file, the IRS routes all communication through the attorney and stops contacting the taxpayer directly. Active levies are not automatically lifted by the 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. Massachusetts state collection follows a similar pattern: a Form M-2848 routes DOR contact, and a pending Massachusetts Offer in Final Settlement pauses state tax-lien enforcement.
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.
Page last reviewed: . Editorial standard: every federal-statute citation links to law.cornell.edu (Legal Information Institute, Cornell Law School). Every Massachusetts statute citation references the Massachusetts General Laws. 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 Massachusetts Department of Revenue, the U.S. Tax Court, the Massachusetts Appellate Tax Board, 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 Massachusetts; where a Massachusetts state-court appearance or Massachusetts Appellate Tax Board litigation is required, the firm associates with locally admitted counsel.
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
Massachusetts state hub
Statewide MA practice
See other areas
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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. § 7345 — Passport Revocation
- 26 U.S.C. § 1202 — Qualified Small Business Stock
- 26 U.S.C. § 174 — R&D Capitalization
- 26 U.S.C. § 117 — Scholarships and Fellowships / 117(c) services characterization
- 26 U.S.C. § 107 — Clergy Housing Allowance
- 26 U.S.C. § 83 — Property Transferred for Services / 83(b) Election
- 26 U.S.C. § 263A — UNICAP / inventory capitalization (craft breweries)
- M.G.L. Ch 62 § 4(b) — Massachusetts flat 5% personal income tax
- M.G.L. Ch 62 § 4(d) — Massachusetts Fair Share Amendment / Millionaires Tax
- M.G.L. Ch 63 § 39 — Massachusetts corporate excise tax
- M.G.L. Ch 64H § 2 — Massachusetts sales tax
- M.G.L. Ch 64I — Massachusetts use tax
- M.G.L. Ch 65C — Massachusetts estate tax
- M.G.L. Ch 58A § 7 — Appellate Tax Board petition deadline
- M.G.L. Ch 62C § 26 — Massachusetts assessment statute of limitations
- M.G.L. Ch 62C § 31A — Massachusetts responsible-person liability
- M.G.L. Ch 62C § 33 — Massachusetts failure-to-file penalty
- M.G.L. Ch 62C § 35A — Massachusetts accuracy-related penalty
- M.G.L. Ch 62C § 37A — Massachusetts Offer in Final Settlement
- M.G.L. Ch 62C § 50 — Massachusetts state tax lien
- M.G.L. Ch 62C § 65 — Massachusetts collection statute