Half of your Money back guarantee If the IRS rejects your offer, we will give you $1,400.00 back.
By offering a money back guarantee it gives my staff and I a vested interest in getting your offer approved by the IRS. This means that we will not write up an OIC that has little to no chance of being approved. We will NOT tell you that you can pay off your debt for a sum that is less than reasonable, just so we can make a sale. In the long run if the IRS rejects your offer you lose money. By having a vested interest in your offer, if you lose we lose. This is our ethical way of doing business.
There are a number of companies that do not share our ideas about ethical practices. So the IRS has issued a consumer alert.
A warning from the IRS
The following was copied from the IRS web page and is a consumer alert, issued by the IRS.
IR-2004-17, Feb. 3, 2004
WASHINGTON — The Internal Revenue Service today issued a consumer alert advising taxpayers to beware of promoters’ claims that tax debts can be settled for “pennies on the dollar” through the Offer in Compromise Program.
Some promoters are inappropriately advising indebted taxpayers to file an Offer in Compromise (OIC) application with the IRS. This bad advice costs taxpayers money and time. An Offer In Compromise is an agreement between a taxpayer and the IRS that resolves the taxpayer's tax debt. The IRS has the authority to settle, or "compromise," federal tax liabilities by accepting less than full payment under certain circumstances.
“This program serves an important purpose for a select group of taxpayers. But we are increasingly concerned about unscrupulous promoters charging excessive fees to taxpayers who have no chance of meeting the program’s requirements,” said IRS Commissioner Mark W. Everson. “We urge taxpayers not to be duped by high-priced promises.” The OIC may be considered only after other payment options have been exhausted. If taxpayers are unable to pay their taxes in full, there are other payment options, such as monthly installment agreements, that must be explored before an OIC can be submitted.

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