Tax Relief Guide
The Fresh Start Program is not a single program you apply to, and it is not guaranteed forgiveness. It is a set of IRS relief options for people who are behind on taxes. Here is what it actually is, who it can help, and how to use it.
Free 30-minute consultation.
The "Fresh Start Program" is a name people use for a set of changes the IRS made, starting in 2011 and expanded in 2012, to make it easier to deal with back taxes. It is not a law Congress passed, and it is not a separate program with its own application. Instead, it made the IRS's existing tools easier to use: payment plans, also called installment agreements, settlements for less than you owe, also called offers in compromise, penalty relief, and changes to how and when the IRS files tax liens. When people say "Fresh Start," they almost always mean some combination of those options.
The IRS itself has largely retired the "Fresh Start" label and now presents these simply as options for when you cannot pay in full. So if you came here from an ad about a "new IRS program," the honest answer is that the relief is real, but it is not new, secret, or one-size-fits-all.
Yes. The relief options behind the Fresh Start name are real and come directly from the IRS. What gives the term a questionable reputation is the marketing around it, not the IRS tools themselves. A lot of advertising treats Fresh Start as a limited-time government program that erases tax debt for pennies on the dollar. That is not how it works.
The options are legitimate, but whether you qualify depends on your specific finances, and most people do not settle their full balance for a small fraction of what they owe. A trustworthy firm will tell you honestly what you are likely to qualify for before you pay anything.
Fresh Start is really these options working together. Which one fits depends on how much you owe, your income and expenses, and what you own. Here is what each one does.
Pay what you owe over time in monthly payments. If you owe $50,000 or less, you can often set up a streamlined plan of up to six years, 72 months, without a detailed financial review.
Settle for less than the full amount, but only if the IRS agrees that paying in full would be a genuine hardship. The rules are strict and most people do not qualify.
Reduce or remove certain penalties, either through first-time penalty abatement if you have a clean filing history, or for a reasonable cause such as serious illness.
Fresh Start made it easier to avoid a federal tax lien, and to have one withdrawn after you pay or set up a direct-debit payment plan.
If you truly cannot pay anything right now, the IRS can pause collection. It is temporary, and the IRS reviews it periodically.
There is no single qualification, because there is no single program. But some basics apply across the board. First, you generally have to be caught up on filing, with all required tax returns filed, even if you cannot pay them yet. Second, you need to be current on this year's taxes, such as estimated payments or withholding. Third, you have to agree to stay compliant going forward.
After that, which option you qualify for depends on the numbers:
Because Fresh Start is not one program, there is no single application or form. You apply for the specific option that fits your situation:
Before any of this, get any unfiled returns filed. The IRS will not negotiate while you are out of compliance. Simple installment agreements are something many people handle on their own. Offers in compromise, penalty abatement, and hardship status are more involved, and that is where a licensed professional usually makes the difference.
A few things to be skeptical of when you see Fresh Start advertising:
A legitimate firm gives you an honest assessment of your options before taking your money.
We start by looking at your actual situation: what you owe, what you have filed, and what you can realistically pay. Then we tell you which of these options fits, including when the honest answer is a straightforward payment plan rather than a settlement. Our team includes licensed CPAs, enrolled agents, and tax attorneys who handle these cases with the IRS regularly.
Yes. The relief options people call "Fresh Start" are real IRS options. The problem is usually the marketing around the phrase, not the IRS tools themselves. Fresh Start is not a secret program, and it is not automatic forgiveness.
It is a common name for several IRS relief options, including installment agreements, offers in compromise, penalty relief, lien relief, and Currently Not Collectible status. It is not one single program with one application.
The IRS has relief options that are often grouped under the Fresh Start name, but the IRS now usually presents them as standard payment and collection alternatives rather than as one branded program.
Qualification depends on the specific option. Most taxpayers need to be current on required filings and current-year tax obligations. From there, the right option depends on income, expenses, assets, balance owed, and hardship.
You apply for the specific relief option that fits your situation. That may mean setting up an installment agreement, submitting an offer in compromise, requesting penalty relief, asking for hardship status, or seeking lien withdrawal.
No. Fresh Start is not a limited-time program and it does not expire. Be careful with any advertisement that creates deadline pressure or suggests that a special window is closing.
Only if you qualify for an Offer in Compromise or another specific resolution that reduces the balance. Most people do not qualify for a major settlement, but many do qualify for payment plans or other relief.
Some taxpayers can handle simple installment agreements on their own. More complex cases, including offers in compromise, penalty abatement, hardship status, liens, levies, or unfiled returns, are often better handled with licensed professional help.
A licensed professional can look at your situation and tell you honestly what you qualify for, including when a simple payment plan is the right answer.
Prefer to talk first? Call 800-630-4374
Free · Confidential · 30 minutes · No obligation