Discharging Tax Debts Chapter 13

Chapter 13 Bankruptcy and Taxes

For the most part, you cannot discharge tax debts in Chapter 13 bankruptcy. Instead, you repay your tax debts through the life of your Chapter 13 bankruptcy. How much of the tax debt you must repay depends on whether the tax debt is classified as a priority claim or a non-priority, unsecured claim. You must pay priority claims in full through your plan. You generally pay only a portion of your non-priority, unsecured tax debts.

Non-priority Tax Debts

In Chapter 13 bankruptcy, your non-priority tax debt is lumped with your other unsecured debt. This debt is paid through your Chapter 13 plan after all priority and secured claims are paid. Although you cannot fully discharge this debt, you will likely only pay a percentage of your total unsecured debt through the life of the plan.

Your tax debt will be non-priority, unsecured debt if it meets all of the following requirements:

1. The debt is for income taxes. For the most part, income taxes are the only type of tax debt that is non-priority debt in Chapter 13 bankruptcy. This means your tax debt must be for federal or state income taxes or taxes on gross receipts.

2. The return was due at least three years ago. The tax debt must be disclosed on a tax return that was due (including all valid extensions) at least three years before you filed for bankruptcy. For example, if you disclosed the taxes in a 2019 income tax return for which extensions to file the return expired on October 15, 2020, you will satisfy the tax return due date test if you file the bankruptcy petition after October 15, 2020.

3. The tax return was filed at least two years ago. You must have filed the tax return at least two years before filing for bankruptcy. To avoid additional objections from the taxing authority, you must make sure that you have properly signed and mailed the return, and that it is sufficiently complete to be deemed a tax return. In continuing with the example above, if extensions to file the 2005 return expired on October 15, 2020, you filed the tax return on April 15, 2008, and you filed your bankruptcy petition on October 15, 2020, the taxes won’t have non-priority status. This is because you have satisfied the tax return due date test, but not the tax return filing date text. In this scenario, you must wait until two years after April 15, 2020, or until April 15, 2020, to file for bankruptcy.

4. The taxes were assessed at least 240 days ago. The taxing authority must have assessed (entered the liability on the taxing authority’s records) the tax against you at least 240 days before you filed for bankruptcy. This time limit may be extended if you have an offer in compromise with the taxing authority or you had previously filed for bankruptcy.

5. You did not commit fraud or willful evasion of taxes. The tax return must not be fraudulent or frivolous and you cannot be guilty of any intentional act of evading the tax laws. If you file a joint petition, the taxing authority must prove that both you and your spouse committed an act of fraud related to the applicable return or willfully attempted to evade the tax.

Priority Tax Debts

One advantage of Chapter 13 bankruptcy over Chapter 7 is that you don’t have to pay priority tax debts immediately. In Chapter 7 you cannot discharge priority tax debt nor can you pay it back over time through the bankruptcy. Chapter 13 allows you to pay your priority tax debt through the life of the plan. This means that you do not have to liquidate or sell any assets to pay it back right away.

Since the bankruptcy court’s decision supersedes that of the taxing authority, the IRS cannot object to your payment plan once it is approved by the bankruptcy court. In addition, you can often pay priority tax debts at 0% interest over the life of the Chapter 13 repayment plan. This is a much better deal than the IRS will offer.

The following are types of priority tax debt which, absent a showing of severe hardship, you must pay back in full through the life of the Chapter 13 plan:

1. Tax liens. Even if the tax debt is classified as non-priority, if a lien based on the debt is attached to your property, the debt is classified as a secured debt. You must pay back 100% of any secured tax debt through the life of your plan.

2. Recent property taxes. If you incur a property tax before you file for bankruptcy and the tax was payable within a year before your filing, the tax is a priority claim. If a property tax was payable more than one year before your filing, the tax is non-priority. Keep in mind, though, that many counties attach a lien to your property upon assessment of the property tax or one year afterwards. If this happens, the tax debt will be secured (and treated as secured tax debt, discussed above).

3. Taxes that you are required to collect or withhold. These are taxes that you must withhold from your employee’s pay, such as FICA, Medicare, and income taxes. It also includes sales taxes that your customers pay to you and that you in turn pay to the government.

4. Certain employment taxes, excise taxes, and custom duties, depending on specific time periods.

5. Non-punitive tax penalties that relate to non-dischargeable taxes and where the transaction or event that sparked the penalty occurred less than three years before filing the bankruptcy petition.

6. Erroneous tax refunds or credits relating to non-dischargeable taxes.

If you need help with resolving your tax debt then contact the Dunaway Law Group at 480-389-6529 or send us a message HERE.

Unfiled Taxes and Bankruptcy

In order to file for personal bankruptcy, you must be current on your tax filings. Meaning, if you have not filed a tax return in the last five years you need to file those tax returns prior to filing the bankruptcy.

However, even if you owe the IRS $100,000 but have filed all required tax returns then you are permitted to file for bankruptcy. And while the general rule is that tax debts are not discharge in bankruptcy you may qualify for the exception and your tax debt may actually be discharged. Usually, you can discharge income tax obligations where a return was due at least three years ago, you actually filed the return over two years ago, and the IRS assessed the tax at least 240 days ago.

Even if your tax debts are not dischargeable you are still permitted to file bankruptcy. Schedule a free consultation with one of our attorneys today to see if your tax debt can be discharged.

benefits of filing bankruptcy with tax debt

There are many benefits to filing bankruptcy if you have tax debt. For instance, all penalties and interest subside during the bankruptcy. Additionally, if you file a Chapter 13 bankruptcy you will be able to pay on your tax debt through one single payment sent to a trustee each month.

Taxes and how they are affected by bankruptcy can be a very complex issue. So if you are struggling with debt and owe the IRS money, speak to an experienced bankruptcy attorney at the Dunaway Law Group by calling us at 480-702-1608 or send us a message HERE.