Collection Due Process Hearing: Rights and Procedures
The Collection Due Process (CDP) hearing is a formal legal mechanism under the Internal Revenue Code that grants taxpayers the right to challenge IRS collection actions before an independent Appeals Officer. Established by the IRS Restructuring and Reform Act of 1998, the CDP process applies specifically to federal tax liens and levies, creating a structured review pathway separate from ordinary IRS examinations. Understanding the procedural rules, eligibility thresholds, and outcome possibilities is essential for taxpayers and practitioners navigating the IRS resolution process.
- Definition and Scope
- Core Mechanics or Structure
- Causal Relationships or Drivers
- Classification Boundaries
- Tradeoffs and Tensions
- Common Misconceptions
- Checklist or Steps (Non-Advisory)
- Reference Table or Matrix
- References
Definition and Scope
The Collection Due Process hearing is a statutory right codified at Internal Revenue Code §§ 6320 and 6330 (26 U.S.C. §§ 6320 and 6330), enacted as part of the IRS Restructuring and Reform Act of 1998 (Public Law 105-206). IRC § 6320 governs CDP rights following the filing of a Notice of Federal Tax Lien (NFTL), while IRC § 6330 governs CDP rights preceding or following a levy action.
The scope of the CDP hearing is national — it applies to all individual and business taxpayers subject to federal tax collection, regardless of the type of underlying tax liability (income, payroll, estate, excise). The IRS Office of Appeals, operating independently of the IRS Collection Division, conducts CDP hearings. The hearing serves two concurrent functions: it allows the taxpayer to raise collection alternatives, and it permits challenge to the validity or appropriateness of the specific collection action.
One critical scope boundary is the distinction between CDP hearings and Equivalent Hearings. A taxpayer who misses the 30-day CDP request window loses the right to petition the U.S. Tax Court but retains a limited right to request an Equivalent Hearing within one year of the lien or levy notice. This distinction directly affects judicial review rights.
Core Mechanics or Structure
Upon issuance of a Notice of Federal Tax Lien or a Final Notice of Intent to Levy (typically delivered on IRS Form CP90, CP297, or Letter 1058), the IRS must notify the taxpayer. From that notice date, the taxpayer has 30 days to request a CDP hearing by submitting IRS Form 12153 ("Request for a Collection Due Process or Equivalent Hearing").
The mechanics unfold in five discrete phases:
- Trigger and Notice Issuance: IRS files the NFTL or issues a levy notice. The notice date starts the 30-day clock.
- CDP Request Filing: Form 12153 must be submitted in writing to the IRS address specified on the notice. Timely filing suspends collection activity in most circumstances.
- Assignment to IRS Office of Appeals: An Appeals Officer who has had no prior involvement in the case reviews the request. This independence requirement is mandated by IRC § 6330(b)(3).
- CDP Conference: The taxpayer (or authorized representative under IRS Form 2848) presents grounds for relief. The conference may be conducted in person, by phone, or by correspondence.
- Notice of Determination: The Appeals Officer issues a written determination. From the date of this notice, the taxpayer has 30 days to petition the U.S. Tax Court for judicial review under IRC § 6330(d).
During the CDP conference, permissible issues include: verification that all legal and procedural requirements were met; consideration of collection alternatives such as installment agreements, offers in compromise, currently not collectible status, or partial pay installment agreements; and challenges to the appropriateness of the collection action relative to the amount owed.
Causal Relationships or Drivers
CDP hearings are triggered by two primary IRS collection enforcement actions: the filing of a Notice of Federal Tax Lien and the issuance of a levy notice. The lien is a legal claim against a taxpayer's property under IRC § 6321, arising automatically when a tax assessment is made, demand for payment is issued, and payment is neglected. The levy is the actual seizure of property or rights to property under IRC § 6331. Both actions generate independent CDP rights, meaning a taxpayer may have 2 separate CDP opportunities on the same underlying tax debt — one for the lien and one for the levy.
The 1998 legislative driver was documented congressional concern about IRS collection abuses. The Senate Finance Committee's 1997-1998 hearings on IRS practices led directly to the structural reforms in Public Law 105-206. The CDP mechanism was designed to create a pre-seizure judicial review pathway that did not previously exist.
Key factors that drive CDP hearing outcomes include the completeness and accuracy of financial disclosures (IRS Collection Financial Standards apply), the taxpayer's compliance history, and whether the specific collection alternative proposed is consistent with IRS Policy Statement 5-100 (requiring the IRS to balance collection with fair treatment). Taxpayers who have unresolved tax levy issues or active federal tax liens most commonly initiate CDP proceedings.
Classification Boundaries
CDP hearings fall into two distinct legal categories, each with different procedural consequences:
Timely CDP Hearing: Filed within 30 days of the CDP notice. The taxpayer retains full judicial review rights — the U.S. Tax Court has jurisdiction to review the Appeals Officer's determination on both the underlying liability and the collection action. Collection activity is suspended during the CDP process.
Equivalent Hearing: Filed after the 30-day CDP window but within one year of the lien or levy notice. No judicial review in the U.S. Tax Court is available — the only recourse is U.S. District Court or the Court of Federal Claims if the taxpayer pays the tax and sues for a refund. Collection suspension does not automatically apply.
A secondary classification boundary exists between liability challenges and collection alternative challenges. A taxpayer may challenge the underlying tax liability in a CDP hearing only if the taxpayer did not previously receive a statutory notice of deficiency and did not previously have an opportunity to dispute the liability (IRC § 6330(c)(2)(B)). This limitation means taxpayers who received and ignored an audit notice frequently lose the ability to contest the underlying amount in a CDP forum. The IRS appeals office process offers a parallel but procedurally distinct pathway for liability disputes.
Tradeoffs and Tensions
The CDP process embeds several structural tensions that complicate its use in practice.
Suspension vs. Accrual: Filing a timely CDP request suspends most levy actions, but interest and penalties under IRC §§ 6601 and 6651 continue to accrue throughout the suspension period. A CDP hearing that takes 12–18 months to resolve can result in materially higher total liability, even if the taxpayer ultimately prevails on the collection alternative issue.
Judicial Review Scope Limitation: The U.S. Tax Court reviews CDP determinations on an "abuse of discretion" standard for collection alternative issues, but applies de novo review when the underlying liability is properly in dispute. The narrower abuse-of-discretion standard makes it difficult to overturn Appeals Officer determinations on purely procedural or judgment-based grounds.
Preclusion of Future Hearing Rights: Once a CDP hearing has been held on a specific tax period and type, the taxpayer is generally precluded from receiving another CDP hearing on the same tax period under IRC § 6330(b)(2). This means strategic missteps in the first hearing cannot easily be corrected in a subsequent proceeding.
Interaction with Bankruptcy: The automatic stay provisions of 11 U.S.C. § 362 interact with CDP suspension periods. Taxpayers who file bankruptcy during a CDP proceeding introduce additional complexity around federal tax debt discharge in bankruptcy and may face competing timelines.
Common Misconceptions
Misconception 1: Filing Form 12153 automatically stops all IRS collection.
The reality is more limited. A timely CDP request suspends levy actions (IRC § 6330(e)(1)) but does not release an already-filed Notice of Federal Tax Lien. Garnishments already in progress under a pre-existing levy may require separate action.
Misconception 2: Any tax issue can be raised at a CDP hearing.
IRC § 6330(c)(2) explicitly restricts the issues that may be raised. Frivolous arguments — as defined by IRS Revenue Procedure 2012-22 and IRC § 6702 — can result in a $5,000 penalty (IRS, IRC § 6702). Issues already decided by a court or that were the subject of a prior CDP hearing are foreclosed.
Misconception 3: The CDP hearing is a negotiation session with the IRS Collection Division.
The hearing is conducted by the IRS Office of Appeals, which operates independently of the Collection Division. The Appeals Officer is prohibited from having prior involvement in the case (IRC § 6330(b)(3)). This is a formal administrative proceeding, not an informal discussion with the revenue officer who issued the notice.
Misconception 4: Missing the 30-day deadline is a minor procedural issue.
Missing the 30-day window eliminates U.S. Tax Court jurisdiction over the CDP determination. The taxpayer is reduced to an Equivalent Hearing with no judicial review right, a materially weaker procedural position.
Misconception 5: CDP hearings resolve trust fund recovery penalty assessments the same way as income tax liabilities.
Trust fund recovery penalties assessed under IRC § 6672 are treated as separate assessments, each generating independent CDP rights tied to the specific assessment date and notice.
Checklist or Steps (Non-Advisory)
The following sequence outlines the procedural steps in a Collection Due Process proceeding as defined by IRC §§ 6320 and 6330 and IRS administrative guidance (IRM 8.22.2):
- [ ] Identify the triggering notice: Confirm whether the notice relates to a lien (NFTL, triggering IRC § 6320) or a levy (Final Notice of Intent to Levy, triggering IRC § 6330). Note the specific notice date.
- [ ] Calculate the 30-day deadline: Count 30 calendar days from the date on the notice. Late filing converts a CDP request to an Equivalent Hearing with reduced rights.
- [ ] Obtain IRS Form 12153: Download from IRS.gov (Form 12153). Identify all tax periods and tax types covered by the request.
- [ ] Identify the issues to raise: Determine whether the request involves (a) a collection alternative, (b) a challenge to the underlying liability (if not previously contested), or (c) a procedural challenge to the collection action itself.
- [ ] Prepare financial documentation: Collection alternatives require IRS Collection Financial Standards compliance. Form 433-A (individuals) or Form 433-B (businesses) may be required.
- [ ] Submit Form 12153 to the correct IRS address: The mailing address is printed on the CDP notice itself. Certified mail with return receipt provides a verifiable submission date.
- [ ] Receive acknowledgment and Appeals assignment: IRS should assign an independent Appeals Officer and schedule a conference. The taxpayer or authorized representative (Form 2848) participates in the conference.
- [ ] Participate in the CDP conference: Present supporting documentation for the collection alternative or liability challenge. Keep records of all submissions.
- [ ] Receive the Notice of Determination: Review the written determination carefully. Note the 30-day window to petition the U.S. Tax Court if the determination is adverse.
- [ ] Evaluate Tax Court petition rights: If filing a Tax Court petition, the Tax Court petition process has separate procedural requirements under Tax Court Rule 330.
Reference Table or Matrix
| Feature | Timely CDP Hearing (≤30 days) | Equivalent Hearing (31 days–1 year) |
|---|---|---|
| Governing code section | IRC § 6320 / § 6330 | IRC § 6320(b)(2) / § 6330(b)(2) |
| Collection suspension | Yes — levy suspended upon filing | No automatic suspension |
| Liability challenge permitted | Yes, if no prior opportunity | Yes, if no prior opportunity |
| Collection alternatives permitted | Yes | Yes |
| U.S. Tax Court review | Yes — within 30 days of determination | No |
| District Court / CFC review | Yes (after Tax Court exhaustion or refund suit) | Only via refund suit after full payment |
| Preclusion of future CDP hearings | Yes — same tax period/type barred | No preclusion of future timely CDP rights |
| Interest/penalty accrual during process | Continues under IRC §§ 6601, 6651 | Continues |
| Frivolous argument penalty | Up to $5,000 under IRC § 6702 | Up to $5,000 under IRC § 6702 |
| IRM reference | IRM 8.22.2 | IRM 8.22.3 |
The IRS Taxpayer Advocate Service publishes annual assessments of CDP hearing outcomes in its Objectives Report to Congress, which provides aggregate data on hearing requests, determinations, and Tax Court petition rates.
References
- Internal Revenue Code §§ 6320 and 6330 (26 U.S.C.) — via eCFR
- IRS Form 12153: Request for a Collection Due Process or Equivalent Hearing
- IRS Internal Revenue Manual (IRM) 8.22.2 — Collection Due Process
- IRS Internal Revenue Manual (IRM) 8.22.3 — Equivalent Hearing Procedures
- IRS Restructuring and Reform Act of 1998, Public Law 105-206
- IRC § 6702 — Frivolous Tax Submissions
- U.S. Tax Court Rule 330 — CDP Petitions
- IRS Taxpayer Advocate Service — Annual Report to Congress
- IRS Office of Appeals — Overview