The Settlement Advantage: How ERC Litigation Brings Finality and Protection

Business owner signing a check, signaling the receipt of their ERC refund check from the IRS.

Why Finality Matters in ERC Refunds

For many businesses, the Employee Retention Credit (ERC) was more than a tax incentive — it was a vital source of post-pandemic relief. But as refunds continue to stall and audit scrutiny intensifies, even those who’ve already received their ERC refunds are realizing that “paid” doesn’t always mean “protected.”

Under the IRS’s extended six-year audit window, ERC refunds can be revisited long after the funds have been received. That uncertainty leaves many business owners wondering: When does this finally end?

The answer, increasingly, lies in litigation and settlement. While litigation is often viewed as a way to move claims forward, it also provides something equally important — finality. Once a refund is resolved through a court-approved settlement or judgment, it becomes binding. The IRS can’t later claw it back or reopen the issue.

In this article, we’ll break down how ERC settlements work, why they offer a unique layer of protection under the new audit rules, and what businesses should consider when pursuing litigation to secure — and safeguard — their refunds.

Why the 6-Year Audit Window Changes the Game for ERC

Until recently, ERC refunds were subject to a standard three-year audit period — similar to most other tax matters. But under new legislation, that window has now doubled. The IRS has six years from the date a refund is paid to audit or claw it back.

Key Takeaways

  • Until recently, ERC refunds were subject to a standard three-year audit period — similar to most other tax matters. But under new legislation, that window has now doubled. The IRS has six years from the date a refund is paid to audit or claw it back.
  • At first glance, that may sound procedural. In reality, it changes everything.
  • For many business owners, that uncertainty creates an uneasy gray area. Most companies no longer have quick access to the same records, government orders, or employee statements that originally supported their claims.

At first glance, that may sound procedural. In reality, it changes everything. Even if your business has already received its ERC refund, the IRS can revisit that claim years down the line — long after the details of how COVID-19 affected your operations have faded from memory.

For many business owners, that uncertainty creates an uneasy gray area. Most companies no longer have quick access to the same records, government orders, or employee statements that originally supported their claims. And rebuilding that documentation years later — when staff has changed and operations have evolved — can be incredibly difficult.

The risk isn’t just about recordkeeping, though. It’s also financial. If the IRS later determines that your credit was improperly claimed, repayment could include not only the original refund amount but also interest and penalties. For businesses that already used their ERC funds to support payroll, expansion, or recovery, paying that money back years later could be devastating.

That’s why finality matters. A refund that remains open to audit for six years isn’t a closed chapter — it’s a potential liability. Litigation, particularly when resolved through settlement or judgment, offers a way to close that chapter permanently. Once a case is finalized in court, your refund becomes binding and protected from future claw backs — providing the peace of mind that the administrative process simply can’t offer.

The Settlement Advantage Explained

When businesses pursue ERC litigation, the goal isn’t just to push their refund forward — it’s to secure a resolution that lasts. That’s where settlement comes in.

A settlement, or a court-approved judgment, does more than get a refund paid. It provides legal finality. Once the case is resolved through the courts, the refund amount is binding. The IRS can’t come back months or years later and challenge it — even under the new six-year audit window.

This protection is one of the most overlooked advantages of ERC litigation. While many see litigation as simply a way to speed things up, it’s also what ensures your refund stays yours once it’s resolved. In an environment where IRS guidance continues to shift and enforcement is tightening, that finality matters more than ever.

It’s also important to understand that settlement doesn’t mean confrontation. Most ERC litigation cases aren’t about fighting the IRS — they’re about creating structure where there currently is none. The court process introduces timelines, accountability, and documentation, ensuring your case moves forward with transparency and predictability.

In short, settlement brings both resolution and protection. It turns a long, uncertain waiting period into a defined process — one that ends with closure, not another round of questions.

Beyond Payment: ERC Litigation Brings Structure and Protection

For many businesses, the ERC refund process has been defined by uncertainty — long waits, unclear communication, and constant change. Litigation changes that. It introduces structure, accountability, and a definitive timeline into an otherwise open-ended process.

Once a case moves into court, deadlines apply. The government has 60 days to respond, and procedural steps ensure the matter continues to move forward. That’s a stark contrast to the administrative process, where the IRS can hold a claim indefinitely without consequence.

Just as importantly, litigation provides a safeguard for the future. When an ERC case is resolved through settlement or judgment, the outcome is final — protecting the refund from being revisited or clawed back under the six-year audit window. For businesses that have already waited years, that kind of closure provides confidence and peace of mind.

In the end, litigation is about more than just recovering your ERC refund — it’s about bringing closure to an uncertain process. For years, businesses have been left waiting with no answers or clear next steps. Litigation gives you a way to take control, move your claim forward, and ensure that once your refund is paid, it stays that way.

When ERC Litigation Makes the Most Sense

ERC litigation is designed for businesses that have been waiting six months or longer for their ERC refunds. After that point, the odds of progress through the administrative process drop sharply — leaving many businesses stuck in limbo with no timeline for review or resolution. Litigation provides a structured alternative, one that brings accountability and a defined path to closure.

Settlement tends to make the most sense for businesses that meet one or more of the following conditions:

  • ERC claims exceeding $250,000–$500,000. Larger refunds often face more scrutiny and longer processing times, making litigation an effective tool for moving them forward.
  • Claims delayed six months or longer. If your claim hasn’t seen progress in over half a year, litigation starts the 60-day response clock and ensures continued movement.
  • Partially denied claims. When certain quarters are approved and others denied, litigation allows for full review, ensuring the IRS considers the complete picture.

The takeaway: litigation isn’t about conflict — it’s about closure. For businesses still waiting on their ERC refunds, settlement provides the structure, accountability, and resolution the administrative process has failed to deliver.

How Brotman Law Helps Businesses Reach Resolution

At Brotman Law, our goal is to bring clarity and finality to an otherwise uncertain process. We don’t simply file lawsuits—we build strong, defensible cases designed to withstand court scrutiny and deliver lasting results.

Our process starts with a comprehensive review of your ERC filings, documentation, and correspondence. From there, we rebuild or strengthen your file, compiling the evidence most PEOs and third-party providers never created: government orders, legal opinion letters, revenue analyses, and detailed factual narratives linking operations to COVID-era restrictions.

Once the file is ready, we develop a litigation strategy tailored to your situation—whether that means filing suit in federal district court or the Court of Federal Claims. Our team then manages the entire process, coordinating with the Department of Justice and working toward an efficient resolution through settlement or judgment.

Throughout it all, we keep one focus: protecting your refund. Litigation doesn’t mean confrontation—it means enforcing timelines, achieving closure, and ensuring your refund can’t be clawed back later.

If your ERC refund is still pending—or if you’re worried about future IRS claw backs—contact Brotman Law to discuss your options. Our team can help you assess your claim, determine whether litigation is the right next step, and prepare a strong, defensible file to move your case forward with confidence.

Turning Uncertainty Into Resolution

The ERC refund process has left thousands of businesses waiting — many for years — without clear answers or timelines. The extended six-year audit window only adds to the uncertainty, leaving business owners questioning when (or if) their refund will ever be finalized.

Litigation provides an alternative path — one that introduces structure, enforces accountability, and leads to lasting resolution. Once a case settles, the matter is closed. The refund is secure, and the risk of future challenges disappears.

At Brotman Law, we help businesses take control of that process. From assessing claims and rebuilding documentation to managing every step of litigation, our focus is on helping clients move their ERC refunds from indefinite delays to final outcomes.

If your ERC refund has been delayed for months with no progress, contact Brotman Law to learn how litigation can help bring your case to a definitive close — and turn waiting into resolution.

ERC Refunds and PEOs: Who’s Really Responsible?

Stressed business owner working on documents related to ERC filings.


When the Employee Retention Credit (ERC) first became available, many businesses relied on Professional Employer Organizations (PEOs) to file their claims. It seemed like the simplest path—PEOs were already managing payroll, so why not let them handle the paperwork associated with filing the ERC claim too?

But now, as ERC refunds remain delayed and the IRS increases scrutiny, a key question is surfacing: who is actually responsible for defending these ERC claims if something goes wrong?

Key Takeaways

  • What Role Did PEOs Play in ERC Filings?
  • Who Is Really Responsible for the Refund?
  • Litigation With a PEO — What Makes It Different?
  • Rebuilding a Strong File Post-PEO
  • Why Businesses Pursue Litigation Anyway

The reality is that while PEOs may have submitted the filings, the responsibility for the ERC refund ultimately rests with the business itself. This creates a gray area—especially when litigation becomes necessary to move a claim forward. Businesses that filed through PEOs often face an extra layer of complexity in pursuing their refunds, not because the claims are invalid, but because the process requires cooperation between the employer, the PEO, and the legal team.

In this article, we’ll break down what role PEOs play, why businesses still bear the ultimate responsibility, and how litigation can help clarify and resolve ERC refund delays even when PEOs are involved.

What Role Did PEOs Play in ERC Filings?

For many businesses, especially small and mid-sized companies, working with a Professional Employer Organization (PEO) seemed like the easiest way to file their ERC claims. PEOs were already processing payroll taxes, so naturally, they became the ones to submit the required amended returns (Form 941-X) on behalf of their clients.

On paper, this arrangement made sense. The PEO handled the filing logistics, the business expected the refund, and everyone assumed the IRS would process claims without issue. But as refunds dragged on and litigation became a more realistic option, an important complication emerged: the filing technically belongs to the PEO.

That technical detail matters because in ERC litigation, the PEO is often required to be part of the case. The business is the rightful claimant, but because the PEO submitted the paperwork under its EIN, the lawsuit can’t move forward without at least acknowledging the PEO’s role. This doesn’t mean the PEO has any claim to the refund—it doesn’t. But it does add a layer of coordination that businesses who filed on their own don’t face.

Adding to the complexity, not all PEOs approach this issue the same way. Larger PEOs often resist involvement because of the scale of their filings. Many submitted ERC claims for hundreds or even thousands of clients under consolidated filings. Agreeing to participate in litigation for one client could raise concerns about opening the door to additional cases they’d rather avoid.

Smaller PEOs, on the other hand, are sometimes more willing to cooperate. With fewer clients and less exposure tied up in ERC filings, they tend to recognize that there’s little downside in allowing litigation to move forward.

Most PEOs fall somewhere in between, which means cooperation varies case by case. Some are quick to step aside, while others require careful negotiation.

The result? For businesses that filed through a PEO, navigating an ERC refund claim requires not just legal expertise but also strategic coordination with the PEO to keep the process moving.

Who Is Really Responsible for the Refund?

Some business owners assume that if the IRS asks for more documentation—or issues a disallowance letter—their PEO will step in to defend the claim. After all, the filing was made under the PEO’s EIN, so it feels like they should be the point of contact with the IRS.

But in practice, that’s not how it works. While the PEO is technically the filer, defending the claim isn’t their responsibility—and most won’t take it on. Their role ended with submission. If the IRS challenges eligibility, it’s the business itself that has to supply the documentation and legal arguments to support the credit.

The problem is that most PEOs never prepared this kind of supporting documentation in the first place. They submitted the amended return but didn’t build files with government orders, legal opinions, financial analyses, or operational narratives. That leaves many businesses in a tough position: they’re responsible for defending the claim, but they don’t have the evidence needed to do so.

This is where businesses that filed through PEOs often find themselves at a disadvantage. The claim may be valid, but without a defensible file, the business needs to reconstruct the supporting materials before it can move forward—especially if litigation becomes necessary.

Litigation With a PEO — What Makes It Different?

When a business decides to pursue litigation for an ERC refund that was filed through a PEO, the process comes with an extra layer of complexity. Because the filing was made under the PEO’s EIN, the PEO technically has to be included in the lawsuit.

This doesn’t mean the PEO is fighting over the refund. Instead, it’s about managing their procedural role in the case. As our firm Owner, Sam Brotman, often explains to clients who filed under PEOs:

“Everyone agrees where the plane should land—the refund belongs to you. The question is what flight path gets it there.”

That “flight path” varies depending on the PEO:

  • Smaller PEOs often step aside, cooperating enough to let the business and its attorneys move the case forward.
  • Larger PEOs may resist more strongly, especially if they’ve filed ERC claims for hundreds of clients under consolidated filings. In those cases, they may be hesitant to participate in litigation that could complicate how their broader filings are viewed.
  • Most PEOs fall somewhere in the middle—willing to collaborate when asked, but not eager to take an active role.

For the business owner, this usually doesn’t mean a direct burden. The challenge lies more with the attorneys, who need to coordinate with the PEO and manage the additional procedural steps.

The key takeaway: including a PEO in litigation may add time and complexity, but it doesn’t stop the claim from moving forward. With the right strategy, the “plane” still lands—the refund gets resolved—it just requires more navigation along the way.

Rebuilding a Strong File Post-PEO

One of the biggest challenges for businesses that filed ERC claims through a PEO is the lack of supporting documentation. PEOs typically submitted the amended returns, but they didn’t prepare the evidence needed to defend those filings if questioned by the IRS.

That’s where legal counsel steps in. To move an ERC claim forward—especially in litigation—you need a defensible file that goes beyond a simple payroll form. At Brotman Law, we help clients rebuild that file from the ground up, creating the documentation their PEO never provided.

A strong ERC litigation file often includes:

  • Government orders that directly impacted the business, tied to specific quarters.
  • Gross receipts analyses that demonstrate whether the business qualifies under the revenue test.
  • Legal opinion letters that explain how the business meets ERC requirements under the law.
  • Industry or contractual evidence showing compliance with federal mandates where state orders were limited.

By compiling these materials into a structured file, businesses are better equipped to present a complete and persuasive case in court. This process not only strengthens the litigation itself, but also ensures the refund is protected from potential claw backs down the road.

Why Businesses Pursue Litigation Anyway

For companies that filed through a PEO, litigation can feel like an added hurdle. Coordinating with another party, rebuilding documentation, and managing a legal process may sound like extra work. But for many businesses, it’s the only path that brings certainty and protection to an otherwise open-ended process.

Litigation offers two major advantages:

  • It starts the clock. Once a lawsuit is filed, the government has 60 days to respond. That’s a stark contrast to the administrative process, where claims can sit untouched for years.
  • It protects your refund. Under the new six-year audit window, even refunds that are eventually paid can be clawed back. But once a case is resolved in court—through settlement or judgment—that refund is final and no longer subject to claw backs.

For businesses waiting on substantial ERC refunds, this combination of accountability and finality is powerful. Even if a PEO adds procedural steps, litigation remains the surest way to move a claim forward and secure the refund for good.

Navigating ERC Refunds with a PEO

For many businesses, filing for the ERC through a PEO has created extra uncertainty. Owners often feel “stuck” because they aren’t getting clear updates—neither from the IRS nor from their PEO. And when updates do come, they’re often vague, offering little insight into when or if the refund will actually arrive.

The good news is that you’re not out of options. Litigation can still move your claim forward, but it requires careful coordination and strong supporting documentation to fill in the gaps your PEO didn’t provide. At Brotman Law, we rebuild ERC files, manage the PEO component of litigation, and pursue legal strategies that both enforce timelines and protect refunds from claw backs.

If your ERC refund was filed through a PEO and you’re still waiting, now is the time to get clarity on your options. Contact Brotman Law to learn more about how litigation works in these cases and whether it may be the right next step for your business.

If the IRS has disallowed your ERC claim, you may have options — including litigation. Learn about ERC disallowance defense →

ERC Refunds: The Fork in the Road – Administrative Path vs. Litigation

Frustrated businesswoman at desk with financial charts, symbolizing delays and uncertainty in ERC refund process.

Why Businesses Are Still Waiting on ERC Refunds

Key Takeaways

  • Why Businesses Are Still Waiting on ERC Refunds
  • The Administrative Path: Endless Waiting and Growing Risk
  • The Litigation Path: Forcing Resolution Through the Courts
  • The Fork in the Road: Choosing Your Path
  • Why Businesses Are Increasingly Choosing Litigation

The Employee Retention Credit (ERC) was designed to provide financial relief to businesses impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic. For many, it represented not just tax savings, but a financial lifeline to cover payroll, stabilize operations, and keep the doors open.

But years later, thousands of businesses are still waiting on their ERC refunds. Unlike tax returns, which must be processed within defined timelines, ERC refund claims don’t have statutory deadlines. That means the IRS can hold them indefinitely. Add in leadership turnover, staffing cuts, and an overwhelmed review process, and many businesses have been left in limbo — waiting three or even four years for relief they were promised.

This leaves business owners at a fork in the road:

  • Stay in the administrative process and continue waiting, with no clear end in sight.
  • Or pursue litigation, which forces the government to respond and brings resolution on a defined timeline.

The Administrative Path: Endless Waiting and Growing Risk

On the surface, staying in the administrative process feels like the least disruptive option. After all, the IRS will eventually get to your claim — right? The problem is that there’s no legal requirement for when that has to happen.

Why ERC Refunds Get Stuck

  • No statutory deadline: The IRS is under no obligation to process ERC refunds within a specific timeframe.
  • Severe backlogs: Staffing cuts and leadership churn mean fewer agents reviewing claims and more denials issued without explanation.
  • Scrutiny of certain claims: Larger claims and businesses in certain states are facing closer review, which adds even more delay.

A Frozen Pipeline

On top of backlogs and staffing issues, Congress passed what has been called Trump’s Big Beautiful Bill, which prohibited the IRS from processing any ERC refund claims filed after January 31, 2024.

That means if your business filed after that date, your claim isn’t just delayed — it’s effectively frozen until further notice. This freeze also signals the government’s increasing caution toward ERC claims, making it clear they are scrutinizing the program more closely.

The Risks of Waiting

  • Indefinite delays: Many businesses have already been waiting three to four years with no movement.
  • Increased denial risk: The longer a claim sits, the more likely it is to be denied without a clear rationale.
  • Clawback exposure: Even if a refund is eventually paid, the IRS now has six years to audit and claw back ERC refunds. Businesses that wait could still face uncertainty years down the road.

The Business Impact

These delays don’t just cause frustration — they stall real-world decisions. Business owners have had to put off hiring, expansion, or capital investments because their ERC refunds remain tied up in administrative limbo.

The Litigation Path: Forcing Resolution Through the Courts

For businesses that don’t want to remain in IRS limbo, litigation provides a way to move forward. Filing an ERC refund lawsuit transfers your claim out of the administrative process and into federal court, where timelines and rules of procedure ensure progress.

What Litigation Involves

  • Filing a lawsuit: Typically in federal district court or the Court of Federal Claims.
  • Case review: A neutral federal judge evaluates your claim, not IRS auditors.
  • Government representation: The Department of Justice’s Civil Tax Division, not the IRS, handles ERC refund litigation.
  • The 60-day clock: Once a lawsuit is filed, the government has 60 days to respond — a stark contrast to the unlimited delays in the administrative process.

Benefits of Litigation

  • Forces the IRS to act: A lawsuit compels the government to engage with your claim.
  • Neutral review: Your case is decided by a judge, removing it from IRS backlog and delay.
  • Structured timeline: Filing a lawsuit initiates deadlines and keeps the case moving forward.
  • Settlement protection: Once settled, your refund is final — shielding it from clawbacks during the extended 6-year audit window.

Common Misconceptions

  • “Litigation will trigger an audit.” False. Lawsuits are handled in court, and the IRS does not retaliate against businesses for exercising their rights.
  • “Litigation is only for big corporations.” In reality, mid-sized businesses with claims of $250k–$500k or more are among the best candidates for this option.
  • “Litigation means fighting IRS agents in court.” Also false. The IRS itself is not present; the DOJ defends, and the judge makes the decision.

Why Businesses Choose Litigation

For companies that have already been waiting years, litigation offers something the administrative process cannot: accountability. It creates a defined process, sets deadlines, and provides the potential for settlement that protects refunds from future clawbacks.

The Fork in the Road: Choosing Your Path

Every business waiting on an ERC refund eventually reaches a decision point: keep waiting in the administrative process, or pursue litigation. Each path carries its own realities and risks.

Path 1: The Administrative Route

  • Timeline: No legal deadline; claims can remain unprocessed indefinitely.
  • Risk: Higher chance of delays or denials without clear explanations.
  • Clawback Exposure: Even if paid, refunds can be audited and clawed back for up to 6 years.
  • Business Impact: Ties up cash flow, delays hiring and investment, and creates ongoing uncertainty.

Path 2: The Litigation Route

  • Timeline: Filing a lawsuit starts a 60-day clock for the government to respond, moving your claim forward.
  • Risk: Litigation introduces legal steps, but it ensures your case is reviewed by a judge rather than sitting in backlog.
  • Clawback Exposure: Once resolved through settlement or judgment, your refund is final and shielded from clawbacks.
  • Business Impact: You’ll finally recover the refund your business has been waiting for. In many cases, accrued interest can also help offset the cost of litigation.

Making the Choice

The right path depends on your business’s needs, claim size, and tolerance for uncertainty. For some, waiting may feel easier in the short term. For others — especially those with larger claims or urgent cash flow needs — litigation offers accountability, structure, and resolution the administrative process cannot provide.

Why Businesses Are Increasingly Choosing Litigation

After years of waiting, many businesses are reevaluating whether staying in the administrative process is worth the uncertainty. Litigation has become an option because it provides structure where the IRS does not.

Mounting Delays

Some businesses have already been waiting three to four years for ERC refunds, with no clear timeline for resolution. On top of that, Congress passed Trump’s Big Beautiful Bill, which froze processing for all claims filed after January 31, 2024. That left many businesses with refunds that aren’t just delayed — they’re completely blocked from moving forward.

Defined Timelines

Litigation offers something the administrative path cannot: accountability. Filing a lawsuit starts a 60-day clock for the government to respond. Even if the process takes time, it comes with deadlines that prevent claims from sitting untouched for years.

Protection Against Clawbacks

Under the new six-year audit window, even paid refunds can be clawed back. Litigation adds protection, because once a case is resolved through settlement or judgment, the refund is final and shielded from future clawbacks.

Who Should Consider Litigation?

Litigation isn’t the right move for every business, but it is worth serious consideration if:

  • Your ERC claim is $250,000 or more (ideally $500,000+).
  • Your business is human-capital heavy or depends on a physical location.
  • You’ve been waiting 6+ months with no refund or clear response from the IRS.
  • For these businesses, litigation isn’t just a legal option — it’s a practical strategy to bring long-delayed refunds to resolution. The question then becomes: which path makes the most sense for your situation, and how do you prepare to take it?

How Brotman Law Helps Businesses Navigate This Decision

ERC refund claims are complex, and litigation adds another layer of difficulty — especially for businesses that filed through PEOs or operate across multiple states. At Brotman Law, we help businesses:

  • Evaluate their options: We review your claim, documentation, and circumstances to determine whether litigation makes sense for your situation.
  • Build a defensible file: Our team prepares supporting materials such as legal opinion letters, calculations, and government orders that link directly to your business operations.
  • Manage complexities: From PEO-filed claims to multi-state operations, we’ve seen the challenges and know how to navigate them.
  • Pursue litigation when needed: We initiate lawsuits in federal court to move claims forward, enforce accountability, and protect refunds from clawbacks.

Our role isn’t just to litigate — it’s to make sure you’re in the strongest possible position, whichever path you choose.

Taking the Next Step Toward Your ERC Refund

The ERC refund process has left thousands of businesses in limbo. With no deadlines in the administrative process, claims can sit indefinitely, creating uncertainty and risk. Litigation provides an alternative path — one that forces government action, sets timelines, and offers protection against future clawbacks.

For many businesses, the choice is clear: keep waiting in a stalled system, or take action to move forward with certainty.

If your ERC refund has been delayed more than six months, now is the time to explore your options. Contact Brotman Law to schedule a consultation and learn whether litigation is the right step for your business.

Learn More About the Litigation Process

Want to understand the steps involved in suing the IRS for your ERC refund? Read our in-depth guide on The ERC Litigation Process: What to Expect When Suing the IRS to get a clearer picture of how legal action can help you secure your refund faster.

Contact us today to schedule a consultation and take the first step toward recovering your ERC refund.

The Three Elements of a Powerful Tax Strategy

Person reviewing financial documents with a calculator and laptop, symbolizing tax preparation or financial planning.


When most people think about taxes, they think about rules, forms, and compliance. But if you’re looking to take real control of your tax outcomes, there’s a deeper framework at play—one that goes beyond simply following the rules and starts asking: what’s best for the client?

Key Takeaways

  • What Is Tax Strategy—And Why It’s Different from Compliance
  • 1. Knowledge of Tax Law
  • 2. Knowledge of Tax Procedure
  • 3. Situational Awareness
  • Strategy That Works for You

What Is Tax Strategy—And Why It’s Different from Compliance

At its core, tax compliance is about meeting government requirements. It’s what your CPA does when they file your return, make sure your estimated payments are accurate, and help you stay within the bounds of IRS expectations. And while compliance is necessary, it’s not designed to optimize your outcome—only to ensure you’re checking the right boxes.

Tax strategy, on the other hand, is forward-looking. It’s about actively using the tax code to your advantage. Instead of reacting to what already happened, it’s focused on designing legal structures and making intentional decisions that minimize your tax liability, support your goals, and protect your wealth.

This is where tax attorneys often come in. While CPAs are highly skilled in compliance and reporting, attorneys bring a deeper focus on advocacy, legal structure, and risk mitigation. They’re trained to think in terms of defense, long-term positioning, and how the law is enforced—not just how it’s written.

So now that you understand what tax strategy actually is, let’s explore what makes it effective. Here are the three core elements of every strong tax strategy.

1. Knowledge of Tax Law

The foundation of any tax strategy is a solid understanding of the law itself. Both CPAs and attorneys receive training in tax law—how the rules are written, where they apply, and what they cover. But knowing the law is just the first step. Strategy begins when you look at the law not as a list of requirements, but as a toolbox of possibilities.

2. Knowledge of Tax Procedure

Here’s where the difference really starts to show. Tax procedure is about how the IRS (or state agencies) interpret and enforce the law. In many cases, it’s not just about what the law says—it’s about how it’s applied in the real world.

A tax attorney brings an advocacy mindset to the table. We don’t just prepare documents—we prepare for outcomes. We understand how decisions will play out under scrutiny, how audits unfold, and how to mitigate risk before it becomes a problem. This procedural insight allows us to craft strategies that are not only legal—but defensible.

3. Situational Awareness

This is the most overlooked—but arguably most critical—element of great tax strategy.

Situational awareness means understanding the client’s world. Their business goals. Their personal ambitions. Their risk tolerance. It’s about looking beyond the numbers and seeing the full picture.

Why is this so important? Because no two clients are the same. What’s optimal for one business owner may be completely wrong for another. The best strategies are those crafted with empathy, insight, and a clear view of the bigger picture.

Strategy That Works for You

At Brotman Law, our approach to tax strategy combines deep legal knowledge, practical experience, and a high level of personal understanding. We believe that the best outcomes happen when all three elements—law, procedure, and perspective—work together to serve the client’s real-life needs.

Want to dive deeper? Watch the video above to hear Sam Brotman explain how these three elements work together in real-life tax strategy.

Want to Learn More?

Whether you’re looking to reduce your personal tax burden or maximize your business’s after-tax profit, we offer tailored services for both individuals and business owners.

Looking for more insights? Explore these related articles and resources:

 

Why a Corporate Holding Company Could Be Your Smartest Tax Move Yet

Diagram illustrating cash flow with interconnected circles labeled asset, investment, money, and return—representing financial strategy and resource allocation."

Key Takeaways

  • The Two-Circle Framework: Enterprise vs. Individual
  • A Smarter Alternative: The Corporate Holding Company
  • The Bottom Line

Most business owners want to use their profits to fund other ventures, build wealth, and keep growing. But few realize how much money they lose when they move profits from their business to their personal accounts. That transfer—done without strategy—can mean the difference between keeping 79% of your money and keeping just 61%.

The Two-Circle Framework: Enterprise vs. Individual

Sam Brotman often explains tax flow using two circles: the left circle represents your enterprise—your businesses, investments, and income sources. The right circle represents you or your family.

As income is earned in the enterprise, expenses are deducted, and what’s left is profit. That profit is typically distributed to the individual to support lifestyle expenses—mortgage, education, vacations, investments, and so on.

But here’s the catch: when you move profits from your business to your personal account, that income is taxed at individual rates—currently 37% to 39.6% federally, plus state tax.

A Smarter Alternative: The Corporate Holding Company

What if you didn’t need all that profit right away? What if you could preserve more of it and still put it to work?

That’s where a corporate holding company comes in. Rather than paying high individual tax rates, you can move excess profits into a holding company and preserve the 21% corporate tax rate. Here’s how:

  • Your operating business distributes excess profits to the holding company instead of to you personally.
  • Because both are corporations, you can often take advantage of the dividends received deduction—resulting in little or no tax on the transfer.
  • The holding company then reinvests those funds into other ventures: real estate, businesses, or passive investments.

It’s like placing the holding company at the center of your investment web, with cash flowing up and down through different “tentacles,” all while maintaining efficiency and flexibility.

What About My CPA?

If this idea makes your CPA uneasy, you’re not alone. Many CPAs are focused on compliance and may suggest that you simply distribute income to yourself. But a better question is: Why? Why take income at a higher tax rate when a holding company structure offers greater efficiency and protection?

This strategy isn’t just about taxes—it’s about asset protection too. Individuals are exposed to lawsuits, liability, and risk. Corporations, by contrast, offer a shield. If you hold assets personally and something goes wrong (say, a car accident or lawsuit), all of your wealth is potentially on the line.

A corporate holding company helps you:

  • Lower your overall tax rate
  • Preserve capital for future investments
  • Protect assets from liability
  • Create a centralized hub for strategic growth

The Bottom Line

People make great entrepreneurs—but terrible holding companies. By rerouting your profit through a corporate holding company, you keep more of what you earn and build wealth more safely and strategically.

Want to learn how this structure might apply to your business? Watch the full video or reach out to our team to explore whether a holding company is the right move for your financial future.

Whether you’re looking to reduce your personal tax burden or maximize your business’s after-tax profit, we offer tailored services for both individuals and business owners.

Looking for more insights? Explore these related articles and resources:

 

Tax Compliance vs. Tax Strategy: Why It Pays to Know the Difference

Strategic chess pieces with overlay of financial graphs, symbolizing tax planning, business strategy, and decision-making in a competitive environment.

Key Takeaways

  • What Is Tax Compliance?
  • Enter: Real Tax Strategy
  • The CPA Planning Trap
  • What Is Tax Optimization?
  • The Bottom Line

For most people, the term “tax planning” brings to mind an annual meeting with their CPA, focused on making sure all the right forms are filled out and filed on time. But if that’s the extent of your experience, you’re only seeing part of the picture—and potentially leaving significant money on the table.

What Is Tax Compliance?

Tax compliance is the process of staying on the right side of the law. Your CPA ensures that your income is reported correctly, that you’re paying estimated taxes on time, and that your returns align with IRS and state requirements. Compliance is essential. But it’s also just the baseline. It’s what the government requires—and what your accountant is trained to deliver.

Enter: Real Tax Strategy

As your finances or your business become more complex, you eventually outgrow a compliance-only approach. That’s when real tax strategy becomes crucial. Tax strategy means understanding the law—and more importantly, understanding how to use the law to benefit your specific situation.

At Brotman Law, we define tax strategy as crafting a customized plan that takes into account not just what’s required, but what’s optimal. It’s driven by a simple, powerful question: What is best for the client and their individual situation?

The CPA Planning Trap

Many CPAs market themselves as offering “tax planning.” But in practice, their planning is often limited to compliance-oriented tasks: making sure your quarterly estimates are correct, checking for standard deductions, or recommending minor adjustments that don’t truly move the needle.

While CPAs are excellent at keeping you compliant, they are rarely trained to think strategically about your tax situation. They operate within the box. Tax attorneys and strategic advisors, on the other hand, are trained to look beyond it.

What Is Tax Optimization?

Tax optimization is the next level. It’s the proactive implementation of tax strategy, customized to your business, your goals, and your long-term vision. At Brotman Law, we call this “tax optimization” because it combines strategic planning with execution. It’s about:

  • Designing structures to minimize your effective tax rate
  • Timing revenue and expenses to your advantage
  • Reclassifying income when beneficial
  • Using legal frameworks to protect your wealth and reduce exposure

And we do it all while keeping you safe and audit-ready.

The Bottom Line

If your current tax plan feels reactive, narrow, or overly focused on filing forms—or if your tax bill consistently feels higher than it should be—it may be time to rethink your approach. A real tax strategy doesn’t just help you follow the rules—it helps you use them intentionally to support your financial goals.

Want to see how tax optimization could work for you? Watch the full video above or reach out to our team to learn how strategic planning can save you money and protect your future. Whether you’re looking to reduce your personal tax burden or maximize your business’s after-tax profit, we offer tailored services for both individuals and business owners.

Looking for more insights? Explore these related articles and resources:

Is Your CPA Holding You Back from Real Tax Savings?

Business professionals analyzing financial charts and graphs at a desk, highlighting data-driven tax planning and strategic decision-making.

Key Takeaways

  • The Compliance Trap
  • When a CPA Isn’t the Whole Strategy
  • What Real Tax Strategy Looks Like
  • Why Tax Strategy Needs Legal Insight
  • Real-World Results: A Case in Point

Most people assume that hiring a CPA means their taxes are in good hands. And while CPAs are essential for preparing tax returns and staying compliant with the IRS, they’re not always equipped to help you achieve real, ongoing tax savings.

If you’ve ever felt like your tax bill is too high despite having a competent accountant, you’re not alone—and you’re not wrong.

The Compliance Trap

CPAs are trained in accounting and tax compliance. Their job is to accurately record what happened last year and report it to the IRS. They help you stay in bounds, avoid penalties, and make sure your return is filed properly. But compliance is just the baseline—it’s not a strategy.

Strategic tax planning, on the other hand, looks forward. It’s about proactively managing income, timing, business structures, and compensation to minimize your tax burden legally and sustainably. That’s a different skillset—and it’s often outside the scope of what most CPAs are trained or incentivized to do.

When a CPA Isn’t the Whole Strategy

It’s not that CPAs are doing anything wrong. In fact, many are great at what they do. The problem is that tax optimization requires more than plugging numbers into a return. It requires strategic thinking, legal insight, and collaboration across disciplines like estate planning, finance, and entity structuring.

Here’s a common scenario: A business owner asks their CPA for tax planning help. The CPA recommends an S-Corp election and maybe maxing out a retirement plan. But what’s left untouched? Multi-entity structuring. Income reclassification. Timing of revenue recognition. State tax arbitrage. These high-impact strategies are usually the domain of tax attorneys and strategists.

Without someone directing the strategy, the CPA often becomes an unintentional bottleneck. Even when clients switch accountants, the results rarely change—because the underlying approach hasn’t.

What Real Tax Strategy Looks Like

At Brotman Law, our tax strategy process is built around five core components—areas that often extend beyond the traditional scope of a CPA’s role and require a more integrated, legal approach:

  1. Proper Income Allocation – We ensure that income is classified and taxed in the most advantageous way (e.g., capital gains vs. ordinary income, individual vs. corporate rates).
  2. Multistate Income Allocation & Arbitrage – We identify state-by-state tax opportunities and compliance risks that can result in major savings.
  3. Enterprise Income and Expense Optimization – We analyze the structure of the business, including how it earns and spends, to find overlooked deductions and inefficiencies.
  4. Efficient Income Transfer to Individuals – We help clients move income from the business to their personal accounts in the most tax-efficient manner possible.
  5. Maximizing Credits & Deductions – This includes underused opportunities like R&D tax credits, depreciation strategies, and owner benefit expenses.

This framework turns reactive compliance into proactive savings—and it’s what sets our clients apart from those who just “check the tax box.”

Why Tax Strategy Needs Legal Insight

Tax attorneys are uniquely positioned to lead strategic planning because they understand not just the tax code, but how it’s enforced. They bring:

  • Attorney-client privilege, offering an extra layer of privacy
  • A legal lens on entity structures, compensation, and audits
  • Strategic oversight, coordinating efforts between CPAs, financial advisors, and legal professionals

At Brotman Law, our tax strategy team acts as the integrator—bringing together all the moving pieces and ensuring every decision is aligned for maximum tax efficiency.

Real-World Results: A Case in Point

Take the example of a professional services client who had worked with the same CPA for over a decade. While everything looked fine on paper, they were unknowingly overpaying the IRS by hundreds of thousands of dollars. After conducting a strategic review, our team helped restructure their business entities and optimize expense flow. The result? More than $579,000 in tax savings over three years—without cutting staff or lifestyle.

These kinds of results are not outliers—they’re the outcome of applying a repeatable, disciplined tax strategy tailored to each client’s goals.

Who’s Orchestrating Your Tax Strategy?

Your CPA, attorney, and financial advisor each play critical roles—but without a clear leader to integrate those efforts, tax planning often falls flat. At Brotman Law, we serve as that integrator—ensuring your entire advisory team is aligned around one coordinated, tax-optimized strategy.

FAQ: Common Questions We Hear

Isn’t my CPA supposed to handle tax planning?
Most CPAs focus on compliance—ensuring your returns are filed correctly. Strategic planning requires a forward-looking, legal and structural approach that CPAs may not be trained or resourced to provide.

Is tax strategy only for big companies?
Not at all. Anyone with recurring income—whether from a business, real estate, or investments—can benefit from proactive tax optimization.

What happens if I do nothing?
Inaction often means overpaying the IRS year after year. Even modest changes in income classification or timing can result in significant long-term savings.

Will tax strategy increase my audit risk?
Not when it’s done properly. In fact, a well-designed tax strategy often reduces audit risk because it ensures your tax positions are clearly documented, legally sound, and aligned with what the IRS expects to see. Many audit triggers stem from inconsistent filings or red flags caused by haphazard deductions. By contrast, strategic planning—especially when led by tax attorneys—prioritizes compliance while optimizing outcomes, giving you the best of both worlds: minimized liability and peace of mind.

Take Back Control of Your Tax Plan

If your current setup feels reactive or limited, it might be time to reassess who’s directing your tax strategy. Your CPA is a valuable member of your team, and when paired with a strategy leader—like a tax attorney—you can unlock even greater opportunities for long-term tax savings and planning.

Want to learn how real tax savings happen? Explore our service pages tailored for individuals and business owners, where we break down key strategies and share real client results.

It’s time to go beyond compliance—and into true tax optimization.

The Hidden Cost of Doing Nothing: Why You Might Be Overpaying the IRS

Close-up of a calendar with the word 'Tax' circled in red ink, marked with a pin, symbolizing a critical tax deadline or planning date.

Key Takeaways

  • The Myth of “Set It and Forget It”
  • The Real Price of Inaction
  • You Can’t Afford to Wait
  • CPA vs. Tax Attorney: Why It Matters
  • How Our Tax Strategy Process Works

When it comes to tax planning, most people fall into one of two camps: those who treat taxes as a once-a-year compliance exercise, and those who take a strategic approach to minimize what they pay. If you belong to the first group, you might be leaving tens or even hundreds of thousands of dollars on the table—every single year.

The Myth of “Set It and Forget It”

A common misconception is that if you’re not getting audited and your CPA files your return on time, then you’re doing everything right. But this mindset overlooks one critical truth: compliance is not the same as strategy.

Tax compliance is reactive. It focuses on recording and reporting income after it has been earned and spent. Tax strategy, on the other hand, is proactive. It involves evaluating your income sources, entity structure, spending habits, and financial goals in advance, then using that information to reduce your tax burden legally and sustainably.

Take for example one client who had used the same CPA for nearly a decade. Every year, he filed on time, stayed out of trouble, and felt confident that his tax situation was “handled.” But after a strategic review with our team, we discovered missed opportunities in his business structure and compensation strategy. Within the first year of implementing a new plan, he saved over $120,000—money that had previously gone straight to the IRS without a second thought. This wasn’t about gaming the system; it was about finally playing by the rules to his full advantage.

A common misconception is that if you’re not getting audited and your CPA files your return on time, then you’re doing everything right. But this mindset overlooks one critical truth: compliance is not the same as strategy.

The Real Price of Inaction

Consider this: at Brotman Law, our clients typically save between 10% and 30% of their tax bill through strategic tax optimization. One recent case showed a savings of nearly $1.5 million over five years, with no reduction in the family’s lifestyle. Those savings went toward investments, retirement planning, and long-term financial security—not to the IRS.

Every year you delay building a tax strategy is another year of overspending on your single largest expense. It’s like ignoring a leaky pipe and letting thousands of dollars drip away.

You Can’t Afford to Wait

The reality is, most people delay tax strategy for reasons that seem valid—but often aren’t. Let’s debunk a few of the most common:

  • “I already have a CPA.” CPAs are great for filing your taxes, but many don’t specialize in proactive planning. Tax strategy is a different discipline, one that works before tax season rolls around.
  • “Tax laws are too complicated; I’ll just end up getting audited.” A solid tax strategy isn’t risky—it’s built on the existing tax code. With a tax attorney guiding the process, your plan is not only legal but also audit-resistant.
  • “I don’t have time right now.” The longer you wait, the more money you leave on the table. A strategic review takes less time than you think—and pays off for years to come.

So ask yourself: how confident are you that you’re not overpaying? If the answer is anything less than a 10 out of 10, it might be time to take a closer look. The sooner you begin working with a qualified tax strategist, the sooner you can start unlocking meaningful savings. This isn’t about loopholes or gray areas—it’s about structuring your finances in a way that makes the tax code work for you, not against you.

CPA vs. Tax Attorney: Why It Matters

While Certified Public Accountants (CPAs) are skilled at preparing tax returns and ensuring compliance, their training often stops short of strategic planning. CPAs focus on what’s already happened—calculating, documenting, and reporting. Tax attorneys, on the other hand, are trained in law, advocacy, and high-level strategy. They understand not only what the tax code says, but how it’s enforced, and how to structure your income, entity, and asset flows to your advantage. Working with a tax attorney ensures your plan is not only effective, but also legally protected and resilient in the face of audits.

How Our Tax Strategy Process Works

At Brotman Law, we follow a clear, data-driven process to uncover and capture tax savings across five strategic focus areas. Here’s how it works:

  1. Proper Income Allocation – We begin by ensuring your income is classified correctly—ordinary income, capital gains, corporate or individual—so that it’s taxed in the most favorable way.
  2. Multistate Income Allocation & Arbitrage – Businesses often overlook the opportunity to lower taxes by strategically allocating income across multiple states. We identify where you may be overpaying and structure income to take advantage of lower state tax rates.
  3. Enterprise Income and Expense Optimization – We dig deep into how your business earns income and what expenses support that activity. This allows us to reclassify or consolidate expenses, identify tax-advantaged structures, and reduce taxable profit.
  4. Efficient Income Transfer to Individuals – Once profits are optimized, we strategize how to transfer funds to you personally (e.g., wages, dividends, equity) in a tax-efficient way. The goal is to meet your family’s lifestyle needs while minimizing personal tax liability.
  5. Maximizing Expenses, Credits, and Deductions – Finally, we identify underused tax credits and deductions—including R&D credits and owner benefit expenses—that can create meaningful tax relief. Every little bit adds up.

This multi-layered approach isn’t just about lowering one year’s tax bill—it’s about designing a lasting framework that supports wealth growth, business reinvestment, and family well-being.

Ready to Take the First Step?

If this article has raised questions or sparked curiosity about your current tax situation, we encourage you to connect with our team. Brotman Law does provide personalized, paid tax strategy assessments that deliver clear, actionable recommendations tailored to your goals.

These sessions are a worthwhile investment for business owners and individuals serious about minimizing their tax burden and protecting their wealth.

Want to Learn More about Tax Strategy?

Whether you’re an individual looking to protect your personal wealth or a business owner aiming to maximize after-tax profit, we have dedicated content to help you dive deeper.

Each page includes on-demand videos that break down key strategies—perfect for anyone who wants to take control of their tax planning year-round.

ERC Refund Processing Time: How Long Will It Take — and What Can You Do About It?

Digital tax return concept with 'TAX+' key highlighted, symbolizing income tax processing and IRS filing

Key Takeaways

  • Why Are ERC Refunds Taking So Long?
  • The 5 ERC Refund Paths — And How Long Each One Takes
  • So, What’s the Fastest Way to Get Your ERC Refund?
  • Who Qualifies for ERC FastTrack?
  • Why We Recommend This Path — and Why It Works

If your ERC refund still hasn’t arrived, you’re not alone. Thousands of businesses are stuck in limbo, wondering when — or if — the IRS will ever release their funds.

And while some delays are legitimate, many are part of a strategic slowdown.

Here’s the uncomfortable truth:

The IRS has no legal obligation to process your claim within any specific timeframe.

According to the Internal Revenue Manual (IRM 21.4.1.4):

“The IRS is not statutorily required to process a refund claim within a specific period. The law only limits how long a taxpayer has to file a claim — not how long the IRS has to respond.”

This means your ERC refund could sit untouched for months — even years — with no explanation and no recourse. The IRS is not required to act. But you are not powerless.

There’s a legal mechanism that puts pressure on the system: a federal refund lawsuit. That’s where ERC FastTrack comes in.

In this article, we’ll break down the five paths businesses are taking to handle ERC refund delays, the average processing time for each, and which option can actually move your refund forward.

Why Are ERC Refunds Taking So Long?

Before we get into solutions, it helps to understand why so many businesses are stuck.

The IRS is facing a perfect storm:

  • A massive backlog of ERC claims (hundreds of thousands)
  • Increased scrutiny on “questionable” filings
  • Staffing cuts across critical departments
  • Political and media pressure to reduce payouts

But behind the scenes, many large claims are being intentionally delayed or quietly denied — often without formal notice.

In other words: If you’re waiting, the clock may not even be ticking.

The 5 ERC Refund Paths — And How Long Each One Takes

Let’s walk through your current options — including the typical timelines and risks.

1. Do Nothing

Timeline: 24–36+ months (or indefinitely)

Risk: Quiet denial, loss of refund

This is what most businesses are doing — waiting and hoping. But with IRS capacity stretched thin, many legitimate claims are being deprioritized or ignored entirely. Unfortunately, inaction is often the riskiest choice.

2. File with the Taxpayer Advocate Service (TAS)

Timeline: 6–18 months

Works best for: Hardship cases only

The Taxpayer Advocate can flag your case, but they have no authority to force the IRS to act. TAS is helpful for hardship scenarios, but it’s not designed to move large refund claims forward quickly.

3. Contact Your Congressional Representative

Timeline: Varies — often 12+ months

Outcome: Visibility, not action

Your congressperson may send an inquiry on your behalf, which can get your claim noticed — but not necessarily paid. They’re handling thousands of ERC-related requests and typically cannot provide direct resolution.

4. Traditional Refund Litigation

Timeline: 12–24+ months

Problem: Slow, reactive, often ineffective

Filing a refund lawsuit is a formal option — but many firms take a volume-driven approach, without the ERC-specific expertise needed for fast resolution. Traditional litigation can drag on, adding legal stress without clear payoff.

5. ERC FastTrack Recovery

Timeline: Often resolved in 6–12 months

Advantage: Strategic, pre-packaged, leverage-based approach

Our ERC FastTrack Recovery service is different by design:

  • We only accept strong, litigation-ready claims
  • We file to create settlement leverage, not to fight for sport
  • Most cases resolve before trial — many within a year

This process puts your claim on the DOJ’s radar, forces a response, and gets real timelines moving.

So, What’s the Fastest Way to Get Your ERC Refund?

Here’s a side-by-side snapshot:

  • Do Nothing – 24–36+ months
  • Taxpayer Advocate – 6–18 months
  • Contact Congress – 12+ months
  • Traditional Refund Lawsuit – 12–24+ months
  • ERC FastTrack – 6–12 months

Why Choose ERC FastTrack?

ERC FastTrack Recovery is not traditional litigation. It’s a strategic, goal-oriented pathway designed to force movement — without drawn-out court battles or unnecessary complexity. Most firms litigate to fight. We litigate to win quickly and efficiently.

When you choose ERC FastTrack, your claim is removed from the IRS’s internal backlog and repositioned where real deadlines and oversight exist: federal court.

Here’s what that shift accomplishes:

  • Your case is no longer under the IRS’s exclusive control. It’s now handled by the Department of Justice (DOJ), Civil Tax Division.
  • The IRS becomes the government’s “client” in a federal refund suit — while the DOJ becomes the negotiating party.
  • The DOJ, unlike the IRS, must respond under the supervision of the court. Lawsuits have timetables. DOJ lawyers have duties to the court. Delay is no longer a tactic.
  • Most importantly, the DOJ has both the authority and the motivation to resolve cases when there’s risk to the government.

When done right, this creates real leverage. And when that leverage is paired with a well-documented, litigation-ready ERC claim, it can result in:

  • Full ERC refunds
  • Accrued interest
  • Resolution in as little as 6 to 12 months

This isn’t about fighting for sport. It’s about creating a path to recovery that the IRS simply doesn’t offer — and doing it without the friction, fog, or inertia that has left so many business owners in refund limbo.

Who Qualifies for ERC FastTrack?

ERC FastTrack isn’t for everyone — and that’s intentional.

This strategy is designed for business owners who want to stop waiting and start moving toward a real outcome. We focus on strong, well-documented claims with legitimate business impacts — not high-volume filings or one-size-fits-all submissions.

1. You Have a Large, Unpaid ERC Claim

You’re owed a substantial refund — typically $500,000 or more — and it’s still sitting. You may have received a partial 2020 refund, but your 2021 claim has gone untouched. The numbers are real. The claim was filed. But the IRS hasn’t moved — and you’re tired of the silence.

2. Your Claim Was Filed Over 6 Months Ago

You filed your 941-X. You followed the rules. But since then, there’s been no payout, no update, and no movement. The IRS hasn’t processed your refund and hasn’t explained why. If you’ve been stuck in this holding pattern for six months or longer, FastTrack may be your most effective next step.

3. Your Business Was Clearly Impacted by COVID

We’re not here to stretch eligibility. We’re here to defend real claims — for businesses that took real hits. If your operations were restricted by government orders, your revenue or workforce was affected, or you operated in a high-risk industry (such as schools, healthcare, hospitality, or manufacturing), your claim likely has the strength to stand up in litigation.

4. You Can Provide Documentation Quickly

We don’t need months of back-and-forth. If you or your CPA can provide access to financials, payroll data, and your ERC claim files, we can take it from there. Once we have what we need, your involvement is minimal — and the process moves fast.

5. You Want to Work With an Experienced Tax Litigation Team

ERC FastTrack isn’t just a filing strategy — it’s a litigation strategy. You’ll be represented by a team that’s handled hundreds of ERC cases, understands DOJ negotiation tactics, and knows how to get results in federal court. If you’re looking for an operator, not just a lawyer, you’re in the right place.

Why We Recommend This Path — and Why It Works

ERC FastTrack isn’t just faster. It’s structurally different — and that’s why it works.

Every other path relies on the IRS to take action voluntarily. Whether you’re waiting for standard processing, contacting the Taxpayer Advocate, or asking your congressperson to intervene, you’re still hoping the IRS decides to prioritize your case. But if your refund hasn’t arrived in 6, 12, or even 18 months, that approach has already failed you.

ERC FastTrack removes that risk by changing the playing field.

When you file a federal refund lawsuit:

  • The IRS no longer controls your case — the Department of Justice (DOJ) does.
  • The DOJ must respond under court deadlines. Delay is no longer an option.
  • The case becomes structured. You get a timeline, a forum, and an accountable process.

That’s the advantage of a structured legal process:

  • The case is governed by real deadlines and legal oversight
  • The DOJ has the authority to settle and the motivation to act
  • A strong, well-prepared claim becomes a negotiation opportunity, not just a file in a backlog

We’ve designed ERC FastTrack around the elements that consistently lead to resolution: leverage, clarity, and pressure. It’s not about waiting for the system to work — it’s about using the system differently.

If you’re ready to move beyond uncertainty, this is the most efficient and results-focused path available.

Learn More About the Litigation Process

Want to understand the steps involved in suing the IRS for your ERC refund? Read our in-depth guide on The ERC Litigation Process: What to Expect When Suing the IRS to get a clearer picture of how legal action can help you secure your refund faster.

Contact us today to schedule a consultation and take the first step toward recovering your ERC refund.

Used a Third-Party ERC Provider on Contingency? Here’s What You Should Know Before You Pursue a Refund Claim

Close-up of a U.S. Treasury refund check symbolizing ERC refund claims

If you used a third-party ERC provider under a contingency fee agreement, you’re not alone. Thousands of businesses turned to outside help to claim the Employee Retention Credit (ERC)—especially during the rush of 2021–2022. These providers typically promised no upfront cost, instead taking a percentage of the ERC refund once it was received.

Key Takeaways

  • What Litigation Can Offer—Even If a Third Party Filed Your ERC Claim
  • The Importance of Reviewing Your ERC Contingency Agreement
  • Why Finality Matters: The Risk of IRS Clawbacks and Disallowance
  • Can Litigation Reduce or Replace Your Contingency Fee?
  • Proceed Carefully, But Confidently

Now that the IRS has slowed processing, denied many claims, and raised the stakes through audits and clawback actions, you may be wondering:

What are my options if my ERC refund is delayed—and I used a contingency-based provider?

This article outlines what to consider before pursuing a refund claim through litigation, especially when a third party filed on your behalf. It also explains why reviewing your contract—carefully and legally—is a crucial first step.

What Litigation Can Offer—Even If a Third Party Filed Your ERC Claim

Many businesses who used contingency-based providers now face one of three problems:

  • Their ERC refund is delayed by more than six months

  • The IRS denied or flagged the claim

  • They are unsure whether the claim was filed properly

In these situations, litigation can provide a path to resolution that the IRS alone may not offer.

1. Litigation Creates Finality

A refund lawsuit can lead to a court judgment or settlement that the IRS cannot later revisit. This protects your refund from future clawbacks or denials based on the same facts—even if you didn’t handle the filing personally.

2. Litigation Is Independent of the Provider’s Filing

When you sue, it’s your case, your evidence, and your outcome. This is critical if you weren’t involved in preparing the original claim, or if documentation is incomplete or unclear.

The Importance of Reviewing Your ERC Contingency Agreement

Many contingency fee agreements cover ERC filing, but not litigation. That means:

  • You may not be obligated to use the same provider in court

  • A court-ordered refund might not trigger a fee under the original terms

  • The provider may not have rights to future payments, depending on the language

However, every contract is different. A legal review can help clarify your options and protect you from unintended consequences.

What an Attorney Can Help You Understand:

  • Does your agreement cover refund litigation?

  • Are you required to involve or notify the provider?

  • Is there a secondary fee clause if you take legal action?

  • What are the risks and remedies if there’s a dispute?

This isn’t about challenging your provider—it’s about knowing your rights before you proceed.

Why Finality Matters: The Risk of IRS Clawbacks and Disallowance

Even if your ERC provider did everything right, the IRS is:

  • Auditing ERC claims retroactively

  • Disallowing claims without full review

  • Issuing clawback notices to reclaim refunds

Litigation offers closure. Once a court decides or a settlement is signed, your claim is resolved—and the IRS can’t come back for more.

Can Litigation Reduce or Replace Your Contingency Fee?

It depends on your contract. If the agreement doesn’t cover litigation:

  • You may not owe a fee on a refund awarded through court

  • You may be able to work with a new attorney on separate terms

  • You should still understand any residual obligations

Reviewing your agreement is the best way to avoid confusion and prevent future disputes.

Proceed Carefully, But Confidently

If your refund is stuck, denied, or uncertain, litigation may be the right next step—but only with full awareness of your contractual obligations. Before filing:

  1. Request and review your contingency agreement

  2. Speak to a tax litigation attorney

  3. Document your communications with your provider

  4. Make informed, strategic decisions—not reactive ones

Conclusion: Know What You Signed, Know What You Can Do

ERC litigation can resolve long-delayed claims and give your business financial certainty. If you used a third-party ERC provider on contingency, that path is still open—but it must start with a clear understanding of your agreement.

Before you file suit or make assumptions, consult a professional. Know your rights. Then move forward with confidence.

This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Consult with an attorney before taking any action related to ERC claims or third-party agreements.

Learn More About the Litigation Process

Want to understand the steps involved in suing the IRS for your ERC refund? Read our in-depth guide on The ERC Litigation Process: What to Expect When Suing the IRS to get a clearer picture of how legal action can help you secure your refund faster.

Contact us today to schedule a consultation and take the first step toward recovering your ERC refund.

If the IRS has disallowed your ERC claim, you may have options — including litigation. Learn about ERC disallowance defense →

Brotman Law Featured in Inc. Magazine - Fastest Growing Law Firm in California