Before you read further — which describes you?
Quick Answer
An IRS installment agreement default occurs when the taxpayer misses a payment, fails to file a required future return, or fails to pay a future tax balance. The short version is that the IRS issues Letter CP523 warning of pending termination before formally defaulting the agreement. Default reinstates the full original balance plus accrued interest and penalties, and collection enforcement resumes. Reinstatement is available in most cases — filing the missed return, catching up the missed payment, or curing the compliance failure typically restores the agreement. Default during active Revenue Officer cases is usually treated more strictly than default in ACS-managed cases.1
Installment agreement defaulted or at risk? A 15-minute consultation is free.
Installment agreement default is recoverable in most cases. The critical window is between the CP523 notice and the formal termination of the agreement. Cure in that window typically preserves the agreement; delay typically triggers re-filing requirements. This chapter walks through the four default triggers, the reinstatement procedures, and what to do if reinstatement is denied.
Our firm has reinstated hundreds of defaulted installment agreements. For the installment agreement framework, see Negotiate Installment Agreement.
The Four Installment Agreement Default Triggers
| Trigger | Typical Response | Cure Path2 |
|---|---|---|
| Missed Payment | CP523 notice | Catch up within 30 days |
| New Balance Due | Agreement termination | Pay new balance or modify agreement |
| Unfiled Required Return | CP523 + termination | File return, reinstate |
| Multiple Defaults | Termination + alternative resolution | Non-streamlined or OIC |
Quick Reference
Jump to the default trigger: missed payment, new balance due, unfiled return, or multiple defaults. For the default document lookup, see the default document reference. To cure a default, a 15-minute consultation is free.
1. Missed Payment: The Most Common and Easiest to Cure
A missed monthly installment payment is the most common default trigger and typically the easiest to cure. The IRS sends Letter CP523 warning that the agreement will terminate if the missed payment is not made within a specified window.
If this is you: One or two payments were missed. CP523 has arrived. Catch up immediately — the agreement typically stays in place. Delay past the CP523 window triggers formal termination and full balance reinstatement.
Missed Payment Strategy
- Read the CP523 notice carefully. Identify the specific cure deadline.
- Make the missed payment. Plus any additional missed.
- Resume regular payments. Direct debit is most reliable.
- Document the cure. Keep payment confirmation.
- If inability to pay, request modification. Lower monthly payment vs. default.
2. New Balance Due: Current-Year Non-Compliance
An installment agreement includes a covenant to stay current on future tax filings and payments. A new balance-due return while the agreement is active is a default trigger.
If this is you: Your 2023 return is filed and paid. Your 2024 return shows a balance due. Even if you pay the 2024 balance, the new balance may default the installment agreement. Best path: pay the new balance in full, or modify the agreement to incorporate the new balance.
3. Unfiled Required Return: Filing Compliance Break
Failure to file a required return during the installment agreement is a default trigger. Filing compliance is a continuing obligation — an unfiled current-year return terminates the agreement even if payments are current.
If this is you: A required return is unfiled. File immediately. The agreement may be reinstatable once the return is filed, but the filing delay often results in a new balance that compounds the problem.
4. Multiple Defaults: Pattern Issues
Repeated defaults — missed payments over multiple cycles, multiple unfiled returns, chronic new balance issues — can result in termination without cure opportunity. The path forward typically requires an alternative resolution rather than reinstatement.
Just received CP523? You have a limited window to cure before the agreement terminates. Book a call immediately to scope the cure or the alternative resolution.
IA Default Document Lookup
| Document | Purpose |
|---|---|
| CP523 | Notice of Intent to Terminate IA |
| CP521 | Monthly IA statement |
| Form 9465 | IA Request (for reinstatement or new agreement) |
| Form 433-F | Collection Information Statement |
| Form 433-D | Direct Debit Authorization |
| Form 9423 | Collection Appeal Request |
| Form 12153 | CDP Hearing (if levy threatens) |
| Publication 594 | IRS Collection Process |
Found your letter or notice code? The next step is confirming your exact deadline and whether you need representation. A 15-minute call answers both. Book a free call →
CSED and IA Default
- CSED continues to run during installment agreement.
- Default does not toll CSED.
- Reinstatement uses original CSED. No reset.
- Some defaults produce CDP tolling. If CDP hearing is filed.
IA Default Reinstatement Rates
| Default Type | Reinstatement Rate |
|---|---|
| Single missed payment cured within CP523 window | ~95% |
| Payment missed past CP523 window | ~60% to 70% |
| Unfiled return, then filed and cured | ~50% to 70% |
| New balance cured with modification | ~70% to 85% |
| Multiple defaults | Often denied; alternative resolution needed |
The Default Escalation Pathway
CP521 to CP523
Regular monthly statements (CP521) during the agreement. Missed payment triggers CP523 warning. Agreement is active but at risk.
CP523 to Termination
Failure to cure within the CP523 window terminates the agreement. Full balance reinstates. Collection activity resumes.
Termination to Enforcement
Post-termination, the IRS can levy, garnish, and enforce as before the agreement. CDP hearing (Form 12153) can be filed if a Final Notice of Intent to Levy issues.
The First 48 Hours After CP523
- Read CP523 carefully. Identify cure deadline and missing item.
- Make missed payment or file missing return immediately.
- Confirm cure with the IRS. Phone or written confirmation.
- Set up direct debit if not already. Reduces future miss risk.
- If cure not possible, request modification. Lower payment.
- Consider alternative resolution. PPIA or CNC if ability-to-pay has dropped.
- Engage counsel for complex cases.
The ROI Question
Curing a default within the CP523 window is dramatically cheaper than defending post-termination enforcement. Professional cure of a complex default typically costs a fraction of the enforcement activity that termination would trigger.
When to Engage an Attorney for IA Default
- Multiple defaults in the same year.
- Revenue Officer-managed case.
- Default combined with new audit or examination.
- Prior reinstatement denied.
- Business agreement default.
- Levy or garnishment imminent post-termination.
Any of the above apply?
A 15-minute consultation is free. We scope cure or alternative resolution.
Frequently Asked Questions
What happens if I default on my IRS installment agreement?
The IRS issues Letter CP523 warning of pending termination. If the default is not cured within the CP523 window, the agreement terminates, the full original balance reinstates with accrued interest, and collection activity resumes. Most defaults are curable within the CP523 window.
Can I reinstate a defaulted installment agreement?
Usually yes. Single missed payments cured within CP523 window reinstate at approximately 95%. Post-termination reinstatement is also possible via Form 9465 with explanation of the default. The IRS is generally cooperative on first-time defaults with reasonable cause.
What is Letter CP523?
The IRS notice warning that the installment agreement is at risk of termination. It identifies the specific default (missed payment, unfiled return, new balance due) and provides a cure deadline. Curing within the deadline preserves the agreement.
How do I cure a missed installment payment?
Make the missed payment immediately, plus any other missed payments. Direct debit or mailed check both work. Confirm the payment was applied to the correct account and year. Resume regular payments. Consider direct debit enrollment to prevent future misses.
Does default reinstate the full balance?
Yes. Formal termination reinstates the full original balance, including interest and penalties accrued during the agreement period. Payments made during the agreement apply against the reinstated balance but do not otherwise offset the reinstatement.
Can I get a new installment agreement after default?
Yes. File a new Form 9465. The IRS typically approves a new agreement unless multiple prior defaults exist. Subsequent agreements may have stricter terms (direct debit required, shorter terms) than the original.
Will the IRS levy if I default?
Yes, after formal termination and issuance of a Final Notice of Intent to Levy (CP90 or CP297). Levy cannot issue immediately on default — the IRS must send the Final Notice and provide 30 days for CDP hearing. Curing the default or requesting CDP during that window prevents levy.
What if I cannot afford the installment payment?
Request a modification. Lower monthly payment may be available via Form 9465 with Form 433-F documentation of reduced ability-to-pay. Conversion to PPIA or CNC may also be available. Modification is almost always cheaper than default-and-replace.
Can I appeal a default termination?
Yes. Form 9423 (Collection Appeal) within 30 days of termination can appeal the decision. Appeals considers whether termination was appropriate and can reinstate the agreement. This path is typically faster than setting up a new agreement.
Does default affect my credit?
The default itself is not reported to credit bureaus. The underlying tax balance and Notice of Federal Tax Lien continue to affect the taxpayer’s credit profile. Enforcement actions (levy, garnishment) following termination may also have downstream credit effects.
What if I default because of job loss or emergency?
Reasonable cause cures are commonly accepted for job loss, medical emergency, natural disaster, or similar circumstances. Provide documentation with the cure request. The IRS can also modify the agreement to reflect the new financial circumstances.
Can the IRS default me for minor late payment?
Technically yes, but typically no for direct-debit agreements on a single occurrence. ACS and Revenue Officers have some discretion. A day or two late on a direct debit (IRS processing delay) typically does not produce CP523. Multiple late cycles do.
How do I prevent future default?
Direct debit from a reliable account. Calendar for future return due dates. Maintain current-year estimated tax / withholding to prevent new balance due. Monthly review of CP521 statements to confirm correct application. Proactive modification when circumstances change.
If you have read this far, you have a notice and you are trying to understand it before doing anything that makes it worse. That instinct is correct.
The next right move is a 15-minute call. We will identify the audit type, confirm your deadline, and tell you honestly whether you need representation. There is no cost and no obligation.
Get a Candid Assessment — FreeOr call us directly at (619) 378-3138
Next Steps in This Guide
If your agreement has defaulted, a 15-minute consultation is free.