Before you read further — which describes you?
Quick Answer
If an IRS Revenue Officer visits your home or business, the correct response is to be polite, confirm identity with their HSPD-12 credential and IRS-issued pocket commission, decline to answer substantive questions until counsel is engaged, and request any communication in writing. The short version is that Revenue Officers are civil collection personnel — not criminal investigators. Criminal Investigation Special Agents are different (they carry badges and guns). Revenue Officers cannot force entry, cannot compel answers, and cannot demand documents without a summons. Taxpayers have the right under IRC §7521 to have a representative present. Almost all substantive interactions should be routed through a Form 2848 Power of Attorney to an attorney.1
IRS at your door? A 15-minute consultation is free.
An IRS visit is unsettling, but taxpayers have specific rights. This chapter walks through those rights, identifies the difference between Revenue Officers and Criminal Investigation Special Agents, and explains what to say (and not say) during the visit. The core principle is that direct taxpayer-to-agent communication almost always widens the case; routing through counsel almost always narrows it.
Our firm has represented taxpayers visited by Revenue Officers hundreds of times. For broader collection context, see 5 Strategies to Resolve Tax Debt. For Revenue Officer interactions generally, see IRS Revenue Officers.
The Four Types of IRS In-Person Contact
| Type | Who | Purpose | Correct Response2 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue Officer | Civil collection | Balance collection | Polite, confirm ID, decline substantive answers |
| Revenue Agent | Civil audit | Audit examination | Same as RO, engage counsel |
| Combined Visit | RO + Revenue Agent | Mixed collection / audit | Engage counsel immediately |
| CI Special Agent | Criminal Investigation | Potential tax crime | Say nothing; call criminal defense counsel |
Quick Reference
Jump to the contact type: Revenue Officer, Revenue Agent, combined visit, or CI Special Agent. For taxpayer rights reference, see the rights and credentials lookup. If visited, a 15-minute consultation is free.
1. Revenue Officer: The Civil Collection Visit
A Revenue Officer is an IRS civil collection employee. The visit purpose is to resolve unpaid tax through installment agreement, asset identification, or voluntary payment. Revenue Officers cannot arrest, search, or seize without specific court authority.
If this is you: An RO has appeared at your door. Be polite. Confirm identity by asking for the HSPD-12 credential (badge with photo) and pocket commission. Decline to answer substantive questions. Request that communications go through a Power of Attorney (Form 2848) to your attorney. Schedule a follow-up for your counsel to contact the RO.
Revenue Officer Visit Strategy
- Confirm ID. HSPD-12 credential and pocket commission.
- Be polite but say little. “Thank you for coming. I will have my attorney contact you.”
- Do not let them enter without appointment. ROs do not have search authority.
- Do not produce documents on the spot. Request IDR in writing.
- Engage counsel same day. Form 2848 redirects future contact.
2. Revenue Agent: The Civil Audit Visit
A Revenue Agent is an IRS civil examination employee — the auditor on a field audit. The visit typically involves formal Information Document Requests and initial interview questions.
If this is you: A Revenue Agent has visited for an audit. Same principles as RO: confirm ID, be polite, decline substantive interview, and engage counsel before any formal meeting. The initial interview is the most consequential moment of a field audit.
3. Combined Visit: Civil Collection and Audit
In rare cases, both a Revenue Officer and Revenue Agent appear together. This signals a comprehensive IRS interest in the taxpayer — open examination plus collection activity on prior years. Representation is essential.
If this is you: Multiple IRS personnel at your door. This is higher-stakes than a single visit. Engage counsel immediately. Do not answer substantive questions. Do not produce documents.
4. IRS Criminal Investigation Special Agent: Potentially Criminal
IRS Criminal Investigation (CI) Special Agents carry badges, pocket commissions, and sidearms. Their visit indicates the IRS is considering or actively investigating criminal tax charges. The response is fundamentally different from civil visits.3
If this is you: Two Special Agents at your door with badges. Do not answer any substantive questions, even seemingly innocuous ones. Exercise your right to remain silent. Politely state “I would like to speak with an attorney” and call a criminal tax defense attorney immediately. Anything said to CI can and will be used in a criminal case.
CI Special Agents at your door? This is a criminal investigation situation. Do not answer questions. Call a criminal tax defense attorney immediately. The first words you say can determine your case outcome.
Taxpayer Rights and IRS Credentials
| Item | Details |
|---|---|
| HSPD-12 Credential | IRS-issued photo badge; required for all IRS employees |
| Pocket Commission | Official IRS identification card; all IRS employees carry |
| IRC §7521 | Right to representative; recording rights |
| IRC §7521(b)(2) | Right to consult representative before answering off-scope questions |
| Miranda Rights | Apply if CI Special Agent conducts criminal interrogation |
| Form 2848 | Power of Attorney — redirects IRS contact |
| Publication 1 | Your Rights as a Taxpayer |
| Taxpayer Bill of Rights | 10 codified rights |
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 →
Statute and IRS Visits
- Assessment statute does not toll during visits. Clock continues.
- CSED does not toll during civil collection visits.
- Criminal statute under IRC §6531. Generally 6 years for tax crimes.
- Voluntary disclosure availability. Closes when IRS initiates contact on the specific matter.
Revenue Officer Visit Outcomes
| Taxpayer Response | Typical Outcome |
|---|---|
| Engaged counsel, polite, Form 2848 filed | Controlled civil resolution |
| Self-represented, answered questions | Widened case scope |
| Refused contact, no counsel | Escalated enforcement |
| Spoke to CI Special Agent without counsel | Criminal case acceleration |
The Visit Escalation Pathway
Civil to More Civil
A cooperative civil response (with counsel) typically produces resolution — installment agreement, CNC, or OIC. No escalation.
Civil to Criminal
Admissions made during civil visits that indicate fraud can escalate to CI referral. This is why counsel should be engaged before substantive discussion.
Criminal to Indictment
CI investigation concluded with referral to DOJ Tax Division can proceed to grand jury indictment. Statements to CI agents are the primary evidence in many cases.
The First 48 Hours After an IRS Visit
- Document the visit in writing. Name, badge number, date, time, questions asked.
- Do not call the IRS back. Let counsel make the call.
- Engage counsel. Tax attorney for civil; criminal defense attorney for CI.
- File Form 2848. Redirects future contact.
- Gather relevant documents internally. Do not send to IRS.
- Assess exposure. Civil resolution or criminal defense.
- Prepare for counsel-led engagement.
The ROI Question
The first 10 minutes of an IRS visit can determine the trajectory of the case. Professional representation engaged before the first substantive interaction is the single highest-ROI move in any IRS contact. Mistakes made before counsel is engaged are often unrecoverable.
When to Engage an Attorney for an IRS Visit
- Any in-person visit. Do not respond to substantive questions without counsel.
- CI Special Agent contact. Criminal defense counsel immediately.
- Revenue Officer visit on business balance. Multi-party stakes.
- Summons issued. Legal response required.
- Third-party contact. Under IRC §7602(c).
- Post-visit IDR issued.
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Frequently Asked Questions
What should I do if the IRS shows up at my door?
Be polite. Confirm identity (HSPD-12 credential and pocket commission). Decline substantive questions. State “I would like to have my attorney contact you.” Take their card or information. Engage counsel same-day. Do not produce documents or enter into substantive discussion.
Can an IRS Revenue Officer enter my home?
Not without your consent or a court-issued writ of entry. ROs are civil collection personnel and do not have search warrant authority. A polite refusal to admit them to your home is your right. Meetings can be scheduled by appointment at a neutral location or through your attorney.
How do I verify an IRS agent is legitimate?
Ask for the HSPD-12 credential (photo badge) and pocket commission (ID card). Call the IRS directly at 1-800-829-1040 to verify the employee’s assignment. IRS scams are common — legitimate agents will not object to verification.
Do I have to answer IRS questions?
No, not in substantive detail without counsel. IRC §7521 establishes your right to have a representative present. You can decline to answer and request that all communication go through your attorney. Silence cannot be used against you in civil matters; in criminal matters, silence is a constitutional right.
What is the difference between Revenue Officer and Criminal Investigation agent?
Revenue Officers are civil collection employees — they pursue balance payment. Criminal Investigation Special Agents investigate potential tax crimes, carry badges and sidearms, and work criminal cases. The difference in stakes is enormous — civil cases produce payment plans; criminal cases produce indictments.
Can the IRS seize my property during a visit?
Not immediately. Seizure requires specific procedural steps — Final Notice of Intent to Levy, 30-day CDP window, specific seizure procedures for real property. Revenue Officers can document assets for later levy but cannot take property during a visit.
Can I record an IRS meeting?
Yes, under IRC §7521(a)(1), with 10-day advance notice. The IRS is also entitled to record. In practice, most meetings are not recorded; a contemporaneous written memorandum is typically more useful. Recording rights matter most in adversarial situations.
What if the IRS visits my business?
Same principles as home visits. Confirm ID. Decline to answer substantive questions. Do not produce employee records or financial documents on the spot. Engage counsel. A Revenue Officer visit to a business often signals escalation — the balance has not been resolved through ACS and is now at the Revenue Officer level.
Should I be polite or hostile to the IRS?
Polite. Always. Hostility escalates the case and can itself be used against you. Polite refusal to engage substantively — “I respect your role, but I will have my attorney contact you” — is the optimal posture.
What rights do I have during an IRS interview?
Right to have a representative present (§7521). Right to consult representative before answering off-scope questions (§7521(b)(2)). Right to record with notice. Right to end the interview and reschedule. Miranda rights in criminal context. Right to refuse to answer without immunity in criminal-adjacent situations.
Can I refuse to let the IRS in?
Yes. Without a warrant or court order, you can decline to admit IRS personnel to your home or business. Refusal does not prevent civil enforcement but does not itself create additional exposure. The IRS can seek a court-issued writ of entry in specific circumstances but rarely does for routine collection.
What if the IRS has a summons?
A summons requires production of documents or appearance for testimony on a specified date. Summons responses should be prepared with counsel — the summons compels production but may also be challengeable in some circumstances. Do not ignore a summons.
Is speaking to the IRS always risky?
In substantive matters, yes. Informal statements can create admissions. Routine administrative conversations (scheduling, confirming identity) carry less risk. The general rule: talk through counsel in anything substantive, particularly for cases with meaningful balance or any criminal potential.
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.
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Next Steps in This Guide
If the IRS has visited, a 15-minute consultation is free.