Avoid Purchasing a New Home With an IRS Tax Lien

We found our dream house two years ago and we immediately made an offer on the property.  We were ecstatic when our offer was accepted thus, we uimmediately put out house up for sale and found a buyer right away.  Preferred Tax Relief

Everything was going as planned and our family was looking forward to moving to the new house however, there was one problem that got in the way.  We found out that there was an IRS tax lien on the house we were in the process of selling. 

My wife and I had the slightest idea where the tax lien could have come from.  There was no notice from the IRS to inform us of the tax issues.  No statement of back taxes owed.  The problem, apparently, had existed since 2002 and only came to our attention when we were trying to sell the house in 2007. 

So what I did was check our 2002 taxes after filing it online and it showed that we did not owe any taxes.  The situation was far too complicated for me to handle and I thought that I should have somebody take care of the issues for us.  Why spend time over things I couldn't understand?  I decided that it is best to focus on our business rather than divert our attention in dealing with the IRS  Preferred Tax Relief

What frightened me the most was when I learned that, by filing a tax lien, the IRS is has laid claim to our property, including houses or automobiles, and it can include property that we acquired after the tax lien was filed.  According to the information I read online, this prevented us from selling our assets or withdrawing equity from our assets as long as the IRS had a claim over those assets.  It dawned on me that the tax lien will hold us off even if we continue to work hard on our business and the looming possibility of the government taking over our assets in the future. 

We discovered Preferred Tax Relief and started working with them.  They work so fast and quick to address the problems with the IRS.  They took care of the tax lien so fast that we were still able to sell our house and move forward with moving into our dream home.  Preferred Tax Relief

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  • services sprite Avoid Purchasing a New Home With an IRS Tax Lien
  • services sprite Avoid Purchasing a New Home With an IRS Tax Lien
  • services sprite Avoid Purchasing a New Home With an IRS Tax Lien
  • services sprite Avoid Purchasing a New Home With an IRS Tax Lien
  • services sprite Avoid Purchasing a New Home With an IRS Tax Lien

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This entry was posted on Friday, January 15th, 2010 at 8:14 pm and is filed under Uncategorized. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

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