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What should practitioners do if a levy has already occurred?
PostedNovember 17, 2025
UpdatedNovember 17, 2025
ByKlemens Raab
If a levy is already in place, the practitioner should:
1. Immediately contact the IRS,
2. Submit any required financial documents, and
3. Request a full or partial levy release, especially if the taxpayer is facing financial hardship.
Prompt communication can lead to faster relief.
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IRS Tax Levies
- What is a federal tax levy?
- What notice must the IRS provide before issuing a levy?
- What is a regular levy?
- How long will a bank hold funds after receiving an IRS levy?
- What is a continuing levy?
- Why are continuing levies especially burdensome?
- What can a taxpayer do to stop a continuing wage levy?
- Can the IRS levy retirement accounts?
- What determines whether a retirement account can be levied?
- What is a disqualified employment tax levy?
- How can a taxpayer avoid a levy?
- What should practitioners do if a levy has already occurred?
- Can levied funds be returned to the taxpayer?
- What assets are exempt from IRS levy?
- What is the 50% penalty related to employer levy compliance?
- IRC 6343 requires levies to be released under what circumstances?
- What did the Vinatieri v. Commissioner case establish?
- What happens if a taxpayer misses deadlines to submit IRS documents after a levy?
- Can a levy continue beyond the collection statute expiration?
- What is the IRS limit on levying Social Security?
- What is the process for requesting a partial levy release?
- What is a hot tip for evaluating a bank levy before you call the IRS and sit on the phone for two hours?
- Why do taxpayers receive multiple IRS notices before a levy?
- Why does the IRS use levies as a collection tool?
- What must a taxpayer do to qualify for levy release under economic hardship?
- Show all articles (10) Collapse Articles

