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Taxpayer Advocates Baltimore MD

This page provides useful content and local businesses that can help with your search for Taxpayer Advocates. You will find helpful, informative articles about Taxpayer Advocates, including "Taxpayer Advocate". You will also find local businesses that provide the products or services that you are looking for. Please scroll down to find the local resources in Baltimore, MD that will answer all of your questions about Taxpayer Advocates.

Tammara F Langlieb
410-244-7821
Ste 900, 750 E Pratt St
Baltimore, MD
Robert Bruce Curran
410-347-9472
Seven Saint Paul Street
Baltimore, MD
Barbara Ellen Schlaff
410-244-7494
2 HOPKINS PLZ STE 1800
BALTIMORE, MD
Walter R Stone
410-539-5195
7 Saint Paul Street, Suite 600
Baltimore, MD
John A Stalfort
410-385-3424
10 Light St
Baltimore, MD
Robert A Snyder JR
410-752-2468
100 Light Street, 11th Floor
Baltimore, MD
Robert Dennis Earle
410-347-8773
7 Saint Paul St Ste 1400
Baltimore, MD
Brian A Flank
410-332-8513
One South Street, 27th Floor
Baltimore, MD
Danielle Elizabeth Howarth
410-727-7702
2 CHARLES CENTER 218 N CHARLES ST STE 400
BALTIMORE, MD
Michaela Cavanaugh Muffoletto
410-332-8534
One South St 27th Fl
Baltimore, MD
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Taxpayer Advocate

Taxpayer Advocate

Every business has a department that deals with complaints from customers. At the IRS, this department is known as the taxpayer advocate office.

The purpose of the taxpayer advocate office is to provide taxpayers with a friendly source to handle customer service issues. The office is run independent of the IRS and has offices at every IRS center in the nation. The taxpayer advocate has a stated goal of resolving your problem with the IRS in seven short days. It doesn't always happen, but it is a nice goal.

The taxpayer advocate has a surprising amount of power. The advocate agents can rifle through the IRS computers at will, which makes them great at locating filings the IRS claims never occurred. The advocate can also stop collection efforts by the IRS and even release tax liens on your bank account or property. Basically, the advocate office is the place to go when you think you are getting a raw deal from the IRS.

The taxpayer advocate agents do not take any old case. In general, you have to show the IRS is unresponsive to your problem or causing you a major hardship. For instance, if your correspondence to the IRS is not being responded to, the advocate can crack the whip on your behalf. If the IRS puts a lien on your bank account, but you're in the hospital, the advocated can release it. The advocate, however, does not give tax advice or fight audits for you.

If you wish to get the taxpayer advocate involved in your IRS situation, you shoul...

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