An envelope from the IRS triggers an immediate stress response, even when you’ve done nothing wrong. The good news: most notices are routine, fixable, and far less serious than they feel. Here’s a calm, step-by-step playbook.

1. Open it the same day

Ignoring an IRS notice is the single worst thing you can do. Most letters have response deadlines — usually 30 or 60 days — and the consequences for missing them (additional penalties, liens, automatic adjustments) are far worse than whatever the notice originally said.

2. Identify the notice number

Every IRS letter has a code in the top-right corner — CP2000, CP14, LT11, etc. Google the exact code with “IRS notice” and you’ll find a clear explanation of what it means and what’s required. The agency has standardized this for a reason.

Common ones:

  • CP14 — you owe a balance
  • CP2000 — reported income doesn’t match your return
  • CP501/503 — reminders about unpaid balance
  • Letter 525 — examination report

3. Verify it’s actually from the IRS

The IRS never initiates contact via email, text, or phone call demanding payment. If the letter arrived that way, it’s a scam. Real notices come by mail and reference specific tax years and amounts.

4. Respond in writing — and keep copies

If you agree, pay or sign as instructed. If you disagree, respond in writing with documentation. Send everything via certified mail with return receipt and keep a copy of every page. The IRS loses paperwork constantly; your records protect you.

5. Call a professional if the number has commas

For balances under a few thousand dollars or simple math corrections, you can usually handle it yourself. For audits, large adjustments, or anything mentioning collections, hire a Tax Professionals or enrolled agent. Their fee is almost always less than the mistakes a panicked DIY response can create.

The IRS is bureaucratic, slow, and impersonal — but it’s not out to get you. Respond promptly, document everything, and most notices resolve quietly.


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