Loan Covenants for Small Business Borrowers: How DSCR, FCCR, and Tangible Net Worth Decide When a Performing Loan Can Be Called
Loan covenants—DSCR, fixed charge coverage, tangible net worth, and leverage limits—can put a small business borrower in default while every payment is current. A practical breakdown of affirmative, negative, and financial covenants, cure periods, waiver requests, and what to negotiate before signing a credit agreement.
Got a 1099-C? Why You Might Owe Nothing (and the Mistake That Costs People Thousands)
A 1099-C does not automatically mean a tax bill. This guide covers when canceled debt is taxable, the five Form 982 exclusions (bankruptcy, insolvency, qualified farm, real property business, principal residence), the 2026 expiration of the student loan and mortgage forgiveness exclusions, and the recordkeeping that proves insolvency to the IRS.
IRS Tax Relief Programs: A Practical Guide to Resolving Tax Debt Without Falling for Scams
A walkthrough of the IRS's four core tax debt relief programs — installment agreements, Offer in Compromise, Currently Not Collectible status, and penalty abatement — including the 2026 shift to automatic first-time abatement, the 21% OIC acceptance rate from the 2024 IRS Data Book, and how to spot Offer in Compromise mills flagged on the IRS Dirty Dozen list.
Tax Resolution Demystified: How to Settle IRS Debt Without Falling for Scams
A 2026 guide to the five legitimate IRS resolution programs—installment agreements, Offer in Compromise, Currently Not Collectible status, penalty abatement, and innocent spouse relief—plus the warning signs of OIC mill scams and the step-by-step process from a CP14 notice to a working agreement.
How to Pay Off IRS Tax Debt: 6 Options to Settle What You Owe
Six IRS-approved paths to clear back taxes — short-term plans, 72-month installment agreements, penalty abatement, Offer in Compromise, and Currently Not Collectible status — with eligibility, fees, and when to use each.
IRS Form 433-D Explained: How to Set Up a Direct Debit Installment Agreement and Stop the Late Notices
Form 433-D authorizes a Direct Debit Installment Agreement (DDIA) with the IRS — $31 setup online with direct debit versus $130 without, automatic monthly payments, and a reduced 0.25% failure-to-pay penalty. A walkthrough of who needs the form, how to complete each section, and how it differs from Forms 9465, 433-A, and 433-F.
Tax Relief Companies: How to Tell Legitimate Help From Scams in 2026
How to distinguish legitimate tax resolution firms from Offer in Compromise mills—what services should cost in 2026, the IRS-flagged red flags that should end a sales call, and the free alternatives most callers never hear about.
IRS Tax Payment Plans: A Complete Guide to Installment Agreements
Every IRS payment plan in one place — short-term under 180 days, long-term installment agreements up to 72 months, Guaranteed Installment Agreements, and Partial Payment Installment Agreements — with 2026 setup fees, interest math, qualification thresholds, and the three mistakes that quietly cost taxpayers the most money.
Offer in Compromise: How to Settle IRS Tax Debt for Less Than You Owe
The IRS accepts roughly 36% of Offer in Compromise applications. This guide explains qualification rules, how to calculate Reasonable Collection Potential, the Form 656 and 433-A workflow, and the mistakes that cause two-thirds of offers to be rejected.
What Is a Tax Levy? Complete Guide to IRS Seizure and How to Stop It
A tax levy is the IRS's legal seizure of wages, bank funds, or property to satisfy unpaid tax debt. This guide explains the notice sequence from CP14 through LT11, the 30-day Collection Due Process window, bank levy 21-day holds, and seven ways to release an active levy.
IRS Tax Payment Plans: How to Set Up an Installment Agreement When You Can't Pay in Full
A practical guide to IRS installment agreements in 2026 — four plan types, setup fees ranging from $0 to $178, eligibility rules for balances up to $50,000, and the common mistakes that trigger default.
Liabilities in Accounting: What They Are, Types, and How to Manage Them
Learn what liabilities are in accounting, the difference between current, non-current, and contingent liabilities, key financial ratios for analyzing debt, and practical strategies to manage your business obligations effectively.