Two years ago, we finally found the home of our dreams and made an offer on it. Our offer was accepted and so we put our house up for sale in the market and luckily, we found a buyer. Preferred Tax Relief
Everything was going along nice and easy and our family was looking forward to the big move but we hit a major roadblock. To our surprise, there was an IRS tax lien on the home we were selling.
My wife and I had the vaguest idea where this tax lien could have come from. Nothing had ever come in the mail from the IRS to notify us of a problem. 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.
Of course, I went to our home computer where I had saved our 2002 taxes after filing online, and they showed that we did not owe taxes. I couldn’t handle the situation and I felt that it was best to let somebody take care of the problems for us. Why waste time? 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 scared me the most was that filing a tax lien would mean the IRS had claim over our assets including the property we purchased after the tax lien was settled. 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. My understanding was that, while we continue to work hard in our business, the tax lien will haunt us for an indefinite amount of time and worse of all, the government may seize all the things we worked for.
We discovered Preferred Tax Relief and started working with them. They were quick to address the issues and helped us calm down, which was a big deal for us. They were so fast in handling our tax lien case thus, we were able to sell our house right away and moved into our new home. Preferred Tax Relief
