After an installment agreement is approved, you may submit a request to modify or terminate your installment agreement. You may modify your payment amount or due date by going to IRS/OPA. You may also call 800-829-1040 to modify or terminate your agreement.
What is IRS Form 433-D? It is a form taxpayers can submit to authorize a direct debit payment method for an IRS installment agreement. In other words, taxpayers leverage it to set up a direct debit installment agreement. Taxpayers generally use can initiate this direct debit method on this form or form 9465.
Essentially, Form 9465 is a request form used to apply for a payment plan, and Form 433-D is the direct debit installment agreement form that is used to establish the actual agreement once the IRS has approved the payment plan. 433 d form allows the IRS to take payments directly from a taxpayer's bank account.
Who should use Form 433-A? Form 433-A is used to obtain current financial information necessary for determining how a wage earner or self-employed individual can satisfy an outstanding tax liability. If you are an individual who is self-employed or has self- employment income.
Generally, you use Form 9465 (Installment Agreement Request) to apply for an installment agreement. Then, if the IRS accepts your application, you will finalize the agreement with Form 433-D. However, in some cases, you can apply for an installment agreement using Form 433-D.
If you don't qualify for an IA through OPA, you may also request an IA by submitting Form 9465, Installment Agreement Request, with the IRS. When you request an IA using the form, generally, you'll receive a response from the IRS within 30 days notifying you of whether the IA request was approved or rejected.
WHY THE IRS REJECTS INSTALLMENT AGREEMENT REQUESTS. The IRS typically rejects an installment agreement request for one of three reasons. If the IRS determines that your living expenses do not fall under the category of “necessary,” your agreement will more than likely be rejected.