A federal tax lien is a public claim on your property. We’ll help you understand how to remove, subordinate, or live with a tax lien while you resolve the underlying debt.
A federal tax lien is the IRS's legal claim against your property when you owe a tax debt. The lien attaches to all your current and future property and rights to property — real estate, personal property, financial accounts. The IRS files a public Notice of Federal Tax Lien (NFTL), which makes the lien visible to creditors and damages your ability to borrow.
The IRS files a Notice of Federal Tax Lien when your debt exceeds about $10,000 and you're not actively resolving it. A levy can happen with or without a prior lien filing.
The lien is released within 30 days of full payment (statutory deadline).
The IRS removes the public Notice of Federal Tax Lien as if it were never filed. Available when:
The IRS allows another creditor to take priority over the lien — typically used to refinance a mortgage. Doesn't remove the lien but enables a transaction that often pays the IRS.
The IRS removes the lien from a specific piece of property (typically to allow a sale). The lien remains on other property. Common in real estate sales where the IRS gets paid from the sale proceeds.
Under the IRS Fresh Start initiative, the IRS generally won't file a Notice of Federal Tax Lien if you owe less than $10,000 OR if you're in a Direct Debit Installment Agreement and current. Learn more about the Fresh Start program.
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