Receiving an IRS notice can be scary, but most notices are routine and easily resolved. Understanding what different notices mean, how to respond, and when to get help is critical for handling IRS correspondence successfully. This comprehensive guide explains how to respond to IRS notices for freelancers in 2026.
Table of Contents
Understanding IRS Notices
The basics:
What Are IRS Notices?
IRS notices = Letters from IRS about your tax account
Purpose:
- Inform you of issues
- Request information
- Request payment
- Start audit process
Most notices: Routine, easily resolved
Don't Panic
Most notices are not serious:
- Balance due (you just need to pay)
- Missing information (you just need to provide it)
- Simple corrections
Don't assume the worst: Read notice, understand what it says
Common Notice Types
Understanding different notices:
CP14: Balance Due
What it means: You owe taxes
Action: Pay or set up payment plan
Most common: Routine notice
CP2000: Underreported Income
What it means: IRS found income you didn't report
Action: Review, agree or disagree, respond
Common: If you forgot to report income
CP75: Audit Notice
What it means: Your return is being audited
Action: Provide requested documents
Less common: But manageable if prepared
Other Notices
Many other notice types: Each has specific purpose
Key: Read notice carefully, understand what it's asking
CP14: Balance Due Notice
Understanding this common notice:
What It Means
CP14 = You owe taxes (plus penalties and interest)
Why you got it:
- You filed return but didn't pay
- You underpaid estimated taxes
- IRS calculated additional tax
Action: Pay or set up payment plan
How to Respond
Option 1: Pay in Full
- Pay amount due
- Stops penalties and interest from continuing
- Resolves immediately
Option 2: Set Up Payment Plan
- If you can't pay in full
- Apply for installment agreement
- Pay monthly over time
Action: Don't ignore - respond and pay or set up plan
Real Example
Scenario: Receive CP14, owe $5,000
Options:
- Pay $5,000 in full (stops penalties/interest)
- Set up payment plan ($200/month for 25 months)
Action: Choose based on what you can afford
CP2000: Underreported Income
Understanding this notice:
What It Means
CP2000 = IRS found income you didn't report (usually from 1099s)
Why you got it:
- You received 1099 but didn't report income
- IRS matched 1099 to your return
- Income doesn't match
Action: Review, agree or disagree, respond
How to Respond
If you agree:
- Agree with IRS calculation
- Pay additional tax, penalties, interest
- Simple: Just pay
If you disagree:
- Explain why (with documentation)
- Provide proof
- IRS may accept your explanation
Action: Review carefully, respond appropriately
Real Example
Scenario: Receive CP2000, IRS says you didn't report $8,000
Review:
- Check your return
- Did you report it? (Maybe you did, IRS made mistake)
- Or did you forget? (Need to agree and pay)
If you forgot: Agree, pay additional tax If you reported it: Disagree, provide proof
CP75: Audit Notice
Understanding audit notices:
What It Means
CP75 = Your return is being audited
Why you got it:
- IRS selected your return for review
- May be random or based on red flags
Action: Provide requested documents
How to Respond
Step 1: Read notice carefully (what's being audited?)
Step 2: Gather requested documents
Step 3: Respond by deadline
Step 4: Be professional and cooperative
Action: Don't panic, respond professionally
How to Read a Notice
Understanding what it says:
Key Information
Every notice has:
- Notice number (CP14, CP2000, etc.)
- Tax year
- Amount (if applicable)
- What IRS wants
- Deadline to respond
- Contact information
Read carefully: Understand what IRS is asking
The Deadline
Critical: Notice gives deadline to respond
Don't miss: Respond by deadline (or request extension)
If you miss: Situation gets worse (penalties, interest, collection actions)
Try the tool
How to Respond
Here's the process:
Step 1: Read Notice Carefully
Understand:
- What notice is about
- What IRS wants
- What deadline is
- What amount is (if applicable)
Don't skim: Read carefully
Step 2: Gather Information
If notice asks for documents:
- Gather requested documents
- Organize clearly
- Make copies (keep originals)
If notice is about payment:
- Review amount
- Determine if correct
- Decide how to pay
Step 3: Respond by Deadline
Critical: Respond by deadline
How to respond:
- Mail (if notice provides address)
- Online (if notice provides online option)
- Phone (if notice provides phone number)
Don't ignore: Always respond
Step 4: Follow Up
If IRS requests more:
- Provide additional information
- Stay responsive
- Don't ignore follow-up requests
When to Get Help
Understanding when you need professional help:
Get Help If:
✅ Notice is complex (don't understand what it's asking) ✅ Amount is large (significant money at stake) ✅ You disagree with notice (need to dispute) ✅ You're being audited (complex process) ✅ You're unsure how to respond
Cost: $500-$2,000+ (but worth it for complex situations)
Can Handle Yourself If:
✅ Notice is simple (balance due, just need to pay) ✅ Amount is small ✅ You agree with notice ✅ You understand what to do
Most simple notices: Can handle yourself
Real Examples and Scenarios
Let's work through scenarios:
Example 1: Simple Balance Due
Scenario: Receive CP14, owe $2,000
Notice says: "You owe $2,000 for 2025 tax year"
Response:
- Review amount (is it correct?)
- Pay $2,000 (or set up payment plan)
- Simple: Just pay
Time: Resolved in days
Example 2: Underreported Income
Scenario: Receive CP2000, IRS says you didn't report $5,000
Notice says: "We found $5,000 in income you didn't report"
Response:
- Review: Did you report it? (Check your return)
- If you forgot: Agree, pay additional tax
- If you reported it: Disagree, provide proof
Time: 1-2 months to resolve
Example 3: Audit Notice
Scenario: Receive CP75, being audited
Notice says: "We're auditing your 2025 return, please provide receipts for $3,000 in expenses"
Response:
- Gather requested receipts
- Mail to IRS with explanation
- Wait for IRS response
Time: 2-4 months to resolve
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Learn from others' mistakes:
Mistake #1: Ignoring the Notice
The problem: You ignore notice, thinking it will go away
The solution: Always respond (ignoring makes it worse)
Mistake #2: Not Reading Carefully
The problem: You skim notice, don't understand what's needed
The solution: Read carefully, understand what IRS wants
Mistake #3: Missing Deadline
The problem: You respond but after deadline
The solution: Respond by deadline (or request extension)
Mistake #4: Not Getting Help When Needed
The problem: You try to handle complex notice alone
The solution: Get professional help if notice is complex or you're unsure
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I Need to Respond to Every Notice?
Yes. Always respond, even if you think it's wrong. Don't ignore IRS notices.
What If I Don't Understand the Notice?
Get help: Consult tax professional or call IRS (phone number on notice)
Don't guess: Understand what notice is asking before responding
What If I Miss the Deadline?
Contact IRS: Explain situation, request extension
Don't ignore: Contact IRS, work out solution
Can I Ignore a Notice If I Think It's Wrong?
No. Always respond, even if you disagree. Explain why you disagree (with documentation).
Bottom Line: Your Notice Response Plan
Here's your plan for handling IRS notices:
Immediate Actions
- Don't panic (most notices are routine)
- Read notice carefully (understand what it's asking)
- Gather information (documents, records, etc.)
- Respond by deadline (don't ignore)
- Get help if needed (if complex or unsure)
Ongoing Actions
- Stay responsive (if IRS requests more, provide it)
- Follow up (if needed, check status)
- Keep records (of all correspondence)
- Stay organized (makes responding easier)
Key Takeaways
✅ Most notices are routine (balance due, missing information, etc.)
✅ Don't panic (read notice, understand what it's asking)
✅ Always respond (don't ignore - makes it worse)
✅ Respond by deadline (or request extension)
✅ Get help if needed (complex notices, large amounts, etc.)
✅ Keep records (of all correspondence with IRS)
✅ Be professional (cooperation helps resolve faster)
Final Thought
IRS notices are usually routine and easily resolved. The key is not panicking, reading the notice carefully, understanding what's needed, and responding by the deadline. Don't ignore notices—always respond, even if you disagree. Get professional help if the notice is complex or you're unsure how to respond. Most notices are resolved simply—don't assume the worst.