Tax relief leads

Better tax relief calls. Less DIY advice traffic.

A useful tax relief inquiry should say who is collecting, what notice arrived, how much is owed, whether wages or accounts are at risk, and how quickly the person needs help.

The notice and the risk

Before anyone reviews the case, the team needs to understand the notice, balance, urgency, and risk.

Before anyone reviews the case, the team needs to understand who is collecting, what notice arrived, the balance, the urgency, and what risk is actually on the table.

  • agency
  • notice
  • balance
  • urgency

Tax Relief: IRS Notice Calls

Make the tax notice feel manageable before it gets reviewed.

Tax relief prospects often feel pressure from notices, deadlines, or collections. Your tax relief business should feel practical and steady before they share the problem.

  • Notice

    Know what arrived and who is collecting.

  • Balance

    Understand the amount and tax years.

  • Risk

    Surface levy, garnishment, or account pressure.

  • Case reviews

    Know which calls became case reviews.

What a useful inquiry already includes

Know the tax problem before the case review starts.

The lead should make agency, balance, notice type, urgency, income or business context, and next step clear.

  • agency
  • balance owed
  • notice type
  • urgency
  • income or business context
  • next step

Tax Relief

Bring in

  • IRS notice calls
  • state tax conversations
  • levy and garnishment inquiries
  • case-review requests

Filter out

  • tiny balance questions
  • DIY advice seekers
  • unsupported tax years
  • general refund questions

Useful starting points

Lead sources to test first.

The channel should match how this buyer starts the conversation, not just where ads are easy to buy.

Tell us what tax relief cases you want more of.

Start with the balances, notices, states, and case types your team can review.

Start with the tax cases worth reviewing.

A few words about your best-fit tax relief cases is enough.