The Internal Revenue Service changes and announces new initiatives every year.  This webinar will discuss the Internal Revenue Service’s latest initiatives and how you can prepare for a successful year in representing your clients.  We will discuss the Internal Revenue Service’s audit and collection efforts and activities and what you can expect during 2023 with an Internal Revenue Service that may have its first large budget increase in more than a decade.

Webinar Objectives

This webinar will provide insight and tools to assist you and your clients understand what the Internal Revenue Service will focus on during 2023 and how successful they were during 2022.  We will discuss what a large budget increase to the Internal Revenue Service will mean for taxpayers

Webinar Highlights
  • IRS Audit Activity during 2022
  • IRS Collection Activity during 2022
  • IRS priorities for 2023
  • IRS Budget and what it means for your client
  • New Programs that may be beneficial to your client
Who Should Attend?

Accountants, tax preparers, CFOs, financial compliance professionals, and lawyers

 

Client Testimonial (MarcT)

This was my second tax law related seminar (one on civil tax fraud and the other on penalty abatement requests) presented by attorney Adam Fayne. He explains the complex clearly (e.g., the elements of civil tax fraud, defenses, and the IRS’s burden of proof), he understands what he is talking about (e.g., frequently providing numerous real-world examples from his own tax law practice), and he has depth of knowledge of tax law (which is rare for such a vast topic). He does the little things that a seminar attendee would appreciate. His slides seen throughout the seminar are a helpful and concise resource for later reference. Also, Mr. Fayne  took the time at the beginning to let us know about a recent US Tax Court decision decided days before the seminar that provides potential refund opportunities to taxpayers inappropriately assessed “Form 5471 penalties.” Similarly, he mentioned and cited on slides, when relevant, citations to the tax code, the  Internal Revenue Manual, and case law. I’d give both seminars I have attended my highest recommendation to experienced tax practitioners, as well as those new to that practice.