Receiving a rejection letter for your Offer in Compromise (OIC) can be devastating, but in 2026, it is rarely the end of the road. Statistics show that the IRS rejects a significant portion of offers on the first pass—often due to simple math disagreements or missing paperwork.
You have a 30-day window from the date on your rejection letter to fight back. Here is how to use IRS Form 13711 to appeal the decision and get your offer back on track.
The most critical rule of the OIC appeal is the clock. Your appeal request must be postmarked within 30 days of the date on the rejection letter. If you miss this window, the IRS will resume collection actions, including bank levies and wage garnishments.
Before filling out Form 13711, you must look at the Income/Expense and Asset/Equity Tables included in your rejection package. These tables show exactly where the IRS disagreed with you.
Form 13711 is your formal protest. To be successful, you shouldn't just say "I disagree." You must provide a Specific Itemized Protest.
Once you file Form 13711, your case is moved out of the hands of the "Offer Specialist" who rejected you and into the Independent Office of Appeals.
The Appeals Officer is a seasoned IRS veteran who knows the Internal Revenue Manual (IRM) inside and out. If you walk into an appeals conference without knowing the specific legal codes to cite, you are at a significant disadvantage.
At Wolf Tax, we don't just file the form; we build a Legal Protest Brief. We cite specific sections of the IRM and Treasury Regulations to prove the IRS agent made a procedural error. In 2026, many of our successful OICs will actually "win" during this appeal phase.
Don't let the 30-day clock run out. If you've received a rejection letter, contact us immediately for a forensic review of the IRS's calculations.