Quick note: This article is general information about CNC status, not tax or legal advice. Eligibility depends on a complete review of your income, expenses, and assets — the framework below shows how the IRS thinks, not whether you specifically qualify.
If you genuinely cannot pay the IRS without preventing yourself from meeting basic living expenses, the IRS can place your account in Currently Not Collectible — sometimes called "Status 53" or CNC hardship. What that does:
The IRS uses national and local "Allowable Living Expense" standards to decide what counts as a reasonable monthly expense. The basic test is:
Monthly income, minus allowable living expenses, equals what the IRS thinks you can pay them. If that number is zero or negative, you're a CNC candidate.
Allowable expenses include national standards for food, clothing, personal care, and out-of-pocket healthcare; local standards for housing and utilities (varies by county); local transportation standards (varies by region); and certain other necessary expenses (court-ordered payments, child support, life-saving medical needs).
The IRS does not consider every actual expense allowable — luxury items, voluntary retirement contributions beyond a baseline, and some lifestyle expenses get pulled out of the calculation even if you actually pay them.
To request CNC, you typically need to submit Form 433-F (Collection Information Statement) or Form 433-A (the longer version) showing:
The IRS will compare your stated expenses to their allowable standards and may ask for supporting documentation. The numbers have to be defensible — overstating expenses to make CNC fit is one of the fastest ways to disqualify yourself.
People sometimes confuse the two. The difference:
Some taxpayers cycle from CNC into an OIC when their financial picture stabilizes enough to make a credible offer. Others stay in CNC long-term and ride out the CSED. Which path makes sense depends entirely on the specifics.
CNC isn't free of cost. The interest meter continues. Some taxpayers in CNC for several years see the balance grow significantly even though they're not paying anything. If the CSED is far away, that growth matters; if the CSED is close, it doesn't, because the whole thing expires anyway.
The other downside: CNC can flag you for periodic re-review. The IRS will look at your filed returns each year. A jump in income — even one good year — can move you out of CNC and into an installment agreement faster than expected.
CNC is one of the most effective options for taxpayers in genuine hardship, but it's also one of the most paperwork-heavy. Getting the financial statement right, mapping your real expenses to the IRS's allowable categories, and presenting the case in a way that the IRS accepts the first time — that's where Wynn Tax Solutions can make the difference between an approval and an extended back-and-forth. If you authorize us, we communicate with the IRS directly so you don't have to navigate the financial-disclosure process alone.
Bottom line: If you're in real hardship and the IRS is breathing down your neck, CNC is a real, named option that's specifically designed for your situation. It's not a stigma and it's not a trick — it's a recognized status that millions of taxpayers use every year.