1. When Tax Consultation Becomes Urgent
The line between routine tax planning and urgent consultation often hinges on whether the IRS has already initiated contact. A notice of audit, correspondence requesting specific documentation, or a letter proposing adjustments signals that consultation should move to the top of your priority list. In practice, these cases are rarely as clean as the statute suggests; the IRS frequently raises issues that were not obvious from the original return.
Recognizing Red Flags Early
Certain circumstances warrant immediate consultation even before formal notice arrives. If you have unreported income, failed to file returns in prior years, operate a business with cash transactions, or hold foreign financial accounts, the risk profile is elevated. New York State also imposes separate reporting requirements for residents with out-of-state income and complex deduction rules that differ from federal treatment. Waiting until an audit notice arrives means you are already on the IRS's radar, and negotiating from a weaker position.
The New York Department of Taxation Response Process
New York State maintains its own audit procedures through the Department of Taxation and Finance, separate from federal IRS procedures. When the state initiates an audit, you have specific rights to respond, appeal to the Division of Tax Appeals, and ultimately seek judicial review in New York's courts. The practical significance is that state audits often focus on residency claims, business deduction allocation, and credits that differ from federal treatment, requiring specialized knowledge of both New York Tax Law and IRS regulations. Early counsel helps you understand which issues are defensible under state law and which require settlement or amended filings.
2. Entity Structure and Tax Consultation Strategy
How you organize your business—sole proprietorship, LLC, S-corporation, C-corporation, or partnership—fundamentally affects your tax liability, audit risk, and liability protection. Many owners choose a structure for liability reasons without fully considering the tax consequences, then discover years later that they are paying significantly more in taxes than necessary. Civil consultation on business formation often overlooks the tax dimension entirely, leaving clients exposed to structural inefficiency.
Pass-through Entity Elections and Self-Employment Tax
An LLC taxed as an S-corporation can dramatically reduce self-employment tax exposure for owners with substantial net income, but only if structured correctly and maintained with proper payroll and documentation. The IRS scrutinizes S-corporation elections closely, particularly when owners claim minimal W-2 wages while taking large distributions. A poorly designed election can trigger audit and penalties that exceed any tax savings. Consultation should address whether your current structure aligns with your actual income pattern and whether an election change would create more risk than benefit.
3. Income Reporting and Compliance Obligations
Federal and state income tax consultation must address all sources of income, not only salary or business net profit. Investment income, rental property, capital gains, and side business revenue each carry distinct reporting requirements and timing rules. Many clients underestimate the complexity of these obligations and file returns that omit income entirely or claim deductions that do not withstand audit scrutiny.
Estimated Tax Payments and Penalty Avoidance
If you do not have income tax withheld from wages—whether you are self-employed, have substantial investment income, or are retired—you must make quarterly estimated tax payments to avoid penalties. New York State imposes separate estimated payment requirements that do not always align with federal deadlines. The penalty for underpayment is calculated using the IRS's underpayment rate and compounds quarterly, making even small miscalculations expensive. Consultation should establish a payment schedule before the first quarter ends, not after penalties have accrued.
Reporting Requirements for Complex Income
Consultation becomes more intricate when you have multiple income streams, foreign income, or transactions that require specialized forms. Schedule C for self-employment, Schedule E for rental income, Form 8949 and Schedule D for capital gains, Form 3520 or 3520-A for foreign trusts, and Form 5471 for controlled foreign corporations each carry their own rules and penalties for omission or error. A single missed form or miscalculated basis can trigger audit and cascading adjustments across years.
4. Gift Tax, Estate Planning, and Family Transfers
Tax consultation often intersects with family wealth transfer planning. Gifts between family members, loans to relatives, and transfers of business interests each carry tax consequences that require coordination between tax and estate counsel. Gift tax between family members rules are complex and frequently misunderstood, leading to unnecessary tax exposure or missed planning opportunities.
Valuation and Reporting in Family Transfers
When you transfer property, business interests, or cash to family members, the IRS requires that the transfer be reported on Form 709 if it exceeds the annual exclusion amount, currently $18,000 per recipient per year. The value assigned to non-cash transfers—such as business interests, real estate, or intellectual property—must be supported by appraisal or valuation analysis. Undervaluation is one of the most frequently audited issues in family transfers, and the penalty for substantial undervaluation can reach 40 percent of the underpaid tax. Consultation should address valuation methodology before the transfer occurs, not after the IRS questions your return.
5. Audit Defense and Negotiation
Once the IRS initiates contact, the consultation shifts from planning to defense and negotiation. Your response strategy depends on the specific adjustments proposed, the strength of your documentation, and your risk tolerance. In our experience, early engagement with the IRS through counsel often results in better outcomes than attempting to respond independently or delaying response.
| IRS Contact Type | Typical Response Timeline | Consultation Priority |
| Correspondence Audit (mail only) | 30 days to respond | High—documentation quality determines outcome |
| Office Audit (in-person) | 2–4 weeks to prepare | Critical—representation protects rights |
| Criminal Investigation Notice | Immediate | Urgent—counsel required before any response |
Your next step should be to gather all documentation related to the disputed items—receipts, invoices, bank statements, and contemporaneous business records—and schedule consultation before responding to the IRS. Do not assume that additional information will help if it does not actually support your position; sometimes the strongest negotiating stance is acknowledging the weakness early and proposing a reasonable settlement rather than prolonging an audit that you will ultimately lose.
04 Mar, 2026

