In e-News for Tax Professionals 2026-05, the IRS has quietly made a big change that will matter to a lot of cash‑strapped businesses and their owners: “Streamlined Installment Agreements” have been rebranded and expanded as Simple Payment Plans, and as of December 3, 2025, they now fully cover many business taxpayers, not just individuals.
For practitioners and business owners, this means more cases
can be resolved quickly, without financial disclosures, with predictable terms
and fewer headaches.
What Is a
Simple Payment Plan?
A Simple Payment Plan is a long‑term payment arrangement
with the IRS for taxpayers who owe but can’t pay in full right away. These
plans are designed to be quick to set up and low‑friction:
·
No
collection information statement (no Form 433) is required to qualify.
·
No lien
determination is required as part of the qualification criteria.
·
No trust
fund recovery penalty determination is required just to get into the plan.
·
Taxpayers
must be current with all filing and payment obligations.
Previously, this streamlined treatment was largely discussed
in the context of individuals, but now the IRS has folded key business
installment agreement programs into this “Simple Payment Plan” framework.
The Big Update: Businesses Are Now Included
On December 3, 2025, the IRS updated how it processes
business installment agreements. Two familiar business programs are now handled
under the Simple Payment Plan umbrella:
·
In‑Business
Trust Fund Express Agreement
·
Business
Streamlined Agreement
Both are now processed using the updated Simple Payment Plan
qualifications. In practice, this means more in‑business and out‑of‑business
taxpayers can get a plan set up quickly if they stay under the new dollar
thresholds and are current on filings.
Who
Qualifies? Key Dollar Thresholds
The Simple Payment Plan is all about the total assessed tax, penalties, and interest.
Here are the current thresholds:
·
Total
assessed tax, penalties, and interest of 50,000
dollars or less.
This continues the long‑standing streamlined concept for
1040 taxpayers, now under the “Simple Payment Plan” label.
Businesses
With Trust Fund Taxes
Trust fund taxes are amounts withheld from employees (such
as federal income tax withholding and the employee portion of FICA) that the
business holds in trust for the government.
For businesses with trust fund taxes:
·
25,000 dollars or less in assessed tax, penalties, and interest; or
·
50,000 dollars or less for an out‑of‑business
sole proprietorship.
That last point is important: an out‑of‑business sole
proprietor with trust fund exposure can still benefit from the higher
50,000‑dollar threshold.
Businesses
Without Trust Fund Taxes
For businesses that do not owe trust fund taxes (for
example, some income‑tax‑only cases):
·
50,000 dollars or less in assessed tax, penalties, and interest.
What If
the Balance Is Too High?
If a taxpayer does not qualify for a Simple Payment Plan
under these thresholds, they may still qualify for another type of payment plan
under standard IRS installment agreement rules. That may require a collection
information statement, lien analysis, and possibly a more detailed negotiation.
Basic
Requirements: Staying Current
All applicants for a Simple Payment Plan must be current with filing and payment
obligations. That generally means:
·
All
required returns are filed.
·
Current‑year
withholding or estimated tax payments are up to date.
For businesses, that also means current federal tax deposits
must be made on time if the business is still operating.
The IRS will not approve a Simple Payment Plan if the
taxpayer is still accruing new balances through missed deposits or estimated
payments.
While the exact terms can vary by case, the Simple Payment
Plan is intended to fit within the normal collection statute, which often
allows several years for full payment. Longer terms, however, mean more
interest and penalties over time.
Accepted payment methods include:
·
Direct
debit from a bank account (often the smoothest and most favored method).
·
Monthly
payments via IRS Direct Pay.
·
Debit or
credit card, digital wallet, or cash through approved third‑party processors.
Direct debit can reduce setup fees in some situations and
tends to lower default risk.
How to Apply: Individuals vs. Businesses
The application path is different for individuals and
businesses.
Individuals can:
·
Sign in
to their IRS online account to request a Simple Payment Plan.
·
Call the
phone number listed on their IRS notice.
·
Call
general IRS individual accounts at 800‑829‑1040.
Online access remains the fastest route for many 1040
balances that fall within the 50,000‑dollar limit.
Businesses or their authorized representatives can:
·
Call 800‑829‑4933 (business and specialty
tax line).
·
Visit a
local Taxpayer Assistance Center (TAC) after scheduling an appointment.
These channels now process eligible business installment
requests under the updated Simple Payment Plan rules.
Practical Takeaways for Business Owners and Advisors
For owners and advisors, the expanded Simple Payment Plan
rules create several planning opportunities:
·
Faster
resolution for qualifying in‑business 941 and 1120 cases with balances under
the new thresholds.
·
Less
intrusive setup for many out‑of‑business entities and sole proprietors,
especially with trust fund exposure under 50,000 dollars.
·
Clear
guidance on when a case can be handled quickly versus when a full‑blown
financial disclosure‑based installment agreement is necessary.
For more detail, including the latest payment terms and options, the IRS maintains a dedicated “Simple Payment Plans for individuals and businesses” page on IRS.gov.





