If you've received an IRS Information Request letter after filing your Form 1023 or 1024 tax-exemption application, the clock is already ticking. That envelope from the Department of the Treasury means the IRS sees a failure under the organizational test or the operational test. You have 30 days from the date printed on the letter, not from when it arrived.
They are giving you one chance to fix it or write your own adverse determination letter. You don't fix it with emotion or guesswork. You fix it with facts and answers grounded in Treasury regulations. That's what this service does.
Why You Got The LetterSomething in your application drew scrutiny. This letter may be a minor correction, or it may be the IRS laying groundwork for denial. They won't say which. The examiner's job is to test your application. Yours is to answer without speculation, explanation, or self-inflicted damage.
What You Shouldn't DoDon't argue. Don't guess. Don't stall. Every word you send becomes part of your permanent record, so skip the backstory and keep it factual. You have 30 days from the date on the letter, not when you opened it. Miss that window, and the IRS will close your file without a second thought.
How the Correspondence Help Works
I go through your IRS letter and your entire application. I'll tell you exactly what the IRS is asking and where your application failed to answer it. You'll get a diagnostic breakdown of the IRS letter and a line-by-line walkthrough on a call before you respond.
1. A full analysis of the denial grounds the letter is trying to build
2. Complete review of your response against the original application
3. Guidance on what to attach, and what to leave out before submission
Get in touch before the 30 days run out. The IRS won't wait.