Alabama Tax Resolution Document Package
A fillable Word document customized to Alabama law — agency-referenced statutory citations, ready to print and send to the ALDOR.
✓ Fillable .docx · ✓ Agency-referenced Alabamastatutes · ✓ Secure checkout
What's Included:
- Your Alabama collection statute of limitations (Ala. Code §40-29-51, paralleling federal collection limitations)
- Fillable Installment Agreement request letter
- Fillable Penalty Abatement (reasonable-cause) letter
- Offer in Compromise / hardship settlement statement
- Wage garnishment & levy-release request letter
- Your Alabama rights & appeal deadlines
Your Alabama Tax Agency
- Agency: Alabama Department of Revenue (ALDOR)
- Phone: (334) 242-1000
- Portal: www.revenue.alabama.gov
- State income tax: Yes
10 years from the date of final assessment for collection by the Department (Ala. Code §40-29-51, paralleling federal collection limitations); liens under Ala. Code §40-1-2.
Verified Alabama Resolution Options
Installment agreements: Payment agreements administered under ALDOR Collection Services authority (Ala. Code §40-2A-4); apply via My Alabama Taxes (MAT).
Offer in compromise / settlement: Offer in Compromise / settlement authority under Ala. Code §40-2A-4(b)(6) and ALDOR settlement guidelines (doubt as to collectibility / liability).
Penalty abatement: Penalty waiver for reasonable cause under Ala. Code §40-2A-11(g); request via written reasonable-cause statement.
Wage / levy protection: Federal CCPA floor (15 U.S.C. §1673): ordinary creditor garnishment limited to the lesser of 25% of disposable earnings or the amount exceeding 30× the federal minimum wage. State tax levies on wages may exceed this consumer cap at agency discretion. Alabama follows the federal 75% disposable-earnings exemption (Ala. Code §6-10-7).
- Fillable .docx delivered by email
- Alabama-specific statutes
- Attorney-grade formatting
- Secure Stripe checkout
Need Professional Help?
If your Alabama case is complex, our attorneys handle everything.
Free ConsultationThis package is an educational/self-help tool prepared based on Alabama law (Ala. Code §40-29-51, paralleling federal collection limitations). It is not legal advice and not a substitute for a licensed tax professional.