Wage Garnishment Help
A levy is a legal seizure of your property to satisfy a tax debt. The IRS can actually take the property to satisfy the tax debt. Wage garnishment is wage levy.
If you do not pay your taxes, the IRS may seize and sell any type of real or personal property that you own or have an interest in. The IRS can:
1. Take property that is yours but is held by someone else (such as your wages, retirement accounts, dividends, bank accounts, licenses, rental income, accounts receivables, the cash loan value of your life insurance, or commissions).
2. Take and sell property that you hold such as house, boat, or car.
The IRS has 3 requirements before they can levy:
1. The IRS assessed the tax and sent you a Notice and Demand for Payment;
2. You neglected or refused to pay the tax; and
3. The IRS sent you a Final Notice of Intent to Levy and Notice of Your Right to A Hearing (levy notice) at least 30 days before the levy.
The most common levies are bank levy and wage levy (or wage garnishment).
There are ways to release or remove wage garnishments that a professional, such as a CPA, can do. This is why we are here to help you. Give us a call for a free consultation! We are interested to hear your unique case and help you get back to you normal life. Call us – 1 (424) 278-4838.
Common Bookkeeping Problems
These four problems usually appear together—and they’re the exact pain points that tell a business owner their books aren’t truly “working” for them yet.
Behind on Reconciliations
Reconciliations are how your books are tied to reality. Each month, your bank and credit card statements should be matched line-by-line to what’s in QuickBooks.
When this falls behind:
- Transactions pile up and become harder to sort correctly
- Errors go unnoticed (duplicates, missing charges, miscategorized items)
- Cash balances in QuickBooks stop matching the bank
- You lose trust in your numbers
Being “behind” often means months—or even years—of activity haven’t been verified. At that point, the books become more of a guess than a financial record.
Unclear Profitability
Many business owners know how much cash is in the bank, but not whether the business is actually profitable.
This happens when:
- Income and expenses are lumped into broad or incorrect categories
- Owner draws, reimbursements, and business expenses are mixed together
- There’s no clean Profit & Loss statement
- Reports don’t reflect real operating costs
Without clear profitability, it’s impossible to answer:
- “Am I actually making money?”
- “Which services or products are profitable?”
- “Can I afford to hire, invest, or raise my prices?”
You may feel busy and financially strained—even if the business should be healthy.
Tax-Time Surprises
Tax surprises usually come from messy or incomplete books.
Common causes include:
- Income recorded incorrectly or not at all
- Personal expenses mixed with business spending
- Missing deductions
- No estimate of taxable profit throughout the year
The result is:
- Higher-than-expected tax bills
- Scrambling for cash in April
- Stress over whether the numbers are even right
Clean monthly books let you see tax exposure in advance so nothing comes out of nowhere.
Confusing QuickBooks Setup
QuickBooks is powerful—but only if it’s set up properly.
A confusing setup often includes:
- Dozens of unnecessary accounts
- Generic or misused categories
- Bank feeds dumping transactions into “Uncategorized”
- No structure for owner pay, taxes, or payroll
- Reports that don’t make sense
This makes every task harder:
- Categorizing feels like guesswork
- Reports aren’t useful
- You’re never sure if things are “right”
Instead of saving time, QuickBooks becomes another source of anxiety.
Together, these problems create a cycle:
Messy setup → unreconciled books → unclear profit → tax shocks → more stress → avoidance → even messier books.
Good bookkeeping breaks that cycle by making your numbers accurate, understandable, and useful—so your business feels manageable again.



