Received a CP2000 Notice? Here's What To Do Right Now
CP2000 notice from the IRS? Learn what it means, your 60-day deadline, and the exact steps to respond, agree, or dispute proposed tax changes quickly and correctly.
A CP2000 notice from the IRS is not a tax bill and it is not an audit. It is a notice of proposed changes – the IRS has received information from a third party that does not match what you reported on your return, and it wants an explanation. That distinction matters, because how you respond will determine whether you owe anything at all.
Most people who receive a CP2000 feel a spike of panic. The envelope looks official, the numbers can be large, and the deadline is real. But this notice is also one of the most manageable IRS communications you can receive – if you respond correctly and on time.
This hub covers everything you need to act quickly and confidently. Whether you agree with the IRS’s proposed changes, dispute them entirely, or are still trying to understand what the notice is actually saying, the articles below walk you through each stage of the response process.
What a CP2000 Actually Means
The IRS matches income reported on your tax return against data it receives from employers, banks, brokerages, and other payers. When it finds a discrepancy – an unreported 1099, a dividend you may have missed, stock proceeds not accounted for – it sends a CP2000 proposing additional tax, interest, and sometimes penalties based on that gap.
The proposed amount is not automatically owed. You have the right to agree, partially agree, or disagree entirely. The IRS is required to consider your response before making any final determination. This is not the end of the road – it is the beginning of a process with a defined path forward.
The single most important thing to understand: you have a deadline. CP2000 notices give you 60 days from the date on the notice to respond. Missing that window significantly narrows your options and can result in the proposed tax becoming a formal assessment.
What This Hub Covers
The articles in this section guide you through every immediate decision you face after receiving a CP2000. Start with the first steps overview if you are not sure where to begin, then follow the path that fits your situation.
- What To Do If You Receive a CP2000 Notice – A plain-language breakdown of the notice itself and the decisions you need to make before anything else.
- First 5 Steps To Respond To a CP2000 – A prioritized action checklist covering what to do in the first 48 hours after the notice arrives.
- CP2000 Response Deadline: How Much Time Do You Have? – Exactly how the 60-day window works, what happens if you miss it, and how to request an extension if you need one.
- Should You Agree or Disagree With a CP2000? – How to review the IRS’s proposed changes, identify errors, and decide which response path applies to your situation.
- What Happens If You Ignore a CP2000 Notice? – The escalation sequence the IRS follows when no response is received and what it costs you at each stage.
- Can You Respond to a CP2000 Online or By Mail? – Your submission options, which method creates the clearest paper trail, and how to send documentation securely.
- Do You Need Help Responding to a CP2000? – When to handle this yourself, when to bring in a tax professional, and what kind of help actually makes a difference.
Where To Start
If you received the notice today, read What To Do If You Receive a CP2000 Notice first. It will orient you to what the document means, what the IRS is asking for, and which of the articles below applies to your circumstances.
If you already understand the notice and need to act, go directly to First 5 Steps To Respond To a CP2000. That article is structured as an immediate action guide – written for people who need to move quickly and need each step to be clear.
If your situation is more complex – the proposed amount is large, the income in question is disputed, or you have already missed the initial deadline – the article on whether you need professional help will walk you through an honest assessment of when representation makes sense.
The IRS CP2000 process has clear rules and defined timelines. Responding correctly and on time is almost always the best outcome available. The resources here are designed to help you do exactly that.
The information provided on this website is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal or tax advice. RespondToCP2000.com is not affiliated with the IRS, any law firm, or government agency.
