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IRS Announces New Form 907 Extension Option for ERC Disallowance Responses

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Summary

The IRS announced a new streamlined process for taxpayers who have received Employee Retention Credit (ERC) disallowance notices (Letters 105-C or 106-C) to request additional time to respond. Eligible taxpayers—those with six months or less remaining before their two-year deadline expires and awaiting IRS consideration of their response—may now submit Form 907 via the IRS Document Upload Tool by selecting notice CP320B. The IRS will review requests and notify taxpayers in writing whether the extension is granted.

Why this matters

Tax practitioners handling ERC claim disputes should audit their client portfolios for open Letter 105-C or 106-C disallowances and identify those with six months or fewer remaining before the two-year window closes. Form 907 must be signed by both the taxpayer and the IRS before the deadline expires, so early preparation is essential to preserve refund-suit rights.

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About this source

GovPing monitors IRS Newsroom for new tax regulatory changes. Every update since tracking began is archived, classified, and available as free RSS or email alerts — 11 changes logged to date.

What changed

The IRS introduced a new optional pathway for ERC claimants to extend their time to file suit or resolve claims administratively. Taxpayers meeting two criteria—their response to a Letter 105-C or 106-C disallowance is under IRS consideration, and six months or less remain before the two-year deadline—may now use the Document Upload Tool to submit Form 907 rather than traditional paper processes. The IRS will consider properly executed Forms 907 and respond in writing.

Tax advisors and compliance teams handling ERC refund claims should identify any clients with active disallowances approaching the two-year window. This new process provides a formal mechanism to preserve litigation rights, but it requires both parties to sign Form 907 before the statutory deadline expires. Taxpayers who did not receive Notice CP320B may still qualify if they meet the stated criteria.

Archived snapshot

Apr 28, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

IR-2026-58, April 27, 2026

WASHINGTON — The Internal Revenue Service today announced a new, streamlined way for taxpayers to extend the period of time for the IRS and the IRS Independent Office of Appeals to review a taxpayer’s response to a disallowance of an Employee Retention Credit (ERC) claim to avoid refund litigation.

When an ERC claim is disallowed by the IRS, taxpayers receive a Letter 105-C or 106-C. These affected taxpayers generally have two years from the date of that letter to resolve their claim administratively or to file a refund suit in Federal court if they disagree with the IRS’s decision. Taxpayers may protest the IRS’s disallowance with the IRS Independent Office of Appeals, but that does not extend this statutory two-year deadline.

After the two-year period ends, the IRS cannot issue a refund, even if it later decides in the taxpayer’s favor after reviewing the disallowance. The deadline varies depending on the date of the original 105-C or 106-C letter.

The IRS is aware that some taxpayers are approaching the end of this two-year period and is providing a new way for taxpayers to request more time to resolve their claims administratively or to file suit through the filing of Form 907, Agreement to Extend the Time to Bring Suit PDF, if they meet both of the following conditions:

  • The taxpayer is waiting for the IRS to consider their response to the notice of disallowance on Letter 105-C or 106-C, and
  • The taxpayer has six months or less remaining before their two-year period expires. Requesting more time to file suit or resolve claim administratively

Under current law, the IRS and a taxpayer can agree in writing to extend the time to file suit, if both parties sign Form 907 before the two-year period expires. A fully executed Form 907 gives the IRS more time to consider the disallowance administratively and gives the taxpayer more time to file suit, if needed.

Starting today, taxpayers with six months or less remaining in their time to file suit, and who are waiting for the IRS to consider their disallowance response to Letter 105-C or 106-C, may submit Form 907 requesting an extension via the IRS Document Upload Tool by going to IRS.gov/DUTReply and selecting notice ‘CP320B’ from the drop-down menu. Properly executed Forms 907 will be given due consideration by the IRS, and taxpayers will be informed in writing whether the IRS has agreed to the extension. Countersigned Forms 907 will be sent to taxpayers or their authorized representative. The IRS will not consider, as part of this tool, Forms 907 submitted for disallowances unrelated to Letters 105-C or 106-C, and taxpayers should submit these requests through the IRS’s normal processes.

The IRS is sending Notice CP320B to taxpayers identified as eligible for this new Form 907 submission method. Step-by-step instructions are available at IRS.gov/CP320B.

Taxpayers may be eligible to extend the time even if they don’t receive Notice CP320B. Step-by-step instructions are available at IRS.gov/erc105c and IRS.gov/erc106c for those who believe they meet the above-stated criteria, even if they did not receive a letter.

Taxpayers who received an ERC claim disallowance notice and are unsure of their deadline should review the information provided on IRS.gov: Understanding Letter 105-C, Disallowance of the Employee Retention Credit or Letter 106-C, Claim Partially Disallowed. Those with additional questions should call the phone number listed on their most recent IRS notice.

The IRS will continue processing ERC claims and appeals in accordance with its established procedures. This new streamlined process is intended to provide taxpayers with clear, timely information about their rights and available options, and thereby observing taxpayers’ rights.

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
IRS
Published
April 27th, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Branch
Executive
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Employers Public companies Government agencies
Industry sector
9211 Government & Public Administration
Activity scope
Tax credit claims administration Refund dispute resolution Administrative appeals
Geographic scope
United States US

Taxonomy

Primary area
Taxation
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Financial Services Consumer Finance

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