You Dedicated Your Career to Helping Others. Do Not Let the IRS Put Your Practice at Risk.
Best Tax Attorney for Medical Professionals
Medical professionals are among the highest earning and most IRS scrutinized professionals in the country. Dentists, chiropractors, and med spa owners spend years building practices that generate significant income and equally significant tax obligations. Private practice ownership, independent contractor arrangements, payroll tax liability for staff, and the demands of running a medical business leave almost no bandwidth for proper tax management. When IRS debt builds up in a medical practice the consequences can be devastating. David Cho and his team at Tax Law Advocates are here to help medical professionals across the country resolve their IRS debt and protect everything they have worked so hard to build.
The Tax Reality of Private Practice Ownership
Why Medical Professionals Face Unique IRS Challenges
Medical professionals who own private practices operate as business owners first and healthcare providers second in the eyes of the IRS. Practice income, payroll obligations for staff and associates, self-employment tax for owner operators, and the complexity of managing insurance reimbursements, patient payments, and business expenses create a tax environment that is almost impossible to manage without dedicated professional help.
High income years create high tax obligations that catch many practice owners off guard. Insurance reimbursement cycles create cash flow timing issues that make quarterly estimated payments difficult to maintain. And the personal and professional demands of running a medical practice leave almost no time for the kind of proactive tax management that keeps the IRS at bay.
The Pain Points That Bring Medical Professionals to Us
Common IRS Tax Problems Medical Professionals Face
- Unpaid self-employment taxes. Practice owners operating as sole proprietors or single member LLCs owe self-employment tax on top of federal income tax creating a combined obligation that catches many off guard.
- Missed quarterly estimated payments. Insurance reimbursement delays and irregular cash flow make quarterly payments difficult to maintain and the penalties compound fast.
- Payroll tax problems for practice staff. Medical practices with employees face serious payroll tax obligations and the Trust Fund Recovery Penalty makes owners personally liable for unpaid employment taxes.
- Unfiled tax returns. The demands of running a medical practice push many professionals into multiple years of unfiled returns without realizing how serious the situation is becoming.
- IRS audits triggered by high income and deduction claims. High earning medical professionals are audited at significantly higher rates and having attorney-led representation from the start makes an enormous difference.
- IRS liens on practice assets. The IRS can file liens against your practice equipment, medical supplies, and business assets making it impossible to continue operating effectively.
The Best Attorney-Led Solution for Medical Practice IRS Problems
How Tax Law Advocates Helps Medical Professionals
At Tax Law Advocates we understand the unique financial pressures of running a medical practice. David Cho personally reviews every medical professional case and builds a resolution strategy that accounts for the complexity of practice income, payroll obligations, and the personal and professional stakes involved. Whether you need an Offer in Compromise, an installment agreement, penalty abatement, or immediate intervention to stop a lien or levy, we have the legal authority and experience to get it done.
Dedicated Tax Relief Pages for Every Medical Professional
Who We Help in Medical Professionals
Dentists
Dentists who own private practices face high income tax obligations, payroll tax liability for dental staff, and the complexity of managing practice income that creates serious IRS debt situations. We have a dedicated page built specifically for dentists. Best Tax Attorney for Dentists
Chiropractors
 Chiropractors operating independent practices deal with self-employment tax, insurance reimbursement timing issues, and the demands of running a healthcare business that leave little bandwidth for tax management. Best Tax Attorney for Chiropractors
Med Spas
Med spa owners face a unique combination of medical and business income that creates complex tax obligations. High revenue service based businesses with staff payroll and significant equipment costs make med spas particularly vulnerable to IRS debt. Best Tax Attorney for Med Spas
The Difference Attorney-Led Representation Makes
Why Tax Law Advocates is the Best Choice for Medical Professionals
- Tax attorneys, not a call center. David Cho personally handles your case from consultation to resolution.
- We understand medical practice income. Practice ownership, insurance reimbursements, payroll obligations, and self-employment tax are things we deal with every day.
- Full IRS authority. We represent you before every level of the IRS including Appeals and Tax Court.
- Attorney-client privilege. Everything you share with David Cho is legally protected from the first conversation.
- Proven results. From accepted Offers in Compromise to stopped garnishments and removed liens, we deliver real outcomes for medical professionals nationwide.
Simple Steps to IRS Relief for Medical Professionals
Our Process
01
Free Consultation with a Licensed Tax Professional.
Review your IRS situation and understand your options at no cost.
02
Case Review
We pull your IRS transcripts, analyze your tax history, and identify the best resolution path.
03
Attorney Strategy
David Cho personally builds your resolution strategy based on your income, debt, and circumstances.
04
IRS Negotiation
We handle all IRS communication and negotiation on your behalf.
05
Resolution
Your case reaches the best possible outcome whether that is an accepted OIC, an installment plan, penalty relief, or lien withdrawal.
Frequently Asked Questions for Medical Professionals
What is the best way for a medical professional to resolve IRS debt?
The best approach depends on your practice situation and financial capacity. An Offer in Compromise can settle your debt for less than you owe. An installment agreement creates manageable payments. Penalty abatement reduces your total balance. David Cho evaluates every option and recommends the strongest strategy for your case.
Can the IRS audit a medical professional for high income and deductions?
Yes. High earning medical professionals are audited at significantly higher rates than average taxpayers. Large deduction claims, practice ownership structures, and high income levels all make medical professionals prime audit targets. David Cho provides full audit representation and protection.
What is the Trust Fund Recovery Penalty for medical practice owners?
The Trust Fund Recovery Penalty makes practice owners personally liable for payroll taxes withheld from staff but never remitted to the IRS. It applies even if the practice closes and can equal the full amount of unpaid employment taxes. David Cho provides aggressive legal defense against TFRP assessments.
Can a medical professional qualify for an Offer in Compromise?
You may qualify if your total tax liability exceeds what you can realistically pay based on your current income, practice expenses, and assets. David Cho evaluates your complete financial picture to determine if an OIC is achievable for your case.
What happens if a medical professional has unfiled tax returns?
All required returns must be filed before the IRS considers any resolution option. Tax Law Advocates helps medical professionals get into full filing compliance first and then immediately pursues the most favorable relief available.
Is a tax attorney better than a CPA for a medical professional with IRS debt?
For IRS debt resolution and audit representation a tax attorney provides significantly stronger protection. Attorney-client privilege, full IRS representation authority including Appeals and Tax Court, and legal negotiating power give a tax attorney decisive advantages that CPAs simply do not have.
