The IRS Tax Law Questions

Phone Number & Getting a Rep

The IRS Tax Law Questions number

800-829-0582
Toll-free·Calls Tax Law Questions·See main phone number & contact info
Q:

How do I talk to a human at this The IRS number?

A:Press 1 for English, then enter extension 652
Q:

Does this phone number work 24/7?

A:No. Hours for this phone number are Mon-Fri 8am-8pm EST. The least busy day is Thursday, and the most busy day is Monday. See below for more and to learn where this data comes from.
Q:

How long will I have to wait to speak to The IRS Tax Law Questions?

A:The average hold time is 11 minutes. The longest hold times are on Tuesday, and the shortest are on Thursday.

All The IRS customer service contact information

This is the #7 most popular The IRS phone number out of 10. Click above to go back to the main customer service number and other contact information, including The IRS email addresses, twitter handles, and live chat options.

More The IRS Customer Phone Numbers

Customer Service

800-829-1040
Main phone number · Toll-free · Mon-Fri 7am-7pm EST · Press 1 for English, then press 2 for Personal Income Taxes, and then push 1, then 3, then 2, then 0# when it asks for your social security number, then 2 · Refund, or check status of tax return, press 1. Eligibility, clean vehicle credit, tax transcripts, tax reform law, press 2. Answers about your business taxes, press 3. Healthcare law, press 4. Personal or business taxes as they relate to healthcare, press 5. FAQ or to make a one-time payment, press 6. Questions about stimulus payment, press 7. Advance child action payment, press 8.

Business Accounts

800-829-0115
Toll-free · Mon-Fri 8am-8pm EST · Select English, then 3, then 0#, 0#, 0# · If you received a notice about employment tax forms 940, 941, 943, 944, 945, press 1. Balance due and want to make a payment, press 2. For all other questions, press 3.

Federal Payment Levy Program

800-829-7650
Toll-free · Mon-Fri 7am-7pm EST · Use this number for the Federal Payment Levy Program · Stimulus payments, 800-919-9835. To access account information, please enter your social security number or tax ID number for which you are calling.

CP32A Refund Check Customer Service

800-829-0922
Toll-free · Mon-Fri 7am-7pm EST · Press 1, then 1, then 0#, then 0#, then 0# · Stimulus payments, visit the website or call 800-919-9835. To access account information, please enter your social security number or tax ID number for which you are calling.

Collections Department

800-829-3903
Toll-free · Mon-Fri 7am-7pm EST · Choose English, then 0#, 0#, 0# · Stimulus payment information, press 3. Notice or letter you received, press 1. Check status of refund, press 2.

Tax Professionals

800-829-8374
Toll-free · Mon-Fri 8am-8pm EST · Select English, then 1, then 0#, 0#, 0# · Stimulus payment information, press 3. Notice or letter you received, press 1. Check status of refund, press 2.

Wage & Income Transcript

800-908-9946
Toll-free · 24 hours, 7 days · Automated--enter your Social Security Number to retrieve your wage and income transcript · Transcript Order Line - enter the social security number from which you are calling.

International Customer Service

267-941-1000
Mon-Fri 6am-11pm EST · Calling this The IRS number should go right to a real human being · Stimulus payments or child tax payments, visit the website, individual I10 number, press 2. US certifications or forms 6166, press 3. Calling outside the United States, press 4. If you have an extension code, press 5. All other callers, press 6.

E-File Payments

888-353-4537
Toll-free · 24 hours, 7 days · Keep pressing 0 · Enter your tax ID number followed by the pound sign.

How do I get through the phone menu to a real live person?

GetHuman researchers routinely call this The IRS phone number to document the phone system.
Here is our latest tip for weaving through the phone menu to get to a real person the fastest: Press 1 for English, then enter extension 652
Here is how our research team describes the way the The IRS phone system greets you: Please wait; a representative will answer the call.

What are the hours and when should I call?

The IRS operates the call center for this 800-829-0582 phone number Mon-Fri 8am-8pm ET. The short answer is that you should call on a Thursday. This observation and the following section are based on analysis of a sample set of 384,386 calls made in the last 90 days using our free, web-based phone (see above).
An important note: busy times vs hold times vs best time to call
When we refer to busy or less busy times, we are talking about the volume of calls. The busiest times are when the most people are calling this The IRS phone number (least busy times have fewer people calling). This high call volume does not necessarily mean that you will have a long hold time when you call. Companies like The IRS staff their call centers differently based on the time of day and day of the week, so you may experience a shorter wait on hold at the busiest of times. When we refer to the best time to call, we are referring to the optimal combination of lower call volume and shorter wait times.

The least busy time to call

The least busy day to call The IRS is Thursday. The most busy day to call is Monday. Again, this is based on a sample of 384,386 calls made with our AI-powered, web-based phone in the last 90 days.

The shortest wait on hold

We measured the shortest hold times to be on Thursday. The longest wait in the queue on average occurs on Tuesday.

The best time to call

In summation, the best day to call The IRS is Thursday. In this case, it's a no-brainer. Thursday is not only the least busy day for calling this The IRS number, but it is also the day with the shortest hold times.

Calling this The IRS Customer Number

Adam Goldkamp is the editor / author responsible for this content.
Nov 23, 2023

I needed help finding a tax return from a couple of years ago. I needed the transcript because it was required for an application I was filling out, but the IRS certainly does not make it easy to access old records. I originally went online to access my tax transcripts but continually had issues, so I decided to call on my own. 

It goes without saying that there are many reasons people end up calling the IRS. Between business and personal tax returns, there are a lot of things that can go wrong. People probably owe payments and back payments or have questions about audits. Then there are people who want to check on their tax returns and people like me who just need the transcripts. 

While it would be nice to call and get access to what I need by talking to an agent or using the self-automated system, success was not in the cards today for me. When I first called, a voice assistant stated, "Welcome to the Internal Revenue Service. To continue in English press or say 1." After I pressed one, it asked me to "Please wait," and then hold music started to play. At first, I thought I was going to talk to someone, but then another voice assistant stated, "Please enter the three-digit extension number you were given."

I didn't have a three-digit extension number, so I wasn't sure what to do. I waited a minute and tried saying I didn't have it, but nothing happened. The voice assistant repeated the same message and said, "You did not enter a valid extension; your call is being transmitted to our automated services." Then it launched into a new set of options instructing me, "If you are calling to check the status of your refund, press 1. If you received your refund and it was lost, stolen, or destroyed, press 2. If you are calling to check on the status of a 1040 X amended tax return, press 3."

It then told me to enter my Social Security number, which I did, and then it told me to identify how I filed my taxes. Some of the options included married, single, and surviving spouse. However, before I could answer, it hung up because it said to call back when I had all the filing information available. I was a bit shocked, as I knew the answer. I was just listening to the options in full, and then it dismissed me. 

I called back, thinking I could skip ahead to the same spot, but it gave me different options this time, and I wasn't sure what to do. I decided to give up and call another day because if the system was glitching, it wasn't worth my time. 

Adam has been tirelessly trying to help customers find the best tips and tricks to get through phone trees and writing many guides for prickly customer service problems. He's been featured in the Wall Street Journal, Inside Edition and Bloomberg.

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