The 21-Day Rule
A bank levy freezes your account balance at the moment the bank receives the levy notice. The bank holds the money for 21 days, then sends it to the IRS. That 21-day window is your chance to negotiate a release. After the money is gone, getting it back is exponentially harder.
Defense Strategies
Show economic hardship: the levy prevents you from covering rent, food, utilities, or medical care. Enter an installment agreement: the IRS releases levies when you agree to a payment plan. The money in the account belongs to a third party: joint accounts where the other party does not owe taxes, or business accounts holding client funds.
Move Fast
Call a tax attorney the same day you discover the levy. Every day that passes is one less day to negotiate within the 21-day window.
A bank levy is urgent in a way that other IRS actions are not. The 21-day clock does not pause.