Quick Answer
Denver, Colorado businesses with IRS 941 payroll tax debt, federal tax liens, IRS bank levies, or Colorado Department of Revenue state tax delinquency can access business tax debt financing — a specialized solution where an alternative lender pays off the IRS directly, stops enforcement, and converts tax debt into a manageable business loan. Apply in 2 minutes.
Denver’s cannabis industry — legal in Colorado since 2012 — faces extreme 941 payroll tax risk due to banking access restrictions. Many cannabis businesses struggle to make IRS tax deposits because financial institutions won’t service cannabis-adjacent businesses.
Tax Funds is a business tax debt financing marketplace serving Denver and the broader Colorado metro area. We connect businesses with specialized alternative lenders who handle IRS tax debt scenarios that traditional banks will not touch — including active federal tax liens, ongoing bank levies, and Trust Fund Recovery Penalty situations.
Denver Business Tax Debt: What Local Businesses Face
Denver (population 715K) has a concentrated business economy anchored by technology, cannabis, oil and gas, aerospace, real estate. These industries share common tax debt risk factors — high payroll obligations relative to revenue, variable income timing, and state tax compliance complexity on top of IRS federal requirements.
The IRS maintains taxpayer assistance presence in Denver through the Denver IRS Taxpayer Assistance Centers. However, for businesses with active IRS enforcement, any contact with the IRS should be done only with qualified tax representation in place. The IRS is an adversarial collection agency during enforcement — not a problem-solving resource.
Types of Tax Debt Denver Businesses Can Finance
- IRS 941 Payroll Tax Debt — The most common. Financing pays off the IRS in full, stops the Trust Fund Recovery Penalty clock, and releases enforcement holds.
- Federal Tax Liens — The IRS files liens after 10 days of non-payment. We access lenders who work with active liens using subordination.
- IRS Bank Levies — Emergency financing available during the 21-day hold period after a bank levy is served.
- Trust Fund Recovery Penalty (TFRP) — Personal liability for responsible parties. Paying off the business tax debt satisfies TFRP simultaneously.
- Colorado State Tax Debt — Colorado Department of Revenue assessments, state tax liens, and state enforcement.
- Sales Tax Debt — State and local sales tax delinquency.
- OIC Bridge Financing — Keep your Denver business running during the IRS Offer in Compromise review period.
24-72 Hour Response — No Upfront Fees
Our team reviews every application within 24-72 hours and responds with financing options specific to your IRS situation. No hard credit pull on initial application.
Apply: Denver Business Tax Debt Financing
No obligation. No upfront fees. Businesses in Denver and throughout Colorado are eligible. Minimum tax debt: $10,000.
Frequently Asked Questions — Denver Business Tax Debt
Can a Denver business get financing with an active IRS tax lien?
Yes. Traditional banks in Denver will not lend to businesses with active federal tax liens. Tax Funds works with specialized lenders who use the IRS tax lien subordination process — the lender obtains an IRS subordination certificate, pays off the IRS in full, and the lien is released. This is done outside the traditional banking system.
How fast can a Denver business stop an IRS bank levy?
The IRS bank levy notice (CP90) gives 30 days. Once the levy hits a Denver business bank account, the bank holds funds for 21 days before remitting to the IRS. Financing arranged within that 21-day window stops the sweep. 24-72 hour funding is achievable for qualified Denver businesses.
Do I need a tax attorney or CPA before applying?
No. Many Denver businesses apply through Tax Funds before engaging a tax attorney or CPA. The financing process is separate from your IRS representation. That said, we recommend engaging qualified tax representation for any IRS negotiation or settlement strategy — Tax Funds handles only the financing component.
Disclosure: Tax Funds is a financing marketplace serving Denver, Colorado. Not a lender, CPA firm, or law firm. Content is for informational purposes only. IRS procedures sourced from IRS.gov.