Overview
Letter 1058 is another final notice of intent to levy that can include collection due process rights.
Taxpayers searching this are usually close to enforced collection and need deadline-sensitive guidance.
What to review
Review the notice code, tax year, amount due, response deadline, appeal language, and whether the notice mentions levy or lien action.
Practical steps
- Confirm whether it is a final notice.
- Track the hearing request deadline.
- Gather financial and compliance records.
- Evaluate appeal, hardship, payment, or settlement paths.
Risks to understand
- The IRS may levy after rights expire.
- A rushed response can miss better options.
- Ignoring the letter can be costly.
Documents to gather
- The full notice
- Envelope date
- Tax account transcript
- Proof of payment
- Prior IRS correspondence
- Recent IRS or state correspondence
Possible next steps
Do not rely on the notice title alone. The exact language and deadline determine how urgent the response may be. Depending on your situation, options may include filing missing returns, requesting a payment plan, exploring hardship status, asking for penalty relief, appealing a proposed action, or consulting a credentialed tax professional.
When to get professional help
Get professional help promptly if Letter 1058 was received and the balance is unresolved.
Related search terms
LT11, CDP hearing, IRS levy