Urgent window

Low Income Taxpayer Clinic deadline 2011

The current listed application deadline is July 14, 2011. Use this page to verify timing fast, then move into the full grant record for planning, comparison, and drafting.

Agency
Low Income Taxpayer Clinic
Award range
Up to $100,000
Total funding
Not specified
Funding instrument
Grant
CFDA / ALN
21.008
Cost share
Yes

Deadline Status

This deadline has passed

Review the full grant record for updated cycles, archived guidance, and adjacent opportunities.

Quick facts

Opportunity number
Not listed
Last updated
June 1, 2011
Expected awards
Not listed

Deadline summary

The LITC grant program is a federal program administered by the Office of the Taxpayer Advocate at the IRS, led by National Taxpayer Advocate Nina E. Olson. The LITC program awards a matching grant of up to $100,000 per year to qualifying organizations to develop, expand or maintain a low income tax clinic. The LITC program funds organizations that serve low income individuals who have a tax controversy with the IRS and/or that provide outreach and education to taxpayers who speak English as a s...

Key dates

Posted
June 1, 2011
Deadline
July 14, 2011

Before you apply

Confirm the official submission path and any portal requirements.
Review the close date carefully and account for agency timezone handling.
Validate fit against the listed eligibility groups before investing drafting time.
Compare adjacent opportunities if this deadline window feels too narrow.

Eligibility snapshot

Others (see text field entitled "Additional Information on Eligibility" for clarification)&#239&#191&#189Clinical programs at accredited lawbusiness or accounting schools whose students represent low-income taxpayers in tax disputes with the IRS

�Clinical programs at accredited law, business or accounting schools whose students represent low-income taxpayers in tax disputes with the IRS, and �Organizations exempt from tax under Internal Revenue Code Section 501(a) that represent low-income taxpayers in tax disputes with the IRS or refer those taxpayers to qualified representatives.