Why am I getting a letter from NC Dept of Revenue?
Emma Jordan
Published Mar 03, 2026
You received this notice because your refund was reduced. There are two common reasons your refund may be reduced: You owe a debt to us, another state agency, a local agency, or the IRS. We are required by law to deduct that debt from your state tax refund.
What is Ncdor stand for?
North Carolina Department of Revenue
North Carolina Department of Revenue.
How do I get a tax notice of assessment?
Login to your myGov account and select ATO. Click Tax, Lodgments, Income Tax, then the History tab. Find the year you are after and select the drop down arrow next to that year. Click ‘View copy of notice of assessment’, and open the PDF.
Where does NC revenue come from?
Revenues come mainly from tax collections, licensing fees, federal aid, and returns on investments. Expenditures generally include spending on government salaries, infrastructure, education, public pensions, public assistance, corrections, Medicaid, and transportation.
When to send a notice of collection in NC?
The NC General Statues require the Department to send the taxpayer a Notice of Collection even if the taxpayer is in an active Installment Payment Agreement. However, the Department will not take forced collection actions as long as the taxpayer does not default on the Installment Payment Agreement.
Who are the debt collectors in North Carolina?
Sessoms & Rogers, P.A. is a North Carolina collections law firm that has been helping businesses and individuals collect debts for the past thirty years. We serve the North Carolina community with legal services that propagate fair business practices by helping enforce consumer responsibilities.
What to do if you get a debt collection notice?
Even if you know you owe debt, you can stop the collection calls and notices by writing the collectors and asking them to cease contact. That doesn’t get rid of the debt; it just means you will no longer hear about it, with the exception of notices involving legal actions over the debt.
Is there Statute of limitations on collections in NC?
North Carolina law prohibits any collection efforts on accounts owned by a debt buyer (such as collection agents) where the statute of limitations clock has expired.