My DOR and other online services will be down for maintenance from 5 p.m. PST Friday, January 17, 2025, to 8 a.m. PST Tuesday, January 21, 2025.
My DOR and other online services will be down for maintenance from 5 p.m. PST Friday, January 17, 2025, to 8 a.m. PST Tuesday, January 21, 2025.
When the Administrative Review and Hearings receives your request, it:
A Tax Review Officer (TRO) in the Administrative Review and Hearings Division will consider your request. The TRO:
Once the case is assigned, the TRO will:
A hearing is held in many, but not all, cases. The TRO may issue a written decision without holding a hearing when:
If the TRO decides a hearing is needed, you will be notified of the scheduled time and place. The letter will also explain when you should submit any additional documents.
The TRO will decide whether the hearing will be in-person or by telephone. In-person hearings are held at the Tumwater or Seattle office. The TRO will try to accommodate your hearing preferences.
If the hearing date or time must be changed, contact the TRO as soon as possible. If reasonable, the TRO will usually accommodate the change so long as the hearing is within a reasonable time frame.
Hearings are informal. You will not be placed under oath and the hearing will not be recorded.
People permitted to attend a hearing are:
The hearing is not open to the public.
During the hearing:
Throughout the process, the TRO may ask questions, discuss points of law, and ask for additional documents.
You must make every effort to submit documents with your petition and file any additional documents and written arguments as scheduled by the TRO. If you or the Department fail to comply with a scheduling letter or established timelines, the TRO may decline to consider arguments or documents submitted after the scheduled timelines. But if you find you need to file additional material and the TRO allows you to do so, such material usually must be submitted within 30 days after the hearing. TROs also have the discretion to allow additional time for further fact finding, including scheduling an additional hearing, as necessary in a particular case.
The Department's case is usually made by the division whose action you are seeking review of. That division usually submits a written response to your petition and to any additional documents or arguments you make during the review process. If the division presents additional documents or arguments, it will provide them to you for your response. The TRO provides the dates for submitting such documents and arguments.