e-News for Tax Professionals Issue 2016-40

Bookmark and Share

IRS.gov Banner
e-News for Tax Professionals October 7, 2016

Useful Links:

IRS.gov

Tax Professionals Home

All Forms and Pubs

Stakeholders Partners'
Headliners

Training and
Communication Tools

IMRS

e-Services

Taxpayer Advocate Service

Disaster Relief

Internal Revenue Bulletins

IRS Social Media


Upcoming Events

Seminars, Workshops, Conferences, and Other Practitioner Activities By State:

Nationwide Webinars

Alabama
Alaska
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
District of Columbia
Florida
Georgia
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Kansas


Kentucky
Louisiana
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi
Missouri
Montana
Nebraska
Nevada
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New Mexico
New York
North Carolina


North Dakota
Ohio
Oklahoma
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
Utah
Vermont
Virginia
Washington
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming


Back to top

Issue Number:  2016-40

Inside This Issue


  1. IRS Accepting ITIN Renewal Applications
  2. Prepare for Hurricanes, Floods and Other Natural Disasters
  3. Tax-filing Extension Expires Oct. 17 for Millions of Taxpayers; Check Eligibility for Overlooked Tax Benefits
  4. EITC Educational Compliance Letters 5025, 5025C, 5025Q, 5138
  5. Legislation Expands Paid Preparer Due Diligence Requirements
  6. Oct. 17 Payment Reminder

 


1.  IRS Accepting ITIN Renewal Applications

If your client is affected by recent changes involving the Individual Taxpayer Identification Number (ITIN) program, you can now submit an ITIN renewal application to the IRS.

Back to top


2.  Prepare for Hurricanes, Floods and Other Natural Disasters

The IRS offers advice to those affected by and those preparing for storms or other natural disasters. The agency is here to help and has a special toll-free number for taxpayers in federally declared disaster areas, staffed with IRS specialists trained to handle disaster-related issues.

Back to top


3.  Tax-filing Extension Expires Oct. 17 for Millions of Taxpayers; Check Eligibility for Overlooked Tax Benefits

If you have clients whose tax-filing extension runs out on Oct. 17, be sure to double check the returns for often-overlooked tax benefits.

Back to top


4.  EITC Educational Compliance Letters 5025, 5025C, 5025Q, 5138

IRS is sending due diligence letters to paid tax preparers who may be noncompliant in meeting their EITC due diligence requirements.

These letters are sent to raise awareness of questionable returns and assist paid preparers in meeting their due diligence requirements. However, IRS will continue to monitor the EITC returns prepared in the upcoming filing season to see if the quality of the preparers’ returns improves. The letters, in both English and Spanish, can be viewed on EITC Central.

Return Preparers who completed highly questionable EITC claims may receive one of the following letters:   

    • Letter 5025, You may not have met your EITC due diligence requirements on returns with questionable qualifying children and self-employment income

    • Letter 5025C, You may not have met your EITC due diligence requirements on returns with self-employment income

    • Letter 5025Q,You may not have met your EITC due diligence requirements on returns with questionable qualifying children

    • Letter 5138, Return Preparer EITC Client Audit Notification

        For more information on the due diligence requirements, visit our Tax Preparer Toolkit on EITC Central.

Back to top


5.  Legislation Expands Paid Preparer Due Diligence Requirements

Effective for tax year 2016, Congress expanded the EITC due diligence requirements to include two additional refundable credits – the Child Tax Credit/Additional Child Tax Credit and the American Opportunity Tax Credit.

One of four due diligence requirements is completion and submission of Form 8867, Paid Preparer’s Due Diligence Checklist. Form 8867 requires paid tax preparers certify they have confirmed their clients’ eligibility for each of the credits – EITC, CTC/ACTC and AOTC.  The draft Form 8867 and instructions, which are now available for public comment, have been modified to include these credits.

Tax preparers will be able take a free IRS training course about these changes to help them meet their refundable credits due diligence requirements, and earn one continuing education credit. Look for that in late October on the EITC Central tax preparer toolkit.  

Back to top


6.  Oct. 17 Payment Reminder

With the Oct. 17 filing deadline right around the corner, now is the time to remind your clients of the options available to pay their taxes. Payments can be made online, by phone, or with a mobile device using the IRS2Go app. They can visit IRS.gov/Payments to find fast and secure ways to pay.

Learn about all the payment options your clients have by watching this new YouTube video.

Back to top


Thank you for subscribing to e-News for Tax Professionals an IRS e-mail service.

If you have a specific concern about your client's tax situation, call the IRS Practitioner Priority Service 1-866-860-4259.

This message was distributed automatically from the mailing list e-News for Tax Professionals. Please Do Not Reply To This Message

To subscribe to or unsubscribe from another list, please go to the e-News Subscriptions page on the IRS Web site.