Any tax preparer – regardless of
training, experience, or “initials” – can make a mistake. I know I have made mistakes on 1040s I have
prepared over the years.
The mistake can be mathematic or
involve the proper application of tax law or regulation.
A tax preparer can unintentionally
omit reporting or entering income or deductions from an information return or a
client worksheet.
A tax preparer can unknowingly
understate or overstate taxable income or legitimate deductions. A tax return is prepared based on information
supplied by the taxpayer, and this information can be, purposefully or not,
faulty.
Over the years I have found that tax
preparers who use tax preparation software – which I expect is now about 95% of
all tax pros (I am truly one of the last of the dinosaurs) – tend to become lazy
when it comes to checking software-generated tax returns.
There is nothing to guarantee that a
tax return generated using a tax preparation software package, whether or not
the “preparer” is a tax pro or the taxpayer himself/herself, is correct,
mathematically or otherwise. All
software-generated tax returns should be double and triple checked.
Using a tax preparation software
package is no substitute for knowledge of tax law. This applies to paid preparers as well as
individual taxpayers. I sometimes wonder
how many alleged tax professionals, especially those employed by the “fast
food” tax preparation chains, are really nothing more than data entry clerks.
And, of course, a tax preparer -
regardless of “initials” or having to sit through 2 hours of ethics preaching
annually - can purposefully file a fraudulent return, with or without the
knowledge and consent of the taxpayer.
Holding a professional credential or attending annual ethics CPE is no
guarantee that a tax preparer is honest or ethical.
Before signing and filing any tax
returns prepared by a tax pro review the return carefully. If the return was software-generated ask the
preparer if he/she has checked and verified the math on the returns. If there is anything on your returns that you
do not fully understand have your preparer explain it to your satisfaction.
Just because you do not understand
something on your return does not mean that anything is wrong. Do not automatically assume that your
preparer has made an error. Whatever you
do, do not call or email your preparer and say “you made a mistake on my
return”. Simply tell him/her that you
have a question about something on the return.
It is important to remember that
you, the taxpayer, are ultimately responsible for everything that is on your
tax return.
TTFN
2 comments:
Thanks for the great post. I always enjoy reading your articles. You cover such a great range of topics. As professionals, we have to remember that people rely on us to be accurate and perform our best. However, it's also important that tax payers understand their own responsibilities.
From what I see on the photo you have on you blog, I think my great-uncle could still one-up you, Mr. Flach. Back in the '70s he used to do my Dad's taxes COMPLETELY by hand - without even a calculator or adding machine, using pencil and paper for the math. (Raises the question: do you double-check your calculator's math?) And the return was for a dairy farm, not just a simple W2.
The man still does farm returns without software, although he's probably in his 80s. I don't know if he uses a calculator today or not.
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