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Level 3
March 25, 2026
Question

Reject code for a dependent

  • March 25, 2026
  • 5 replies
  • 25 views

Has anyone had a return get rejected because the dependent was claimed on another return? This has happened twice this tax season. The children are biologically their children and there is no way any other person claimed them on their return (not divorced, no split-custody). Is this an IRS issue or a Proseries issues, you think? I am having them paper file and get a PIN for them for the future but it's odd....

5 replies

BobKamman
Level 15
March 25, 2026

How old are the kids?  Is this the first year they had a job and received a W-2?  Did they learn in class how to file a tax return online?

Jtax LLCAuthor
Level 3
March 25, 2026

The first one it happened on was 8 years old. The second one was 7. So it couldn't be that...

BobKamman
Level 15
March 25, 2026

Sounds like identity theft then.  

taxiowa
Level 8
March 25, 2026

They do not have to paper file 2025 tax return.  If you did not read the reject notice give it to the taxpayers and maybe they can read it.  Especially the last paragraph.

Jtax LLCAuthor
Level 3
March 26, 2026

I have a question regarding IRS IP PINs and timing. The notice instructs the taxpayer to go online and obtain an IP PIN, but in this situation the return has already been filed using that Social Security number.

How does obtaining an IP PIN now apply for the current filing season if the return has already been accepted? My understanding was that IP PINs are preventative and apply to future filings rather than retroactively.

For those of you who have encountered this scenario, have you seen cases where a taxpayer obtained an IP PIN after filing and it still had an impact for the current year? Or is this strictly something that will only apply going forward?

Appreciate any insight or real-world experience on this

dd4vols
Intuit Community Champion
March 26, 2026

are you sure the return was accepted?.  a rejected return is NOT a filed return.  If that is the case, when you get the IP Pin, the IRS will know to accept the return. And this is not the IRS's fault. Someone (probbly in South Florida), has filed a return using the kid's information.

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Level 5
March 26, 2026

It’s definitely an IRS issue. Proseries does not match SSN numbers.

someone got hold of their info it sounds like.

Intuit Community Champion
March 29, 2026

@taxiowa is correct in my case it was the TP that got the PIN, not his dependent

hcliston
Level 5
April 2, 2026

Yes. This just happened to me twice today.  In both cases, the parents are married so nobody is competing to claim the dependent, the children are under 8 years old, there are no typos in the names or Social Security numbers for the children.  And yet their returns were rejected and I got notices that "A dependent on your return has already been claimed on another tax return for this year."  I suspect a software glitch, as there is NO reason to think one of these families would be the victim of identity theft, let alone two in one day. 

IntuitSusanY1
Level 4
April 5, 2026

The current rejection stems from the SSN already being flagged as "used" within the IRS database. Because this validation occurs at the agency level after transmission, neither our local software nor the intermediary servers have a mechanism to preemptively detect the match. The issue lies solely in the IRS/SSA database.

 

Given the unfortunate rise in identity theft, encountering multiple occurrences in a single day, while rare, is certainly possible. However, if this trend persists, it would be prudent to conduct a thorough audit of your local servers and hardware to rule out a localized data breach.

 

Should you determine that a security incident has occurred, please ensure you follow the protocols outlined in your Written Information Security Plan (WISP). As you know, the IRS and state agencies will require documentation of these procedures in the event of an inquiry.


In the meantime, obtaining an IPPIN for the primary taxpayer will allow you to efile the return. 

@hcliston