Just had a client in, her DOB has been wrong on the tax return for 20 years....I've had 1955 as DOB, but its actually 1953...so she actually turned 65 in 2018 and will get a higher standard deduction.....does IRS just not care about DOB until they hit an age that it makes a difference?
If we hadn't caught the error this year, would IRS have automatically changed the return and given them a higher standard deduction?
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I had one last year that the client finally noticed the bad date after 120 years. But in my case, the year was correct, it was just the month or day that was bad.
Since it would be in the client's favor, I would guess that the IRS wouldn't have changed it.
I had one last year that the client finally noticed the bad date after 120 years. But in my case, the year was correct, it was just the month or day that was bad.
Since it would be in the client's favor, I would guess that the IRS wouldn't have changed it.
Seems to me that I had a few get kicked out during the whole Y2K mess; but not recently.
I also thought the IRS *matched*, but obviously they don't. And I agree with Jeff, highly unlikely they would "notice" if the error didn't benefit the IRS
I had a client that had to be filed with an incorrect DOB due to it being the DOB the Social Security Office had on file, even though it was wrong. Finally convinced the client to make the trip to the SS office to correct the DOB when he got close to retirement age, because the DOB on file made him 2 years younger than he really was.
Did the return e-file with the corrected DOB?
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