Is a tax return preparer required to give their clients a signed copy of an efiled tax return? Or does just their signature on Form 8879 suffice for IRS rules? Seems like some preparers do not give clients a signed copy of the return, but just emails them an unsigned copy (password protected). If you can give your source for the answer, that would help too. Thanks.
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Printed name (on hard copies and on PDF's).
Hard copies (unfortunately a few clients insist ... ) are physically stamped with a red "CLIENT COPY" on page one & over the signature area. I wet initial over my printed name.....old habit....used to mean something.
PDF copies are water marked with "C L I E N T C O P Y" and just have my printed name. I could make Adobe let me initial but .... why?
I've occasionally had a client/or a lender *complain* that the watermark obscured some number...sigh.
I let the software print my name in the signature box. These days that counts as a signature on the return.
I have the software print my name in the signature box as well. If it's good enough for IRS, its good enough for them.
I never wet sign a copy, only an original.
My name prints, too.
Contrary to what others have posted, I sign every return before mailing, as well as have the software print my name in the signature box. I do this (a) as sometimes a return is printed, corrected, and reprinted; my signature tells me that is the final version, and (b) it shows the clients (who actually look at a return) that I went through each page of the return. Maybe not required, just my preference.
Printed name (on hard copies and on PDF's).
Hard copies (unfortunately a few clients insist ... ) are physically stamped with a red "CLIENT COPY" on page one & over the signature area. I wet initial over my printed name.....old habit....used to mean something.
PDF copies are water marked with "C L I E N T C O P Y" and just have my printed name. I could make Adobe let me initial but .... why?
I've occasionally had a client/or a lender *complain* that the watermark obscured some number...sigh.
@Johnl777 @abctax55 @dascpa @Accountant-Man @Just-Lisa-Now- @IRonMaN great points from all...like dascpa said, imo it is a good idea to sign both the return and the e-file signature document....
Thanks for your answer. Agrees with Rev Ruling 78-317, even though IRS website says otherwise it appears as stated in 2/5/21 post of "Beware of "ghost" preparers who don't sign tax returns." I think, but could be wrong, the key is for the preparer to sign and date the Form 8879 e-file authorization, as well as get his taxpayers to sign and date the same, before efiling the return. Then the taxpayer copy can be given to the client unsigned, if I am reading the RR correctly. Take care and thanks.
That ghost reference refers, for example, to "preparers" using Turddoh Tax who hand the client a tax return that says Prepared by a Nonpaid Preparer
That must be what I've seen.
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