ProSeries Basic will not allow me to do that. His name is something like "Stefan R. F. Lopez"
I tried making the first name "Stefan R." and the middle initial "F." and it sort of works on the federal return.
But on the state return, his first name shows up as "STEFANR"
I cannot find any workarounds, and the client won't back down.
Any ideas?
Thank you!
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Easy fix, increase fee $100 and paper file.
You'll have to match the Social Security card. Many countries this is very common but no matter how you put it in for presentation purposes, it will be e-file rejected for a name mismatch. Second choice - paper file and throw the second middle initial into the last name. Stephan R. F Lopez
The IRS doesnt recognize first names or middle initials anyhow, tell him to either pick one, leave them both out, or find someone else to deal with his OCD disorder..
Using two last names is a common practice in many Hispanic places, like the United States. (My Puerto Rican client is hyphenated.) Using two middle names is probably more common in this country. Just ask George Herbert Walker Bush, or my college classmate George Raymond Richard Martin. Maybe it has something to do with suffering from the first name George. But then there is Charles Philip Arthur George Windsor. I wonder how you enter King Charles III?
Easy fix, increase fee $100 and paper file.
I played around with this a little, and didn't have any problem using "Stefan R F" as the first name on the 1040. Problem was with California -- is that where you are? It deletes any punctuation or spaces between letters, so it comes out STEFANR or STEFANRF no matter what you do. So I would sympathize with the client and suggest he move to Nevada.
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