Albuquerque Journal

Selecting a tax preparer? Be choosy

If you really need one, reduce risk by checking agent’s credential­s

- BY TINA OREM NERDWALLET

Tax preparers do a big chunk of America’s tax returns — more than 80 million a year, according to the IRS — but if you’re nervous about handing confidenti­al informatio­n to someone in a largely unregulate­d field, you’re not alone.

Here are some tips to help you find a good tax preparer and reduce the risk of expensive errors and exposing your finances.

First, decide if you really need a tax preparer. Everyone’s tax situation is different, but many millions of them are simple enough — some W-2s from work, mortgage interest or a few other obvious deductions — to handle in-house. If that’s the case, it might be cheaper and faster to buy software and do your taxes yourself .

“Obviously the more you have going on, the more I would say go see a preparer,” says Trish Evenstad, president of the Wisconsin Society of Enrolled Agents.

If you do need a preparer, be choosy. “I wouldn’t just simply go through the phone book and pick someone randomly,” says Melissa Labant, director of tax policy and advocacy at the American Institute of CPAs. Asking friends, family or colleagues for recommenda­tions can quickly reveal a preparer who’s caused headaches, she said.

Tax attorneys and enrolled agents specialize in or have passed exams on tax rules, and many certified public accountant­s also specialize in tax preparatio­n. At a minimum, Labant says, a legitimate preparer should have a Preparer Tax Identifica­tion Number, or PTIN, from the IRS.

Never assume that because someone works at a big taxprep company he or she must be an enrolled agent or a certified public accountant, Evenstad warns. And don’t assume a PTIN is valid, either — a 2014 Government Accountabi­lity Office study caught some unscrupulo­us preparers using fake PTINs or ones that didn’t belong to them. You can verify PTINs and profession­al credential­s on the IRS website , and you can check accounting and law licenses on state-level CPA and bar associatio­n websites. The National Associatio­n of Enrolled Agents also maintains a directory.

Know what to look for. The IRS requires paid tax preparers to put their name and PTIN on returns they prepare. Not doing so, or asking you to sign a blank return first, suggests a preparer is up to no good, Evenstad said. Directing your refund to a bank account that’s not yours is another red flag. And make sure your return doesn’t say “self-prepared.”

Good preparers will also ask for last year’s return, Labant says. “If they don’t, then you’ll know right away this person is not exercising due diligence and they could easily be missing several key items that need to be reported on your tax return.”

The preparer should provide a secure portal for sending informatio­n, too.

“If someone called me and said, ‘Just email me a copy of your driver’s license,’ that would make me a little nervous about how well they’re protecting taxpayer identifica­tion informatio­n,” Labant says.

Report bad apples. If, despite your efforts, a preparer wrongs you, you have a few options. You can complain to the IRS by filling out Form 14157 and sending along supporting documents. Alerting the National Associatio­n of Enrolled Agents, the National Associatio­n of Tax Profession­als and other profession­al groups might also spark an internal investigat­ion if the preparer is a member, Evenstad says.

Getting restitutio­n, though, might be harder. According

to Council of Better Business Bureaus data, just 66 percent of customer complaints against tax preparers in 2015 were resolved — well below the national average of 79 percent across all industries, according to BBB spokespers­on Katherine Hutt. By comparison, the cellular industry and banks usually have 98 percent and 97 percent resolution rates, she notes.

 ?? BRENNAN LINSLEY/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Boulder, Colo., tax preparer Alicia Utley holds hard copies of tax forms being turned in at her office at the start of the tax season rush. The IRS will begin accepting returns on Jan. 23.
BRENNAN LINSLEY/ASSOCIATED PRESS Boulder, Colo., tax preparer Alicia Utley holds hard copies of tax forms being turned in at her office at the start of the tax season rush. The IRS will begin accepting returns on Jan. 23.

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