All CPAs Urged to Contact IRS about Tax Preparer Registration Program
CPAs across the country should IMMEDIATELY contact the IRS to emphasize the burdens CPAs, CPA firms and businesses will face if the IRS fully implements its proposed Tax Preparer Registration program.
An email from you to the IRS National Public Liaison will help IRS Commissioner Douglas Shulman understand why several of the proposed rules are redundant and unnecessary and how they will lead to higher tax preparation costs for taxpayers. The AICPA supports the IRS’s overall goals of improving compliance and elevating ethical conduct, but the AICPA has specific concerns that the proposed program is moving too far and too quickly.
If you have questions, please send them to: irsconcerns@aicpa.org
Click here to learn more about this IRS proposal.
Join other CPAs across the country in expressing your concerns about this issue, by sending an e-mails with the following information:
1. Copy and paste this address into an email: *public_liaison@irs.gov. (Please be sure to include that asterisk.)
2. Subject line: IRS should slow down implementing tax preparer registration proposal
3. Body of email:
I urge the IRS to exempt CPA firms from the requirement to register their employees who are non-signing tax return preparers, and I urge the IRS to delay the implementation of its preparer examination.
I am a CPA and I support the goals to increase compliance and raise the ethical conduct of paid preparers embodied in your proposal to regulate paid income tax preparers. However, the costs and burdens of this proposal go too far, too fast – we need to see a reasoned, rational approach that creates benefits that outweigh the burdens on the CPA preparer community and ultimately the tax-paying public.
CPA firms stand behind the work done by the CPAs and employees of their firms. Requiring PTINs on tax returns should give the IRS enough information to track and weed out incompetent preparers, WITHOUT the need to require PTINs for non-signing preparers who work at CPA firms. CPAs are already regulated by state boards of accountancy and Treasury Department Circular 230, so I believe strongly that the PTIN requirement should not be extended to non-signing preparers at CPA firms.
I also feel strongly that the exam component should be delayed until evidence is gathered that proves the need for such an exam. The goal is to raise competency and ethical conduct; therefore, the PTIN tracking proposal should be given time to do just that, before layering on potentially unnecessary and redundant regulatory burdens on CPA firms in particular, and on all preparers and the public. In addition, I have concerns about certain aspects of the proposed Circular 230 rules that were recently released.
I request that the IRS: (1) exempt CPA firms from the non-signing preparer requirements of the proposed regulations, and (2) delay the implementation of the exam requirement until the PTIN process is fully implemented and results are known.
Thank you for your consideration of my thoughts on these important issues.
The IRS has proposed to register paid tax preparers by requiring:
- A personal tax identification number (PTIN) for all preparers;
- All preparers to be subject to Circular 230;
- An exam for registered preparers; and
- Continuing education for registered preparers.
CPAs, attorneys and enrolled agents would be exempt from the exam and continuing education requirements, but would be required to obtain and use a PTIN number.
The AICPA supports the IRS goal to improve the competency and ethical conduct of paid tax preparers. However, after the proposal was announced, the IRS also indicated its intent to require non-signing preparers (who are not CPAs) to register and take the proposed exam – even non-signing preparers who work at CPA firms under the supervision of a CPA.
The AICPA believes that requiring registration for non-signing preparers working at CPA firms under a CPA’s supervision is a duplicative regulatory burden on CPAs, who are already appropriately regulated by state boards of accountancy.
The AICPA also believes that the IRS is moving too quickly to implement an exam for all registered preparers, and believes that the results of PTIN tracking should be analyzed to prove whether there is a need for an exam for registered preparers.
The additional and unnecessary registration and exam requirements are a burden on American businesses, as the registration and examination costs will ultimately be passed on to consumers and businesses.
The AICPA supports the IRS goal to weed out “bad actors” through tracking personal tax identification numbers (PTIN) for all signing preparers, and encourages the IRS to fully implement the PTIN regulations before extending the requirement to non-signing preparers AND before requiring an examination.
Source: Judy Love, Director of Advocacy, WSCPA,
and, the AICPA
LAST UPDATED 8/25/2010
Comments