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    Audit Insurance

    Do any of you offer to your clients the opportunity to buy a special guarantee that if they are audited you won't charge them for their defense and if they have to pay any additional tax penalty and interest, these will be paid for them up to some reasonable limit such as $3K or $5K? Does anyone know of anyone who offers such a plan to be sold by tax professionals? The main reason I went with TRX last season was to use Intellitax and get a form of this insurance called Safetynet and then during the season TRX canceled the product. I raised such a fuss that they gave it back just for me.

    Of course I have since learned of proposed regulations that would have banned this insurance as well as Refund Anticipation Loans and another product. Does anyone know what became of that?

    #2
    Audit Insurance

    The problem was that these companies paid out very few claims.If the client had any fault in the problem they did not pay.For example forgetting some interest or dividend you had to prove that you did not enter it not that the client never gave it to you.When I worked for that company they paid out a lot of times because they knew that some preparers made mistakes.

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      #3
      Audit Insurance

      My previous software had this insurance for a cost and my new software has it for a cost. I offer it but have had no clients to take it. I believe it's another way of getting money from the client like extended warranties on all kinds of consumer products. A few years ago I purchased a color TV and the salesman wrote on the ticket customer flatly refuses the extended warranty. He said the TV would require maintenance and repair. I used it for nearly 20 years without one repair. I refuse to become part of this grand scheme to defraud the public.

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        #4
        TaxResources, Inc. offers audit protection, but will not pay interest/penalties etc. Its described as prepaid audit defense, ie, client buys it for 2007 & if at any point they get audited for 2007, TRI defends the return (well, if it can be defended, that is!). Not quite the same thing, since it covers the return, not the preparer.

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          #5
          Thank You

          You are right they are not the same thing especially since they would most likely refer my clients to someone other than me for audit assistance and since they fail to meet the goal of ponying up money in the event the client has to pay. However, I'm very interested to know that these people exist.

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            #6
            No, actually we do the work in house. And don't prepare taxes, so you don't lose that. How do you think I get all this experience on CP2000s?!!!! Hundreds a year! BTW, I am not an owner, just a working schlub, so I'm not promoting, just edumacatin'.

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              #7
              I appreciate knowing about your outfit Joann but for me the deal breakers are that I don't get to represent the client, the fees are higher than I wanted, and there is no reimbursement of the client for the tpi they have to pay.

              Can anyone mention a group that actually sells audit insurance such as I want?

              Does anyone know what became of the fact that the IRS was considering stopping RALs and Audit Insurance as well as another practice?

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                #8
                Bank Products

                IRS stopped pay stub rals. Some states have put ceilings on interest rates.Military has also a rate ceiling so they are not eligible.IRS needs bank products so low income clients will file for the EIC.The never have the money to pay the fees and congress wants that money distributed.

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                  #9
                  Audits

                  Originally posted by joanmcq View Post
                  No, actually we do the work in house. And don't prepare taxes, so you don't lose that. How do you think I get all this experience on CP2000s?!!!! Hundreds a year! BTW, I am not an owner, just a working schlub, so I'm not promoting, just edumacatin'.
                  How do you advertise your service to the public (I've never heard of them before)?

                  Also, when you say you do the work in house, does this mean you deal with an IRS agent by phone rather than in person? I'm curious as to what your process is.

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                    #10
                    Audit insurance

                    Originally posted by erchess View Post
                    ...no reimbursement of the client for the tpi they have to pay.
                    About the tpi, I assume that means tax, penalty, and interest, but I wasn't aware that any insurers paid the actual tax -- just paid the penalty and interest. Block has or had something called the "Peace of Mind Extended Service Plan" and Jackson had a similar one ("Gold" something or other) which at one time paid pen/int. Do they also pay the actual tax now?

                    Can anyone mention a group that actually sells audit insurance such as I want?
                    I got mail the other day from somebody (software company, bank, etc.) selling audit insurance but misplaced it -- don't know who sent it. If it pops up I'll post it.

                    Does anyone know what became of the fact that the IRS was considering stopping RALs and Audit Insurance as well as another practice?
                    I don't think anything's been done on it since January (just a lot of talk as usual). I believe IRS got the FreeFile software bunch to drop RALs (don't know about insurance), but other than that they've just talked about limits on tax info disclosure to third parties (which wasn't what we are concerned with in the first place).

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                      #11
                      The nameless company I once worked for has as far as I know always paid the penalty and interest if they agree that they made a mistake. At some point while I was working with them they began to offer for additional fee a guarantee that they would also pay the additional tax. The first year they offered this they covered the entire additional tax no matter how much but then they said that had proved to expensive and they capped it at if memory serves 3K. I think that figure had risen to 5K by the time I left them and it is probably more now.

                      I never worked with a client who drew on this policy but I was told that a lot depended on which representative from above happened to handle your case. Some seemed to be ok with any payment as long as there had been an error and the local people thought we had at least contributed to it while others acted as though if they could deny a claim they would personally get to keep the money in question.

                      The textbook case we were told about to motivate us to sell this policy involved a supposedly very reliable preparer who I did not know but who was repeatedly named. Her client was a married man who lived in NC but then for some reason got a job in Texas. His wife and family moved to Texas for a short period but they didn't like it so they moved back to the same house they had been in before, which happened to be owned by his parents. He worked in Texas but he banked in NC his kids went to NC Public Schools and then attended public colleges in NC as in state students and he received all mail in NC and took his pets and family including himself to NC care providers. Knowing all this the genius preparer filed him and his family as non residents of NC owing no state tax to anyone since Tx has no state income tax. Well NC took umbridge but with audit protection the company paid all his tax penalty and interest to NC.

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                        #12
                        Originally posted by Chief View Post
                        My previous software had this insurance for a cost and my new software has it for a cost. I offer it but have had no clients to take it. I believe it's another way of getting money from the client like extended warranties on all kinds of consumer products. A few years ago I purchased a color TV and the salesman wrote on the ticket customer flatly refuses the extended warranty. He said the TV would require maintenance and repair. I used it for nearly 20 years without one repair. I refuse to become part of this grand scheme to defraud the public.
                        When the talk that way to me, I ask them why they're selling such poorly manufactured products.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Bart, we were a small company until a popular DIY tax program started selling our service. We do mostly correspondence audits or try to flip office audits to correspondence if we can, but we'll do office ones as well if they won't flip. We have contractors in most areas to handle office audits if necessary.

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                            #14
                            I guess I am just different ;-)

                            When I buy an electronic or mechanical product for over 50 dollars I get the longest extended warranty that is available unless for some unusual reason I am sure I will stop using the item before that period is up. Just tonight I bought a TV from an online Vendor I like and I paid $40 extra for the two year extended warranty. If it malfunctions within that period I will call the company and a new TV will arrive within three business days. On the business day after the one on which the new TV arrives I will have boxed the old one up in the packing materials of the new one and the shipper will be back for pickup. In probably a year and a half I am likely to be offered two more years of this protection and if I still like the TV I will get the additional two years. I can't recall the last time I personally paid for a repair (as opposed to normal maintenance) on say a car or an electronic device. I realize that I pay more in total to own all the items than if I simply paid repair or replacement bills out of pocket when necessary. It's just worth something to me to know that I won't have to do pay for the repairs and that I won't have to replace an item until at least a given time.

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                              #15
                              Everybody to their own taste, I guess.

                              Originally posted by erchess View Post
                              When I buy an electronic or mechanical product for over 50 dollars I get the longest extended warranty that is available...It's just worth something to me to know that I won't have to do pay for the repairs and that I won't have to replace an item until at least a given time.
                              Sometimes they're handy. I once bought a $400 cheapo "eMachine" computer (remember those?) plus extended warranty. It conked out within weeks; I shipped it CA (rep for South Korean manufacturers), they sent me #2. It crashed. I had a local fix-it geeker check it (he said: "Man, that's made so cheap, I don't see how it even runs."). Sent it back -- they freighted me #3. I used it four or five years. Still, the odds are it won't fail, so covering small stuff (under $300-400) doesn't seem worth it to me unless the warranty's real cheap.

                              About that audit protection -- I found the brochure. It's from ATX, called Audit Shield, and pays up to $2,500 for tax, penalty, and interest. Costs client $24.95 -- preparer gets $5 commission (very generous, eh?). Doesn't say who is the client's rep. I assume you have to be an ATX user, but guess it doesn't hurt to ask. Info number is 866-879-2150.

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