Taxpayer had a business which had been closed long time ago. Lately, he started a new business. When he called the IRS for an EIN, he was told to use the same EIN of his old business, even though the business name and address of his new and old business are different. Does it make sense?
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Thank you for the reply.
Yes, it is a sole proprietorship. So I guess the taxpayer has understood what the IRS representative said correctly.
What still puzzled me is that the taxpayer said the representative did not even ask him for the name and address of his new business. So do they update the information when they receive the first payroll tax return of the taxpayer's new business?Comment
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I understand the taxpayer can always do that. What I do not understand is why the representative didn't ask for the name and address of the new business when the taxpayer called in. Is it a policy to wait for the payroll tax return to update the information? I am just being curious here.Comment
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If you are asking why they did not update the records with new info provided by the caller, I doubt if they would do it without a written request or signed 8822. I would still prefer a new EIN. He can get it online with no problem. Keeps things neater. Especially if there is payroll involved.Last edited by Burke; 06-04-2009, 02:02 PM.Comment
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Cana sole proprietorget a new EIN? I thought that answering the question about "Have you ever had an EIN in the past?" would automatically set in motion the process to reassign the same EIN to a sole proprietor."The only function of economic forecasting is to make astrology look respectful" - John Kenneth GalbraithComment
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Don't know. Never had that situation, just assumed they wanted to know that info to determine what was going on with the requestor. All the EIN's I have done in recent years have been for LLC's, SCorps and Estates/Trusts. But a sole proprietor would not need one unless it had payroll taxes to report. I am uncomfortable with mixing new businesses with old businesses.Last edited by Burke; 06-08-2009, 05:05 PM.Comment
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What you have to remember..
is the the EIN of the sole prop is tied to the person. So, unless the individual somehow morphs into an alien life form, they will always use the same EIN for all their sole props. BTW, this is also why the name on the 941 is the sole prop's name.
Now, if they form a SMLLC, under current regs they will get another EIN for the SMLLC with which to report payroll. And so on for a second, third or hundredth SMLLC
If they've never received a EIN tied to the person, a second EIN will be issued for the individual, once and only once.
Year's later, the EIN I had as a farmer is still in use with my practice as a CPA.Comment
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It's like lots of things at IRS
P.S. I still don't quite get it about having only one number if you have two or more business locations. Looks to me like payroll taxes and reports would be all mixed up/a mess.Comment
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