In a different thread, taxea wrote:
I agree that the client copy does not need to be signed by the preparer.
But they may have the right to a signed copy of Form 8879. I'd have to look that one up.
Student loan servicers and financial aid officers routinely require students and their parents to produce a signed copy of their tax return, and some have been known to insist that they produce a copy that is also signed by the preparer. I don't know whether they have any statutory authority to make such demands. But the reality is that they do. I'd love to hear about a case where the student complies by signing the tax form himself, but then says that he can't obtain the preaprer's signature because the preparer is out of business, or deceased...
I have seen some financial aid guidelines that are finally staggering into the 21st century, where it says that you can submit a signed copy of the e-file authorization, or declaration, or whatever it is called. That's Form 8879. And of course they still want the entire return, but they are acknowledging that the signatures may show up somewhere other than at the bottom of Form 1040.
But if you do a Google search, you'll find hundreds of references on financial aid websites at universities, stating that the student must submit a signed copy of their tax return.
They will accept signed documents that are marked with a "copy" stamp, or a watermark, which is available in almost all professional software now. So they do seem to recognize a distinction between a copy and an original...
BMK
I
I don't sign client copies and I recommend to the client that they not sign them when they are providing them to a third party. The reason for this is that the client copy, though a replica of the filed copy, is not the original filed copy which was e-filed and therefore does not require a manual signature. The only time I or the client signs a copy of the return is when the return is requested by the IRS. They want a signed copy.
But they may have the right to a signed copy of Form 8879. I'd have to look that one up.
Student loan servicers and financial aid officers routinely require students and their parents to produce a signed copy of their tax return, and some have been known to insist that they produce a copy that is also signed by the preparer. I don't know whether they have any statutory authority to make such demands. But the reality is that they do. I'd love to hear about a case where the student complies by signing the tax form himself, but then says that he can't obtain the preaprer's signature because the preparer is out of business, or deceased...
I have seen some financial aid guidelines that are finally staggering into the 21st century, where it says that you can submit a signed copy of the e-file authorization, or declaration, or whatever it is called. That's Form 8879. And of course they still want the entire return, but they are acknowledging that the signatures may show up somewhere other than at the bottom of Form 1040.
But if you do a Google search, you'll find hundreds of references on financial aid websites at universities, stating that the student must submit a signed copy of their tax return.
They will accept signed documents that are marked with a "copy" stamp, or a watermark, which is available in almost all professional software now. So they do seem to recognize a distinction between a copy and an original...
BMK
I
Comment