I'm sending off all mine together in one oversized (4 3/4 X 11), brown Kraft, heavy-duty envelope. I'm sending it "certified mail with return receipt" ($4.88 at the post office),
I always get to worrying about what would happen if some clerk at the IRS service center lost the envelope somehow. I know somebody has to sign and send the green card back to me and, therefore, I've got some proof, but what if they later misplaced that envelope with ALL my extensions in it. I'd have the card, but all that really shows is that they received something from me--it doesn't necessarily prove that it was extensions. Worse, even if I could prove it was extensions, I could not prove that big-penalty-due John Doe's was one of them.
Don't know what I'd do if that happened. Both clients and me might be out of luck.
I used to send them off one at a time in separate envelopes, based on the theory that if one envelope was lost, it was only that one. Now I've got too many to do that.
I was wondering--how do the rest of you send yours? What do you think the risks might be (never mind if you're e-filing them)?
I always get to worrying about what would happen if some clerk at the IRS service center lost the envelope somehow. I know somebody has to sign and send the green card back to me and, therefore, I've got some proof, but what if they later misplaced that envelope with ALL my extensions in it. I'd have the card, but all that really shows is that they received something from me--it doesn't necessarily prove that it was extensions. Worse, even if I could prove it was extensions, I could not prove that big-penalty-due John Doe's was one of them.
Don't know what I'd do if that happened. Both clients and me might be out of luck.
I used to send them off one at a time in separate envelopes, based on the theory that if one envelope was lost, it was only that one. Now I've got too many to do that.
I was wondering--how do the rest of you send yours? What do you think the risks might be (never mind if you're e-filing them)?
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