Is anyone else having clients contact them regarding letters from IRS mismatch of addresses on 941 to address on record? I've had 2 in the last 2 days and on one the only difference was one had the 4 digit zip extension and the other did not. The letter states that client needs to call IRS to correct address. The one yesterday actually called and said she was on hold over an hour. May be a clue how IRS resources are being used and why our calls are taking so long. Geez!
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Originally posted by kathyc2 View PostIs anyone else having clients contact them regarding letters from IRS mismatch of addresses on 941 to address on record? I've had 2 in the last 2 days and on one the only difference was one had the 4 digit zip extension and the other did not. The letter states that client needs to call IRS to correct address. The one yesterday actually called and said she was on hold over an hour. May be a clue how IRS resources are being used and why our calls are taking so long. Geez!"The only function of economic forecasting is to make astrology look respectful" - John Kenneth Galbraith
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I had the client e-mail me a copy of the actual letter, CP148B notice. The notice was mailed to the address on record. Text includes "we changed your mailing address" and "if the address change is correct, you don't need to do anything."
and "If you didn't authorize a change of address, contact us immediately..."
No where did it say what the address was changed to. So, client would not know if it was a simple thing like the zip extension or someone is actually trying to circumvent their mail.
With a little more research I found this is not something new, and it was probably just a fluke I suddenly got 2 notices. On IRS site is says notice will be sent with various items including "•Any address variation from the address of record for the business entity, e.g. interchanging "Street" for "St."
I'm not one to constantly criticize the IRS but this is just plain stupid.
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I e-file my clients' business income tax returns, and payroll companies e-file their payroll tax returns. Most received those letters. Two each, since they are sent to both the old and new addresses. Sometimes, I couldn't even tell what the difference was, maybe a space or hidden code or nothing at all. Clients panic when an IRS letter arrives. Then more panic again a couple days later when the second letter arrives! At least one called the IRS to change back to her old address, but she'll get another set of letters when the 3Q returns are e-filed. I've talked to a couple of the payroll companies, and we really think we're formatting the addresses exactly the same. What are you doing to calm your clients? What are you doing to prevent this all over again in another month?Last edited by Lion; 09-30-2015, 10:23 PM.
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Originally posted by Lion View PostI e-file my clients' business income tax returns, and payroll companies e-file their payroll tax returns. Most received those letters. Two each, since they are sent to both the old and new addresses. Sometimes, I couldn't even tell what the difference was, maybe a space or hidden code or nothing at all. Clients panic when an IRS letter arrives. Then more panic again a couple days later when the second letter arrives! At least one called the IRS to change back to her old address, but she'll get another set of letters when the 3Q returns are e-filed. I've talked to a couple of the payroll companies, and we really thing we're formatting the addresses exactly the same. What are you doing to calm your clients? What are you doing to prevent this all over again in another month?Always cite your source for support to defend your opinion
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It's not sent to another address. Both IRS letters -- to the old and new addresses -- end up in my clients' mailboxes. There is some minor formatting difference between an older 941 and the more recent 941, or the 1065/1120/1120S/1041 filed during tax season and the newer 941, that the IRS computer reads as a change of address. I've seen 5 digit zip vs. 9 digit zip, and I've seen punctuation differences, and I've seen no difference discernible to the naked eye. And, because I'm not the payroll company but my clients call me instead of their payroll companies, I try to calm them down. I'm unsure how to prevent it happening again when 3Q payroll taxes are filed. What have any of you done?
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So, it turns out Congress is behind this. 2014 Consolidated Appropriations Act required the notices to be sent beginning Jan 2015. It came from some third party (payroll processors) putting their address on the 941's and then the company was not receiving notices of underpayments. Guess no one thought to ask if IRS computers are capable of determining a true address difference or just a difference of formatting. Nor did they think to report the new address on the form sent to the old address so company could determine if the "new" address was legit.
Lion, I have my business clients trained to not freak out when they receive something from IRS, so don't need to calm them.Last edited by kathyc2; 10-01-2015, 09:14 AM.
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Originally posted by Lion View PostI e-file my clients' business income tax returns, and payroll companies e-file their payroll tax returns. Most received those letters. Two each, since they are sent to both the old and new addresses. Sometimes, I couldn't even tell what the difference was, maybe a space or hidden code or nothing at all. Clients panic when an IRS letter arrives. Then more panic again a couple days later when the second letter arrives! At least one called the IRS to change back to her old address, but she'll get another set of letters when the 3Q returns are e-filed. I've talked to a couple of the payroll companies, and we really think we're formatting the addresses exactly the same. What are you doing to calm your clients? What are you doing to prevent this all over again in another month?
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