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A new consumer protection policy sharply limits what anyone enrolled or otherwise eligible to practice before the IRS can ask a client to sign. The Director of Practice announced that paid tax preparers can not use private contracts to avoid legal and ethical obligations. While not completely banning engagement letters, the Director emphasized that the agreement must not exceed the provisions of Circular 230. A staff member later assured practitioners the IRS would not initiate audits solely for compliance, but would start requiring a copy of any engagement letter to be attached when submitting Form 2848.
A new consumer protection policy sharply limits what anyone enrolled or otherwise eligible to practice before the IRS can ask a client to sign. The Director of Practice announced that paid tax preparers can not use private contracts to avoid legal and ethical obligations. While not completely banning engagement letters, the Director emphasized that the agreement must not exceed the provisions of Circular 230. A staff member later assured practitioners the IRS would not initiate audits solely for compliance, but would start requiring a copy of any engagement letter to be attached when submitting Form 2848.
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