Direct Deposit Into Another Person's Account

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  • Maria
    Member
    • Feb 2007
    • 67

    #1

    Direct Deposit Into Another Person's Account

    Hi, I have a quick question. I am preparing a kid's return. The kid is 30-year-old and not a dependent of the parents. Can the kid's federal and state refund direct deposited into the parent's account? Also, since the kid is in jail, can the parent sign the returns for the kid.

    Thanks a lot.
  • SueBaby
    Senior Member
    • Jan 2006
    • 555

    #2
    Originally posted by Maria
    Hi, I have a quick question. I am preparing a kid's return. The kid is 30-year-old and not a dependent of the parents. Can the kid's federal and state refund direct deposited into the parent's account? Also, since the kid is in jail, can the parent sign the returns for the kid.

    Thanks a lot.
    I had the same situation and yes to both questions.
    SueBaby

    Comment

    • gkaiseril
      Senior Member
      • Feb 2007
      • 567

      #3
      Poa

      Parents will need a Power of Attorney for son's federal and state tax returns or tax matters. The POA can be specific for tax forms and years or a general POA. A copy of the POA would need to be registered with the IRS and state or a copy should accompany the return or an 8453 with the POA needs to be sent to the IRS.

      IRS will only allow 1 direct deposit of a refund to a given bank account. Also, bank must allow direct deposit for others into their account. Some banks will not accept a direct deposit to a married couple if the refund is joint and only one spouse listed on the account.

      Comment

      • Jesse
        Senior Member
        • Aug 2005
        • 2064

        #4
        Be careful

        Check w/ the bank. Technically if the childs name is not on the account it should not go into that account. If the numbers on the return are correct it might "slide" in as a deposit, but if not and it nonposts the bank normally will NOT put it into an account that does not have the taxpayers name on it.

        As for signing the return, is this an adult child? I wouldn't think parents can sign unless they have a POA.
        http://www.viagrabelgiquefr.com/

        Comment

        • SueBaby
          Senior Member
          • Jan 2006
          • 555

          #5
          Originally posted by gkaiseril
          Parents will need a Power of Attorney for son's federal and state tax returns or tax matters. The POA can be specific for tax forms and years or a general POA. A copy of the POA would need to be registered with the IRS and state or a copy should accompany the return or an 8453 with the POA needs to be sent to the IRS.

          IRS will only allow 1 direct deposit of a refund to a given bank account. Also, bank must allow direct deposit for others into their account. Some banks will not accept a direct deposit to a married couple if the refund is joint and only one spouse listed on the account.
          The parents did have POA since my client was in for a few years, and his money went into their account to pay his bills.
          SueBaby

          Comment

          • Jesse
            Senior Member
            • Aug 2005
            • 2064

            #6
            Originally posted by SueBaby
            The parents did have POA since my client was in for a few years, and his money went into their account to pay his bills.
            So your situation was fine, but the answer to Maria's questions are not a simple yes.
            http://www.viagrabelgiquefr.com/

            Comment

            • SueBaby
              Senior Member
              • Jan 2006
              • 555

              #7
              Originally posted by Jesse
              Check w/ the bank. Technically if the childs name is not on the account it should not go into that account. If the numbers on the return are correct it might "slide" in as a deposit, but if not and it nonposts the bank normally will NOT put it into an account that does not have the taxpayers name on it.

              As for signing the return, is this an adult child? I wouldn't think parents can sign unless they have a POA.
              Yes, all is fine. The parents have POA and the money went into their account and they paid his bills from that. No problems. He is19.
              SueBaby

              Comment

              • oceanlovin'ea
                Senior Member
                • Jun 2005
                • 2682

                #8
                may depend on bank

                It may depend on the bank. But when I did my daughter's return, I had it direct deposited into my bank account since she didn't have one.
                It went in on time without a hitch.

                Linda F

                Comment

                • bertrans
                  Senior Member
                  • May 2007
                  • 198

                  #9
                  Poa

                  The f/2848 must modify the powers to include the authority to sign: an unmodified POA does not include signing power.

                  Comment

                  • gkaiseril
                    Senior Member
                    • Feb 2007
                    • 567

                    #10
                    Execution of POA

                    All POAs whether IRS Form 2848 or a general or limited POA prepared by an attorney should be reviewed and verified that the wording and powers are granted are stated correctly. The parents may already have a general POA that lets them perform the signing of the tax return and then they only need attach a copy of that POA.

                    Comment

                    • Bobby
                      Member
                      • Feb 2008
                      • 37

                      #11
                      Can student pay his tax out of his parents account.

                      I have a student who owes, but no checking account. Can he use his Dad's?

                      Comment

                      • oceanlovin'ea
                        Senior Member
                        • Jun 2005
                        • 2682

                        #12
                        probably so. As long as IRS gets the money, I don't think they will care where it comes from. But that is just my opinion

                        Linda, EA

                        Comment

                        • Burke
                          Senior Member
                          • Jan 2008
                          • 7068

                          #13
                          IRS might not care, but by golly, I sure would if it were my account! I'd like to see my kid try that one.

                          Comment

                          • S T
                            Senior Member
                            • Jun 2005
                            • 5053

                            #14
                            If Children Owe

                            I hardly ever direct ACH payment on electronic file,

                            and if it is the children's tax return, I email, fax or mail the payment vouchers to the parent and have them write a check - At that point I don't care which account is paying the tax due.

                            Sandy

                            Comment

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