Interviewing the Taxpayer
- Note: Some of this may have been done by a Client Facilitator (CF).
- Verify the taxpayer’s Social Security number (see the Social Security Number section, page 11) and identity (original photo-issued ID, such as valid U.S. driver’s license, employer ID, school ID, U.S. state ID, Military ID, national ID, visa, or passport).
- Explain the tax-preparation process, particularly the responsibility of the taxpayer for the return, and that a separate QR is done.
- Review the information provided by the taxpayer on the first three pages of the Intake Booklet.
- Complete the dependent information on page 1 (five columns in the greyed areas), if there are any possible dependents.
- Confirm that the three consents have been responded to – for each, the taxpayer has either signed the page, or the CF or taxpayer has written “DENY” or “DECLINE”, or similar, on the page.
- If neither has occurred for a consent, determine what the taxpayer wants, and, if the taxpayer doesn’t want to agree to the consent, mark the page accordingly.
- If not comfortable with the complexity of the return, talk to your LC about another counselor preparing the return.
- Ask the taxpayer to provide any information that they might have omitted from the Intake Booklet.
- Write that information on the relevant page in the Intake Booklet.
- Review all supporting documentation, such as SSA-1099 forms, Form W-2s, and Form 1099-Rs, and place these in the order they’ll be used (normally, in the order listed on pages 2 to 3 of the Intake Booklet).
- Compare information on pages 2 [and 3] of the Intake Booklet to the documents provided by the taxpayer to determine if those pages are correct and complete and to identify missing documents; correct as needed.
- Make sure no item is out-of-scope. Finding something later that is out-of-scope means that a lot of time has been wasted for both preparer and taxpayer.
- The most common out-of-scope items are (a) income from rental property, and (b) out-of-scope codes in box 7 of a Form 1099-R. But there are dozens of other circumstances that make a return out-of-scope. The rule of thumb is that if you see something unusual, research it immediately – look in the scope manual, ask your LC or another counselor, etc.
- An electronic version of a tax form (such as a document viewed on a taxpayer’s phone) is acceptable.
- You have the option to refuse to use such a document, and to ask for a paper copy, if the electronic version is difficult to read.
- Keep in mind that taxpayer mobile phones’ cameras and video are not allowed to be used in the tax preparation area or where other taxpayers’ documents are present, because of the (small) risk of taking a photo or video of others’ tax information.
- If an electronic version of a tax document is used, note this on the related Intake Booklet page.
- Compare the dollar amounts on the previous return, if available, to any dollar amounts on pages 2-3 of the Intake Booklet, and to the dollar amounts on the supporting documents for the current return. Where there appear to be differences, ask the taxpayer about those differences.
- This is also a good way to identify missing documents.
- After you have a general idea of the taxpayer’s income (from reviewing documents, or from entering information in TaxSlayer), consider whether total income seems adequate to live on.
- A taxpayer may be receiving Supplemental Security Income (SSI) (not taxable, nor reported on tax returns), or living on savings, or doing something else that explains their low income and doesn’t affect their return. Alternatively, the taxpayer may actually be a dependent of another person or may have omitted taxable income. If stated sources of income seem clearly inadequate, ask the taxpayer for more information.
- Tax-Aide policy is that the interview should be complete before starting to create a return in TaxSlayer.
- For example, out-of-scope issues should be identified by doing a thorough interview, not when entering document information in TaxSlayer.
Taxpayer and/or spouse not available
- A return when the taxpayer (and/or spouse, if MFJ return) is deceased is in scope. We require no documentation of relationship or right of representation.
- For signature requirements, see the section Deceased Person - Signature Requirements, page 128.
- Signature requirements are usually set by the LC; see the section Married Filing Jointly, page 128.
- A return where an unmarried taxpayer is alive but not present (or for MFJ returns, neither taxpayer is present) is out-of-scope unless the person with the taxpayer’s paperwork has a Power of Attorney form with authority to sign for the taxpayer, as discussed in the section Power of Attorney (POA), page 129. This also applies to a parent who wants Tax-Aide to do the return for a child, and vice versa.
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