Your best friend Tisha might appear to be somewhat of a “tax expert,” but with no formal education, no professional experience, and no accounting related licensure, you in fact are taking a huge gamble by having her do your taxes. For this article, I will examine the concept of “who is doing your taxes” by going over some best practices for choosing tax preparers who will make sure that your complicated tax return is getting the attention that it needs, for a fair price.
It’s hard to provide the exact number of tax preparers in the United States, but estimates show that there could be anywhere from 1.3 million to 1.5 million tax preparers. However, only about 15% of them are regulated/licensed to prepare tax returns as a CPA, Enrolled Agent, or Tax Attorney.
To become an unregulated/non-licensed tax preparer (most of which also have no formal business, finance, accounting, nor legal education) just takes the person waking up one morning and “deciding” they are going to go into business. They usually start with their closest family members and friends (most of whom are likely to be lower income or working class) and use various sales tactics to entice said family and friends to utilize their tax preparation services versus that of a more well-known preparation firm that’s regulated/licensed. Many family members and friends will fall for the pitch because after all, this is your friend, or cousin, “Tisha” and certainly “Tisha” has to know what she’s doing, right? Certainly “Tisha” has to be looking out for your best interest, right?
There are a host of risks that come with using an unregulated/non-licensed individual to prepare your taxes, especially when on top of said non-licensure, they also have no real formal higher education in financial accounting, cost accounting, nor tax accounting.
Other than the major red flag of being unregulated/non-licensed, if a tax preparer does any of the following, you should stay away from them:
While this article does shine a negative light on unregulated/non-licensed tax preparers, the fact is that not all of them are “bad/unethical” and not all of the regulated/licensed tax preparers are “good/ethical.” An unregulated/non-licensed tax preparer might be able to represent you in cases of tax audits, but only regulated/licensed tax preparers such as CPAs, Enrolled Agents, and Tax Attorneys can represent you before the IRS in collections, appeals, audits, and all tax matters. So, a regulated/licensed tax preparer is held to a higher standard of quality and there’s actually a centralized regulatory board that helps to “police” the actions of these individuals. Whereas, an unregulated/non-licensed tax preparer can literally do, say, whatever they want just to try to drum up business.
With that being said, I personally do not recommend that you utilize any tax preparer that’s unregulated and non-licensed, without some form of higher education and actual professional tax experience. My rule of thumb is to:
While the costs for said professionals will likely be higher than going to “Tisha,” at least 95% of the time you can rest assured that you are getting better quality and efficiency in tax preparation, as trying to “save money” by going to “Tisha’s Tax Return Service” could end up costing you more in the end when you have to get the same return done twice due to Tisha’s potential mistakes and bad judgment. Written by John Tucker.
If you need assistance with locating a competent, qualified, regulated/licensed tax preparer, call Currahee Property Solutions today at 210-941-1200.