Area I: Acronyms & Notes
Ethics, Professional Responsibilities & Federal Tax Procedures
I. Circular 230
- R: Refund: Interest and/or penalties
- E: Examination: IRS examination of an original tax return filed within 120 days of receiving a written notice of the examination or challenge
- CPA is representing the client in negotiating or contesting the IRS's proposed changes (decisions are made by third party)
- P: Proceedings: A judicial proceeding arising under the Internal Revenue Code
What Is Circular 230?
Rules governing the authority to practice before the IRS regarding the following:
- Authority to practice before the IRS
- Duties and restrictions relating to practice before the IRS
- Sanctions for violations of the regulations
- Rules applicable to disciplinary proceedings
Circular 230: Key Prohibitions
- Endorsing or negotiating refund checks issued to the client
- Withholding client records at the request of the client
- Charging unconscionable fees (fees so unfair or one-sided they shock the conscience)
Authority to Practice Before the IRS
- Attorneys
- CPAs
- Must notify the IRS of the identity of any person who, according to their belief, could have records for the client
- Must not currently be under suspension or disbarment from practice before the IRS
- Enrolled agents
- Enrolled actuaries
- Enrolled retirement plan agents
- Registered tax return preparers
- Other persons allowed to represent a taxpayer before the IRS in limited circumstances
Written Tax Advice Under Circular 230
A practitioner who provides written advice (including email) on a federal tax matter must:
- Base advice on reasonable factual and legal assumptions
- Reasonably consider all relevant facts and circumstances the practitioner knows or should know
- Use reasonable efforts to identify and ascertain the relevant facts
- Not rely on representations, statements, or agreements if reliance would be unreasonable
- Relate applicable law and authorities to the facts
- Not take into account the possibility that a return will not be audited
Written Advice: Requirements
- Base on reasonable factual and legal assumptions (including assumptions as to future events)
- Reasonably consider all relevant facts and circumstances the practitioner knows or reasonably should know
- Use reasonable efforts to identify and ascertain the facts relevant to written advice on each federal tax matter
- Not rely on representations, statements, findings, or agreements if reliance would be unreasonable
- Relate applicable law and authorities to facts
- Must not take into account the possibility that a tax return will not be audited
Required Conduct By a Preparer of an Income Tax Return
- Legally minimize the taxpayer's tax liability and abide by the tax code
- Make a reasonable effort to obtain necessary information; make inquiries if information appears incorrect or incomplete
- Recommend a tax return position only if there is a good faith belief it has a realistic possibility of being sustained if challenged
- Notify the taxpayer if aware of a tax return error
- Inform the taxpayer on how to correct a failure to file
- Consider withdrawing from the engagement if the taxpayer does not correct the error or file the return
- Not inform the IRS without the taxpayer's permission
Fees
- A practitioner may not charge an unconscionable fee in connection with any matter before the IRS
- Any published written fees must be honored for 30 days
Diligence as to Accuracy
- Preparing, approving, and filing tax returns and other documents related to IRS matters
- Determining the correctness of oral or written representations made to clients or the Treasury Department
- Practitioner is presumed to have exercised due diligence when relying on the work product of another person if reasonable care was used
Return of Client Records
- General Rule: At request of a client; practitioner may keep copies of records returned
- If state allows: Practitioner may retain records in a fee dispute but must provide the client access to review and copy retained records
Conflict of Interest
May not represent a client before the IRS if it involves a conflict of interest, unless the practitioner believes they can competently represent each client, and each affected client waives the conflict in writing within 30 days.
Other Key Rules
- Prompt Disposition: No practitioner may unreasonably delay any matter before the IRS
- Reasonable Basis: Relying on a reputable accountant or attorney generally gives the taxpayer a reasonable basis
- Assistance from Disbarred/Suspended Persons: No practitioner can knowingly accept help from or assist any person who is disbarred or suspended from practice before the IRS
II. Professional Responsibilities & Tax Return Preparer Penalties
- D: Diligence: Failure to be diligent in determining a client's eligibility for certain tax benefits
- Due Diligence includes: eligibility checklists, computation worksheets, reasonable inquiries, record retention
- I: Identification: Identification number missing
- R: Record keeping: Failure to properly retain records, keep for 3 years
- T: Taxpayer: Failure to provide copy to taxpayer
- Y S: You Sign: Failure to sign return
- Failure to furnish identification number of preparer
- I: Inquiry: Failure to file correct information returns
- Any person who employed a tax return preparer during the return period must file the information return with the IRS
- Does not apply if failure is due to reasonable cause (death, serious illness, reliance on incorrect professional advice) and not willful neglect
- N: Negotiation: Negotiation of IRS refund check
Who Is a Tax Return Preparer?
Any person who:
- Prepares a tax return for compensation, or
- Employs others to prepare for compensation
Exclusions: NOT a Tax Return Preparer
- Merely furnishes typing, reproducing, or other mechanical assistance
- Prepares a return for their employer
- Prepares a return for another person as a fiduciary (trustee, executor, etc.)
- Volunteers not compensated
- Those providing only mechanical assistance (data entry)
Representation Rights
- Unlimited: Enrolled agents, CPAs, and attorneys
- Limited: Annual Filing Season Program participants who are PTIN holders but do not have a credential
PTIN (Preparer Tax Identification Number)
- IRS requires all paid tax return preparers to register with the IRS and obtain a PTIN
- An individual who prepares income tax returns for compensation must include their PTIN on returns
Wrongful Disclosure and/or Use of Tax Return Information
Penalty: $250 for each disclosure (max $10,000), and guilty of a misdemeanor, fine not more than $1,000 and/or imprisonment up to 1 year
Disclosure Exceptions
- Disclosures allowed by any provision of the IRC
- Disclosures pursuant to a court order
- Allowable uses
- Disclosures and uses permitted by the U.S. Treasury for quality and peer reviews
- Client consent: Confidential client information may be disclosed to any party if the client consents
Understatement Due to an Unreasonable Position
The penalty can be assessed because of understatement of a taxpayer's liability due to an unreasonable position. A position is unreasonable unless:
- Reasonable basis for a disclosed position exists, or
- Substantial authority for the position, regardless of disclosure, exists, or
- Reasonable to believe that a tax shelter or reportable transaction position would meet the more-likely-than-not standard
Understatement Due to Willful or Reckless Conduct
- Compensated preparer is liable if understatement is due to negligent or intentional disregard of rules and regulations
- Willful: Willful attempt to understate tax liability
- Reckless: Reckless or intentional disregard of tax rules despite the signed declaration on the return
III. Federal Tax Procedures & Taxpayer Penalties
- R: Reasonable Cause: Had reasonable cause to support the tax return position
- A: Acted in good faith
- N: Neglect: Did not have willful neglect
Failure to File Penalty (Tax Delinquency)
- 5% per month (or any part of a month) the return is late, up to a maximum of 25%
- Return more than 60 days late: Minimum penalty is the lesser of $525 or 100% of the tax due (for 2025 returns filed in 2026)
- If no tax is due, there is no penalty
- Failure to file + failure to pay = 4.5% (0.05 − 0.005)
- Penalty for a 2025 partnership or S corporation return filed in 2026: $255/month (max 12 months) × number of partners
Failure to Pay Penalty (Tax Delinquency)
- ½% per month, up to a maximum of 25% of unpaid tax
Penalty for Failure to Make Sufficient Estimated Income Tax Payments
Individual Taxpayers: does NOT apply if:
- Tax owed is $1,000 or less
- Payments equal at least 90% of current year tax
- Payments equal 100% of last year's tax
- Payments equal 110% of last year's tax (if prior-year AGI exceeded $150k for most filers, or $75k if married filing separately)
- Payments equal estimated current year tax based on the annualization of income method
Corporations: does NOT apply if: Owes less than $500 AND makes timely payments equal to the lesser of 100% of current year or 100% of prior year tax
Accuracy-Related Penalties
| Penalty | Rate | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Negligence Penalty | 20% of understatement | Disregard of tax rules; if imposed, substantial underpayment penalty cannot also be imposed |
| Substantial Understatement of Tax | 20% of understatement | Substantial if it exceeds the greater of 10% of correct tax (or 5% for QBI overstatement) or $5,000. For C corps: lesser of $10M or the greater of $10K or 10% of correct tax |
| Substantial Valuation Misstatement | 20% of understatement | Applies if understatement exceeds $5,000 ($10,000 for corporations); cannot be imposed together with negligence penalty |
| Civil Fraud Penalty | 75% of the underpayment attributable to fraud | IRS must prove fraud by clear and convincing evidence. Criminal fraud (tax evasion) is a separate matter with its own penalties and a higher burden of proof (beyond a reasonable doubt). |
Tax Courts Overview
| Court | Pay Tax First? | Jury? | Precedent? | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| U.S. Tax Court | No | No | Yes | Tax law specialists; federal tax cases only |
| U.S. Tax Court Small Claims Division | No | No | No | $50,000 limit per tax year; no precedent for others |
| U.S. District Court | Yes | Yes | Yes | General trial court; handles tax and non-tax cases |
| U.S. Court of Federal Claims | Yes | No | Yes | Claims for money damages against U.S. government; tax refund claims |
Appeals Process
- Revenue Agent Audit: Revenue agent reviews return and proposes adjustments
- 30-Day Letter: If no agreement, taxpayer receives a copy of the Revenue Agent's Report and a 30-day letter, 30 days to request an administrative appeals conference
- Office of Appeals: Goal is to resolve controversies without litigation. If agreement reached, taxpayer signs Form 870-D (Waiver of Restrictions on Assessment); interest stops accruing when form is accepted
- 90-Day Letter (Notice of Deficiency): If no agreement, taxpayer has 90 days to pay the deficiency or file a petition with the U.S. Tax Court
Tax Authority Hierarchy
Primary Authorities (in order):
- U.S. Constitution (supreme law)
- Internal Revenue Code (enacted by Congress)
- Income Tax Treaties
- U.S. Treasury Regulations (official interpretations of the IRC; force of law)
- Final regulations > Temporary regulations > Proposed regulations
- Judicial Decisions (Tax Court Cases)
- IRS Revenue Rulings and Revenue Procedures
Secondary Authorities:
- Private letter rulings (not binding on others)
- Technical Advice Memoranda (TAMs)
- IRS Agent Reports on Prior Years
- IRS Notices, Announcements, and other administrative pronouncements
Tax Position Standards
| Standard | Probability | Disclosure | Tax Shelters? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Reasonable Basis | 20%–40% | Required | No |
| Substantial Authority | 40%–50% | Not required (recommended) | No |
| More-Likely-Than-Not | >50% | Required (higher standard) | Yes |
Reporting Requirements for Foreign Bank Accounts (FBAR)
A U.S. person must file FBAR if they have a financial interest in, or signature/authority over, a financial account located outside the U.S. and the aggregate exceeds $10,000.
IV. Legal Duties and Responsibilities
- M: Misrepresentation of a material fact (no fraud without materiality)
- A: Actual and justifiable reliance by the plaintiff
- I: Intent to induce reliance
- D: Damages suffered by the plaintiff
- S: Scienter (intent to deceive or reckless disregard for the truth)
- S: Subpoena/Summons/Standards (GAAP)
- L: Lawful Defense of a lawsuit brought by a client
- U: Use by Prospective Purchasers
- As long as the prospective purchasers do not disclose the confidential information
- Only for review, not transfer
- T: Trial Board (AICPA/State) in defense of an official investigation
- S: State CPA Society voluntary quality control review boards or panels
Legal Liabilities
- Civil actions for tax malpractice are based on either contract principles or tort principles
- Torts include: Negligence, Constructive fraud (gross negligence), Actual fraud
Elements of Actual Fraud
- Misrepresentation of material fact
- Intent to deceive
- Actual and justifiable reliance by plaintiff
- Intent to induce the plaintiff's reliance and damages
Elements of Constructive Fraud (Gross Negligence)
- Misrepresentation of a material fact
- Defendant acts with gross negligence or recklessly
- Intent to induce plaintiff's reliance
- Actual and justifiable reliance by plaintiff
- Damages
Elements of Common Law Negligence
- Owed a duty of care
- Breach of duty
- Causation (CPA's breach must be the direct cause of the plaintiff's injury)
- Damages
Penalties for Breach of Contract by an Accountant
| Penalty | Notes |
|---|---|
| Money Damages | Usual and primary penalty; available to client + third-party beneficiaries |
| Specific Performance | Generally NOT available for personal service contracts (accounting), would constitute involuntary servitude |
| Punitive Damages | NOT available in contract actions; reserved for tort cases involving fraud/intentional wrongdoing |
| Rescission | Cancellation of the contract; available after a breach; courts prefer monetary damages |
Ultramares Rule: Accountant Liability for Negligence
Limits an accountant's liability for negligence. Accountant is liable for negligence only to:
- Parties in privity: those with a direct contractual relationship with the accountant
- Intended third-party beneficiaries
Privileges Available to CPAs
- Attorney-Client Privilege
- Tax Practitioner–Taxpayer Privilege
- Work Product Privilege: Protects tangible material produced in preparation for litigation
Regulatory Bodies
| Body | Role |
|---|---|
| State Boards of Accountancy | Sole power to license CPAs; can suspend or revoke licenses; conducts disciplinary hearings. Five penalties: suspension/revocation, monetary fine, reprimand, probation, required CPE |
| AICPA | Professional Code of Conduct; Joint Ethics Enforcement Program (JEEP) with 49 state societies. Can suspend/terminate membership (with or without hearing for criminal matters) |
| IRS | Criminal and civil penalties |
| SEC | Censure, suspension, or permanent revocation of an accountant's right to practice before the SEC |
| NASBA | National Association of State Boards of Accountancy, coordinates activities of all state boards to standardize licensing and regulation |