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    <title>How to Find a Trustworthy Tax Preparer - MMCxchange</title>
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        <title>How to Find a Trustworthy Tax Preparer</title>
        <link>https://staging.bipocxchange.com/detail/how-to-find-a-trustworthy-tax-preparer_1777202228</link>
        <pubDate>Tue, 24 Jan 2023 18:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
        <dc:creator><![CDATA[The Baltimore Times]]></dc:creator>
                <category><![CDATA[Maryland News/legal]]></category>
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        <description><![CDATA[Are you looking for a tax preparer for the upcoming season, but don’t know where to findone you can trust? There are many businesses – reputable or otherwise&#8230;]]></description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="https://mmcxchange.s3.us-east-2.amazonaws.com/uploads/cover_photo/1777202228_picspree-668976-scaled.jpg" alt="How to Find a Trustworthy Tax Preparer" /></p><p>Are you looking for a tax preparer for the upcoming season, but don’t know where to find<br>one you can trust?</p>



<p><br>There are many businesses – reputable or otherwise – that help people prepare and file their taxes<br>each year. But some of these businesses aren’t as reliable as they want you to believe. And a few<br>might even be out to steal your refund.</p>



<p><br>Here are some key signs that suggest a tax preparer is one you should avoid:</p>




<li>They charge you a percentage of your refund.<br>Preparers that charge a percentage of your refund have the incentive to make your initial refund<br>larger at first by claiming more credits and benefits than you really are entitled to. And when the<br>IRS or Maryland Comptroller discovers this and begins an audit, you – not the preparer – are<br>responsible for paying the IRS or Comptroller back. This results in a bigger payment for the<br>preparer and extra debt for you.<br>In many cases, the percentage charged winds up being much more expensive than a normal flat<br>rate charged by other preparers. This can be hundreds of dollars taken out of your refund that you<br>could otherwise keep.</li>



<li>They don’t have proper credentials.<br>A professional tax preparer should be a Certified Public Accountant (CPA), an Enrolled Agent<br>(EA), an attorney, or registered as a tax preparer in the State of Maryland.<br>You can check if a preparer is a CPA on the Maryland Department of Labor’s Certified Public<br>Accountants Public Query website. The IRS maintains a searchable list of every Enrolled Agent<br>in the country. You also may request verification that someone is an EA directly from the IRS by<br>following instructions on the IRS website.<br>Preparers without these credentials aren’t qualified as a business to file other people’s taxes.<br>Often such preparers will use employees working off a template who do not understand enough<br>about the law to avoid making potentially serious mistakes.</li>



<li>They offer refund anticipation loans.<br>Refund anticipation loans are notoriously bad deals that charge very high fees. You can avoid the<br>fees and need for the anticipation loan by filing your taxes early.</li>



<li>They are only open for part of the year.<br>The least trustworthy tax preparers will appear during tax season, process as many returns as<br>they can, and then close up shop and move on. This leaves their customers without anyone to<br>work with when the preparer’s mistake or fraud leads the IRS or Comptroller into an audit of the<br>customer’s taxes.</li>




<p>For non-English speakers or limited-proficiency English speakers:<br>If you hire a tax preparer who speaks your first language, be sure to have someone you trust<br>to verify that the paperwork that the preparer gives you in English actually states what the preparer<br>claims it does. Unethical tax preparers may tell you one thing about a tax form when in reality<br>the form is very different. They also may say they completed a form correctly, but actually didn’t<br>– taking advantage of your inability to read the full form.<br>So, where can I find a trustworthy tax preparer?<br>The Volunteer Income Tax Assistance Program (VITA) can provide free, high-quality tax<br>preparation services to low- and moderate-income taxpayers through the Baltimore and<br>Maryland CASH (Creating Assets, Savings, and Hope) campaigns. The CASH Campaign of<br>Maryland is now offering appointments for its IRS-certified, free tax preparation service. You<br>may be eligible for this free program if you earned $60,000 or less last year. Call 410-528-8006<br>or visit cashmd.org to learn more about the Baltimore and Maryland CASH campaigns.<br>You also can find other VITA-free tax preparation sites nationwide at<br>irs.treasury.gov/freetaxprep or by calling 800-906-9887.<br>AARP offers free tax preparation through its Volunteer Tax Aide Program to those over 50 years<br>of age. Volunteers operate virtually or in person nationwide and you don’t need to be an AARP<br>member to qualify. This program will open soon for the 2022 tax filing season. So, keep an eye<br>out for more news.<br>If your taxes are relatively simple and you are comfortable completing online forms, you also<br>may want to consider filing your own taxes online. The IRS website at irs.gov/filing/free-file-do-<br>your-federal-taxes-for-free has a list of IRS-partnered companies that offer free, guided federal<br>tax filing programs that do much of the work for you. Keep in mind that each organization has a<br>different set of criteria for eligibility and that state taxes may not be free. However, this is still a<br>good option for those who are comfortable doing part of the work themselves.<br>This article was written by John Hardt, director of the Low Income Tax Clinic at Maryland<br>Volunteer Lawyers Service.</p>



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