Some taxpayers do not want to e-file their returns and may have similar reservations about sharing their Quickbooks records with the IRS. Added to the taxpayer's fear of sharing electronic data in general, may be a well founded fear that sharing a QuickBooks file may provide access to multiple tax years. What to do?
During a recent presentation by the IRS, it was recommended that a record for a particular tax year can be renamed (similar to the command, “Save As…”). The taxpayer can then delete any extraneous information from that renamed file before providing a copy—flash drive or CD (no emails) to the IRS agent.
I would also point out that Section 3.02(2) of Rev. Proc. 98-25, 1998-11 I.R.B. 7, provides an exemption from the electronic records retention requirement—and an exemption from the “give me your Quickbooks records mandate”—for any taxpayer with assets of less than $10 million UNLESS:
- (a) all or part of the information required by § 6001 is not in the taxpayer’s hardcopy books and records, but is available in machine-sensible records;
- (b) machine-sensible records were used for computations that cannot be reasonably verified or recomputed without using a computer (e.g., Last-In, First-Out (LIFO) inventories); or
- (c) the taxpayer is notified by the District Director that machine-sensible records must be retained to meet the requirements of § 6001.”