Sale of Federal Return When Taxpayer Does Not Qualify is Permitted Sample Clauses

Sale of Federal Return When Taxpayer Does Not Qualify is Permitted. When a taxpayer enters a Member company Free File site, and begins to complete a return but ultimately cannot qualify for the Member's free offer, the Member may then offer the taxpayer the right to pay a fee for the Member company's return services, which charge should not exceed the usual commercial price for such services. The Member company must also provide an option for the taxpayer to return to the federal Free File site. Free returns cannot be provided to those who do not quality.
AutoNDA by SimpleDocs
Sale of Federal Return When Taxpayer Does Not Qualify is Permitted. When a taxpayer enters a Member’s Free File Landing Page and begins to complete a return but ultimately cannot qualify for the Member’s free offer, the Member may then offer the taxpayer the right to pay a fee for the Member’s return services, which charge should not exceed the usual commercial price for such services. For taxpayers who do not qualify for the federal offer, the fee for the federal return must be presented on the company’s landing page with a typeface and prominence no less than the majority of text on the page. The Member must also provide an option for the taxpayer to return to the Federal Free File site. Free returns cannot be provided to those who do not qualify.

Related to Sale of Federal Return When Taxpayer Does Not Qualify is Permitted

  • Disregarded Entity For U.S. federal tax purposes, an entity that is disregarded as an entity separate from its owner is treated as a “disregarded entity.” See Regulations section 301.7701-2(c)(2)(iii). Enter the owner's name on line 1. The name of the entity entered on line 1 should never be a disregarded entity. The name on line 1 should be the name shown on the income tax return on which the income should be reported. For example, if a foreign LLC that is treated as a disregarded entity for U.S. federal tax purposes has a single owner that is a U.S. person, the U.S. owner's name is required to be provided on line 1. If the direct owner of the entity is also a disregarded entity, enter the first owner that is not disregarded for federal tax purposes. Enter the disregarded entity's name on line 2, “Business name/disregarded entity name.” If the owner of the disregarded entity is a foreign person, the owner must complete an appropriate Form W-8 instead of a Form W-9. This is the case even if the foreign person has a U.S. TIN. Line 2 If you have a business name, trade name, DBA name, or disregarded entity name, you may enter it on line 2. Line 3 Check the appropriate box on line 3 for the U.S. federal tax classification of the person whose name is entered on line 1. Check only one box on line 3. IF the entity/person on line 1 is a(n) . . . THEN check the box for . . . • Corporation Corporation • Individual • Sole proprietorship, or • Single-member limited liability company (LLC) owned by an individual and disregarded for U.S. federal tax purposes. Individual/sole proprietor or single- member LLC • LLC treated as a partnership for U.S. federal tax purposes, • LLC that has filed Form 8832 or 2553 to be taxed as a corporation, or • LLC that is disregarded as an entity separate from its owner but the owner is another LLC that is not disregarded for U.S. federal tax purposes. Limited liability company and enter the appropriate tax classification. (P= Partnership; C= C corporation; or S= S corporation) • Partnership Partnership • Trust/estate Trust/estate Line 4, Exemptions If you are exempt from backup withholding and/or FATCA reporting, enter in the appropriate space on line 4 any code(s) that may apply to you. Exempt payee code. • Generally, individuals (including sole proprietors) are not exempt from backup withholding. • Except as provided below, corporations are exempt from backup withholding for certain payments, including interest and dividends. • Corporations are not exempt from backup withholding for payments made in settlement of payment card or third party network transactions. • Corporations are not exempt from backup withholding with respect to attorneys’ fees or gross proceeds paid to attorneys, and corporations that provide medical or health care services are not exempt with respect to payments reportable on Form 1099-MISC. The following codes identify payees that are exempt from backup withholding. Enter the appropriate code in the space in line 4.

Draft better contracts in just 5 minutes Get the weekly Law Insider newsletter packed with expert videos, webinars, ebooks, and more!