Why would the IRS ask for birth certificates or even audit a small tax return?












21















My daughter and her boyfriend live together, and he is the sole earner in the home. They each have a kid plus 1 together. H&R Block told them that he didn't make enough to do his return and now the IRS wants birth certificates. I'm a retired accountant and I've never heard of such a thing!
They live in a different city than me and their cars broke down otherwise I would have done this for them. This is bugging me.










share|improve this question









New contributor




Jen is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
















  • 3





    Hi. It is not clear what you are asking and the title does not make sense. I assume "they" is the IRS. What does not make sense: 1040EZ cannot be used if the filer is claiming dependents.

    – Damila
    yesterday






  • 11





    Jen - The H&R Block anecdote is off on a tangent that may be making the question a bit unclear. Is that really the question, or are you asking why the IRS would like to see birth certificates?

    – JoeTaxpayer
    yesterday






  • 6





    To the vote-to-close members - if the question is edited down to ask why the IRS requires birth certs for a low income return, it might be a decent question, in light of the answer posted by Hart. Patience.

    – JoeTaxpayer
    yesterday






  • 3





    Are you just complaining here? The reality is that unless your friend supplies the examiner with birth certificates proving that he has children, then the IRS is going to deny your friend's attempt to claim child tax credits and assess additional taxes and penalties. If you are an accountant, you should know that anybody who claims a credit or deduction better be prepared to prove that they are entitled to that deduction.

    – Five Bagger
    yesterday











  • @FiveBagger Maybe they retired before 1975. 🤣

    – ceejayoz
    23 hours ago
















21















My daughter and her boyfriend live together, and he is the sole earner in the home. They each have a kid plus 1 together. H&R Block told them that he didn't make enough to do his return and now the IRS wants birth certificates. I'm a retired accountant and I've never heard of such a thing!
They live in a different city than me and their cars broke down otherwise I would have done this for them. This is bugging me.










share|improve this question









New contributor




Jen is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
















  • 3





    Hi. It is not clear what you are asking and the title does not make sense. I assume "they" is the IRS. What does not make sense: 1040EZ cannot be used if the filer is claiming dependents.

    – Damila
    yesterday






  • 11





    Jen - The H&R Block anecdote is off on a tangent that may be making the question a bit unclear. Is that really the question, or are you asking why the IRS would like to see birth certificates?

    – JoeTaxpayer
    yesterday






  • 6





    To the vote-to-close members - if the question is edited down to ask why the IRS requires birth certs for a low income return, it might be a decent question, in light of the answer posted by Hart. Patience.

    – JoeTaxpayer
    yesterday






  • 3





    Are you just complaining here? The reality is that unless your friend supplies the examiner with birth certificates proving that he has children, then the IRS is going to deny your friend's attempt to claim child tax credits and assess additional taxes and penalties. If you are an accountant, you should know that anybody who claims a credit or deduction better be prepared to prove that they are entitled to that deduction.

    – Five Bagger
    yesterday











  • @FiveBagger Maybe they retired before 1975. 🤣

    – ceejayoz
    23 hours ago














21












21








21


1






My daughter and her boyfriend live together, and he is the sole earner in the home. They each have a kid plus 1 together. H&R Block told them that he didn't make enough to do his return and now the IRS wants birth certificates. I'm a retired accountant and I've never heard of such a thing!
They live in a different city than me and their cars broke down otherwise I would have done this for them. This is bugging me.










share|improve this question









New contributor




Jen is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












My daughter and her boyfriend live together, and he is the sole earner in the home. They each have a kid plus 1 together. H&R Block told them that he didn't make enough to do his return and now the IRS wants birth certificates. I'm a retired accountant and I've never heard of such a thing!
They live in a different city than me and their cars broke down otherwise I would have done this for them. This is bugging me.







united-states income-tax irs dependents audit






share|improve this question









New contributor




Jen is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




Jen is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited yesterday









Ben Miller

79.7k19219286




79.7k19219286






New contributor




Jen is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked yesterday









JenJen

11213




11213




New contributor




Jen is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





Jen is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Jen is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.








  • 3





    Hi. It is not clear what you are asking and the title does not make sense. I assume "they" is the IRS. What does not make sense: 1040EZ cannot be used if the filer is claiming dependents.

    – Damila
    yesterday






  • 11





    Jen - The H&R Block anecdote is off on a tangent that may be making the question a bit unclear. Is that really the question, or are you asking why the IRS would like to see birth certificates?

    – JoeTaxpayer
    yesterday






  • 6





    To the vote-to-close members - if the question is edited down to ask why the IRS requires birth certs for a low income return, it might be a decent question, in light of the answer posted by Hart. Patience.

    – JoeTaxpayer
    yesterday






  • 3





    Are you just complaining here? The reality is that unless your friend supplies the examiner with birth certificates proving that he has children, then the IRS is going to deny your friend's attempt to claim child tax credits and assess additional taxes and penalties. If you are an accountant, you should know that anybody who claims a credit or deduction better be prepared to prove that they are entitled to that deduction.

    – Five Bagger
    yesterday











  • @FiveBagger Maybe they retired before 1975. 🤣

    – ceejayoz
    23 hours ago














  • 3





    Hi. It is not clear what you are asking and the title does not make sense. I assume "they" is the IRS. What does not make sense: 1040EZ cannot be used if the filer is claiming dependents.

    – Damila
    yesterday






  • 11





    Jen - The H&R Block anecdote is off on a tangent that may be making the question a bit unclear. Is that really the question, or are you asking why the IRS would like to see birth certificates?

    – JoeTaxpayer
    yesterday






  • 6





    To the vote-to-close members - if the question is edited down to ask why the IRS requires birth certs for a low income return, it might be a decent question, in light of the answer posted by Hart. Patience.

    – JoeTaxpayer
    yesterday






  • 3





    Are you just complaining here? The reality is that unless your friend supplies the examiner with birth certificates proving that he has children, then the IRS is going to deny your friend's attempt to claim child tax credits and assess additional taxes and penalties. If you are an accountant, you should know that anybody who claims a credit or deduction better be prepared to prove that they are entitled to that deduction.

    – Five Bagger
    yesterday











  • @FiveBagger Maybe they retired before 1975. 🤣

    – ceejayoz
    23 hours ago








3




3





Hi. It is not clear what you are asking and the title does not make sense. I assume "they" is the IRS. What does not make sense: 1040EZ cannot be used if the filer is claiming dependents.

– Damila
yesterday





Hi. It is not clear what you are asking and the title does not make sense. I assume "they" is the IRS. What does not make sense: 1040EZ cannot be used if the filer is claiming dependents.

– Damila
yesterday




11




11





Jen - The H&R Block anecdote is off on a tangent that may be making the question a bit unclear. Is that really the question, or are you asking why the IRS would like to see birth certificates?

– JoeTaxpayer
yesterday





Jen - The H&R Block anecdote is off on a tangent that may be making the question a bit unclear. Is that really the question, or are you asking why the IRS would like to see birth certificates?

– JoeTaxpayer
yesterday




6




6





To the vote-to-close members - if the question is edited down to ask why the IRS requires birth certs for a low income return, it might be a decent question, in light of the answer posted by Hart. Patience.

– JoeTaxpayer
yesterday





To the vote-to-close members - if the question is edited down to ask why the IRS requires birth certs for a low income return, it might be a decent question, in light of the answer posted by Hart. Patience.

– JoeTaxpayer
yesterday




3




3





Are you just complaining here? The reality is that unless your friend supplies the examiner with birth certificates proving that he has children, then the IRS is going to deny your friend's attempt to claim child tax credits and assess additional taxes and penalties. If you are an accountant, you should know that anybody who claims a credit or deduction better be prepared to prove that they are entitled to that deduction.

– Five Bagger
yesterday





Are you just complaining here? The reality is that unless your friend supplies the examiner with birth certificates proving that he has children, then the IRS is going to deny your friend's attempt to claim child tax credits and assess additional taxes and penalties. If you are an accountant, you should know that anybody who claims a credit or deduction better be prepared to prove that they are entitled to that deduction.

– Five Bagger
yesterday













@FiveBagger Maybe they retired before 1975. 🤣

– ceejayoz
23 hours ago





@FiveBagger Maybe they retired before 1975. 🤣

– ceejayoz
23 hours ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















75














For people that don't earn very much, the largest single financial event of the year is often getting a large tax refund thanks to the Earned Income Credit and the Child Tax Credit. These refundable credits can result in people getting refunds for thousands more than what they had withheld over the year. This makes fraudulently claiming dependents potentially lucrative. The IRS just wants documentation that supports what is being claimed on the tax return.



A birth certificate is a direct way to prove a child is yours, so it is not an uncommon document to provide.






share|improve this answer





















  • 47





    The family configuration described also makes it possible that someone else has claimed one of the children listed on the return as a dependent.

    – tbrookside
    yesterday






  • 8





    @tbrookside Very true, there are many split couples that race to file claiming the dependents so the other parent can't. However, usually a birth certificate isn't going to resolve anything in those situations since without a legal agreement both parents have a right to claim the child even though only one of them can. It gets messy for sure.

    – Hart CO
    yesterday






  • 22





    From the IRS Web Site: If we pick your EITC claim for an audit based on the child you claim, we ask for proof that the child is your qualifying child ... You need to send proof the child is related to you: ... Birth certificates or other official documents of birth that show you are related to the child,

    – D Stanley
    yesterday






  • 9





    @HartCO: In fact only one of them has the right and the law is clear who; the person who provided the majority of the person's support.

    – Joshua
    yesterday






  • 7





    @Paul - citation? This comment makes no sense to me.

    – JoeTaxpayer
    yesterday










protected by JoeTaxpayer yesterday



Thank you for your interest in this question.
Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?














1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









75














For people that don't earn very much, the largest single financial event of the year is often getting a large tax refund thanks to the Earned Income Credit and the Child Tax Credit. These refundable credits can result in people getting refunds for thousands more than what they had withheld over the year. This makes fraudulently claiming dependents potentially lucrative. The IRS just wants documentation that supports what is being claimed on the tax return.



A birth certificate is a direct way to prove a child is yours, so it is not an uncommon document to provide.






share|improve this answer





















  • 47





    The family configuration described also makes it possible that someone else has claimed one of the children listed on the return as a dependent.

    – tbrookside
    yesterday






  • 8





    @tbrookside Very true, there are many split couples that race to file claiming the dependents so the other parent can't. However, usually a birth certificate isn't going to resolve anything in those situations since without a legal agreement both parents have a right to claim the child even though only one of them can. It gets messy for sure.

    – Hart CO
    yesterday






  • 22





    From the IRS Web Site: If we pick your EITC claim for an audit based on the child you claim, we ask for proof that the child is your qualifying child ... You need to send proof the child is related to you: ... Birth certificates or other official documents of birth that show you are related to the child,

    – D Stanley
    yesterday






  • 9





    @HartCO: In fact only one of them has the right and the law is clear who; the person who provided the majority of the person's support.

    – Joshua
    yesterday






  • 7





    @Paul - citation? This comment makes no sense to me.

    – JoeTaxpayer
    yesterday
















75














For people that don't earn very much, the largest single financial event of the year is often getting a large tax refund thanks to the Earned Income Credit and the Child Tax Credit. These refundable credits can result in people getting refunds for thousands more than what they had withheld over the year. This makes fraudulently claiming dependents potentially lucrative. The IRS just wants documentation that supports what is being claimed on the tax return.



A birth certificate is a direct way to prove a child is yours, so it is not an uncommon document to provide.






share|improve this answer





















  • 47





    The family configuration described also makes it possible that someone else has claimed one of the children listed on the return as a dependent.

    – tbrookside
    yesterday






  • 8





    @tbrookside Very true, there are many split couples that race to file claiming the dependents so the other parent can't. However, usually a birth certificate isn't going to resolve anything in those situations since without a legal agreement both parents have a right to claim the child even though only one of them can. It gets messy for sure.

    – Hart CO
    yesterday






  • 22





    From the IRS Web Site: If we pick your EITC claim for an audit based on the child you claim, we ask for proof that the child is your qualifying child ... You need to send proof the child is related to you: ... Birth certificates or other official documents of birth that show you are related to the child,

    – D Stanley
    yesterday






  • 9





    @HartCO: In fact only one of them has the right and the law is clear who; the person who provided the majority of the person's support.

    – Joshua
    yesterday






  • 7





    @Paul - citation? This comment makes no sense to me.

    – JoeTaxpayer
    yesterday














75












75








75







For people that don't earn very much, the largest single financial event of the year is often getting a large tax refund thanks to the Earned Income Credit and the Child Tax Credit. These refundable credits can result in people getting refunds for thousands more than what they had withheld over the year. This makes fraudulently claiming dependents potentially lucrative. The IRS just wants documentation that supports what is being claimed on the tax return.



A birth certificate is a direct way to prove a child is yours, so it is not an uncommon document to provide.






share|improve this answer















For people that don't earn very much, the largest single financial event of the year is often getting a large tax refund thanks to the Earned Income Credit and the Child Tax Credit. These refundable credits can result in people getting refunds for thousands more than what they had withheld over the year. This makes fraudulently claiming dependents potentially lucrative. The IRS just wants documentation that supports what is being claimed on the tax return.



A birth certificate is a direct way to prove a child is yours, so it is not an uncommon document to provide.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited yesterday

























answered yesterday









Hart COHart CO

31.5k47389




31.5k47389








  • 47





    The family configuration described also makes it possible that someone else has claimed one of the children listed on the return as a dependent.

    – tbrookside
    yesterday






  • 8





    @tbrookside Very true, there are many split couples that race to file claiming the dependents so the other parent can't. However, usually a birth certificate isn't going to resolve anything in those situations since without a legal agreement both parents have a right to claim the child even though only one of them can. It gets messy for sure.

    – Hart CO
    yesterday






  • 22





    From the IRS Web Site: If we pick your EITC claim for an audit based on the child you claim, we ask for proof that the child is your qualifying child ... You need to send proof the child is related to you: ... Birth certificates or other official documents of birth that show you are related to the child,

    – D Stanley
    yesterday






  • 9





    @HartCO: In fact only one of them has the right and the law is clear who; the person who provided the majority of the person's support.

    – Joshua
    yesterday






  • 7





    @Paul - citation? This comment makes no sense to me.

    – JoeTaxpayer
    yesterday














  • 47





    The family configuration described also makes it possible that someone else has claimed one of the children listed on the return as a dependent.

    – tbrookside
    yesterday






  • 8





    @tbrookside Very true, there are many split couples that race to file claiming the dependents so the other parent can't. However, usually a birth certificate isn't going to resolve anything in those situations since without a legal agreement both parents have a right to claim the child even though only one of them can. It gets messy for sure.

    – Hart CO
    yesterday






  • 22





    From the IRS Web Site: If we pick your EITC claim for an audit based on the child you claim, we ask for proof that the child is your qualifying child ... You need to send proof the child is related to you: ... Birth certificates or other official documents of birth that show you are related to the child,

    – D Stanley
    yesterday






  • 9





    @HartCO: In fact only one of them has the right and the law is clear who; the person who provided the majority of the person's support.

    – Joshua
    yesterday






  • 7





    @Paul - citation? This comment makes no sense to me.

    – JoeTaxpayer
    yesterday








47




47





The family configuration described also makes it possible that someone else has claimed one of the children listed on the return as a dependent.

– tbrookside
yesterday





The family configuration described also makes it possible that someone else has claimed one of the children listed on the return as a dependent.

– tbrookside
yesterday




8




8





@tbrookside Very true, there are many split couples that race to file claiming the dependents so the other parent can't. However, usually a birth certificate isn't going to resolve anything in those situations since without a legal agreement both parents have a right to claim the child even though only one of them can. It gets messy for sure.

– Hart CO
yesterday





@tbrookside Very true, there are many split couples that race to file claiming the dependents so the other parent can't. However, usually a birth certificate isn't going to resolve anything in those situations since without a legal agreement both parents have a right to claim the child even though only one of them can. It gets messy for sure.

– Hart CO
yesterday




22




22





From the IRS Web Site: If we pick your EITC claim for an audit based on the child you claim, we ask for proof that the child is your qualifying child ... You need to send proof the child is related to you: ... Birth certificates or other official documents of birth that show you are related to the child,

– D Stanley
yesterday





From the IRS Web Site: If we pick your EITC claim for an audit based on the child you claim, we ask for proof that the child is your qualifying child ... You need to send proof the child is related to you: ... Birth certificates or other official documents of birth that show you are related to the child,

– D Stanley
yesterday




9




9





@HartCO: In fact only one of them has the right and the law is clear who; the person who provided the majority of the person's support.

– Joshua
yesterday





@HartCO: In fact only one of them has the right and the law is clear who; the person who provided the majority of the person's support.

– Joshua
yesterday




7




7





@Paul - citation? This comment makes no sense to me.

– JoeTaxpayer
yesterday





@Paul - citation? This comment makes no sense to me.

– JoeTaxpayer
yesterday





protected by JoeTaxpayer yesterday



Thank you for your interest in this question.
Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?



Popular posts from this blog

How to label and detect the document text images

Vallis Paradisi

Tabula Rosettana