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IMPORTANT IRS UPDATE: The IRS will Accept Digital Signatures and Communicate Electronically

There is important news from the IRS.  Effective immediately, the IRS will accept digital signatures and communicate electronically.  You will be able to send a limited range of documents to and receive documents from the IRS.  Here is the specific statement released yesterday:

EFFECTIVE IMMEDIATELY: IRS to Accept Digital Signatures and Receive and Send Documents Electronically

To help taxpayers and the tax professional community during this COVID-19 period, effective immediately, the IRS will begin temporarily accepting images of signatures (scanned or photographed) and digital signatures on documents related to the determination or collection of tax liability.

In addition, the IRS is allowing IRS employees to accept documents via email and to transmit documents to taxpayers using SecureZip or other established secured messaging systems.

“The IRS is continuing to monitor methods to lessen the burden on taxpayers and professionals during this period,” said Sunita Lough, IRS Deputy Commissioner for Services and Enforcement. “We greatly appreciate the patience, support and valuable comments we continue to receive from the tax professional community as we move forward.”

This effort, described in an internal IRS memo, is in response to the Coronavirus situation maximizing the ability of the IRS to execute on mission-critical duties where employees, taxpayers and their representatives are working from alternate, remote locations outside their office.

The taxpayer or representative must include a statement, either in the form of an attached cover letter or within the body of the email, saying to the effect:

  • “The attached [name of document] includes [name of taxpayer]’s valid signature and the taxpayer intends to transmit the attached document to the IRS.”
  • The choice to transmit documents electronically is solely that of the taxpayer.

The limited categories of documents included in the scope of this effort include:

  • extensions of statute of limitations on assessment or collection,
  • waivers of statutory notices of deficiency and consents to assessment,
  • agreements to specific tax matters or tax liabilities (closing agreements), and
  • any other statement or form needing the signature of a taxpayer or representative traditionally collected by IRS personnel outside of standard filing procedures (for example, a case specific Power of Attorney).