Submitted by Zerole00 t3_zz89y8 in personalfinance
Title sounds ridiculous I know, but please here me out.
Background: Parents and I were born in another Vietnam, came to the USA as refugees, all became US citizens (I don't believe any of us hold Vietnamese citizenship anymore). Parents are in their late 80s and retired about 15 years ago and 5 years ago they moved back to Vietnam (I think they have 5 or 10-year visas to stay there). I had their mail forwarded to me for a while but they never changed their permanent addresses or anything (though I still get some important mail for them like from the SSA).
Separately, they get about $500-700 each in social security benefits and $100-200 each in pension benefits a month (deposited into a joint checking account which I have access to and send money to them via Western Union at their request). Since they moved they haven't done their taxes (so about 2016). They have no assets whatsoever aside from what's in that checking account or other sources of income other than their social security and pension (from the same employer). I also have Power of Attorney for both of them (lawyer drafted some documents and we got it signed and notarized at a US embassy).
Given their situation, do they "need" to do their taxes? I'd have to do it for them and I'd have to track down documentation from the SSA and pension program to do so I believe. I actually asked a tax professional at LibertyTax about this while I was settling a small error on my own taxes, and given their situation he didn't think it was necessary or worth it. Basically at their income level they wouldn't owe any money and it'd cost more just to do so.
What should I do?
BouncyEgg t1_j2a2o6s wrote
Probably not at the Federal level as their income is low enough to not meet reporting criteria.
You can go through this tool on the IRS website:
Generally, it's advised to file even if you do not have a filing requirement. This helps prevent someone else filing a fraudulent tax return under you. Or if someone does file fraudulently, you'd be alerted sooner (rather than discovering it several years later and having to deal with multiple years of fraudulent tax returns).
> I actually asked a tax professional at LibertyTax ... it'd cost more just to do so.
Just be aware that big box shops (like LibertyTax, H&R Block, Jackson Hewett, etc) do not generally have the best reputation. It's primarily because many of their "tax professionals" are receive a cursory education consisting of a few weeks.
A true tax professional carries a CPA or EA certification. Generally this is the qualification you should be seeking when looking for a real professional. Generally, seeking out an independent CPA/EA in your area would be advised over the big box shops.
But anyways, if you're interested in a DIY approach, there are free options out there (or at least very cheap).