[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 18]
[Revised as of April 1, 2008]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR301.7216-1]

[Page 510-513]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 301_PROCEDURE AND ADMINISTRATION--Table of Contents
 
                 Crimes, Other Offenses, and Forfeitures
 
Sec. 301.7216-1  Penalty for disclosure or use of tax return information.

    (a) In general. Section 7216(a) prescribes a criminal penalty for 
tax return preparers who knowingly or recklessly disclose or use tax 
return information for a purpose other than preparing a tax return. A 
violation of section 7216 is a misdemeanor, with a maximum penalty of up 
to one year imprisonment or a fine of not more than $1,000, or both, 
together with the costs of prosecution. Section 7216(b) establishes 
exceptions to the general rule in section 7216(a) prohibiting disclosure 
and use. Section 7216(b) also authorizes

[[Page 511]]

the Secretary to promulgate regulations prescribing additional permitted 
disclosures and uses. Section 6713(a) prescribes a related civil penalty 
for disclosures and uses that constitute a violation of section 7216. 
The penalty for violating section 6713 is $250 for each prohibited 
disclosure or use, not to exceed a total of $10,000 for a calendar year. 
Section 6713(b) provides that the exceptions in section 7216(b) also 
apply to section 6713. Under section 7216(b), the provisions of section 
7216(a) will not apply to any disclosure or use permitted under 
regulations prescribed by the Secretary.
    (b) Definitions. For purposes of section 7216 and Sec. Sec. 
301.7216-1 through 301.7216-3:
    (1) Tax return. The term tax return means any return (or amended 
return) of income tax imposed by chapter 1 of the Internal Revenue Code.
    (2) Tax return preparer--(i) In general. The term tax return 
preparer means:
    (A) Any person who is engaged in the business of preparing or 
assisting in preparing tax returns;
    (B) Any person who is engaged in the business of providing auxiliary 
services in connection with the preparation of tax returns, including a 
person who develops software that is used to prepare or file a tax 
return and any Authorized IRS e-file Provider;
    (C) Any person who is otherwise compensated for preparing, or 
assisting in preparing, a tax return for any other person; or
    (D) Any individual who, as part of their duties of employment with 
any person described in paragraph (b)(2)(i)(A), (B), or (C) of this 
section performs services that assist in the preparation of, or assist 
in providing auxiliary services in connection with the preparation of, a 
tax return.
    (ii) Business of preparing returns. A person is engaged in the 
business of preparing tax returns as described in paragraph (b)(2)(i)(A) 
of this section if, in the course of the person's business, the person 
holds himself out to tax return preparers or taxpayers as a person who 
prepares tax returns or assists in preparing tax returns, whether or not 
tax return preparation is the person's sole business activity and 
whether or not the person charges a fee for tax return preparation 
services.
    (iii) Providing auxiliary services. A person is engaged in the 
business of providing auxiliary services in connection with the 
preparation of tax returns as described in paragraph (b)(2)(i)(B) of 
this section if, in the course of the person's business, the person 
holds himself out to tax return preparers or to taxpayers as a person 
who performs auxiliary services, whether or not providing the auxiliary 
services is the person's sole business activity and whether or not the 
person charges a fee for the auxiliary services. Likewise, a person is 
engaged in the business of providing auxiliary services if, in the 
course of the person's business, the person receives a taxpayer's tax 
return information from another tax return preparer pursuant to the 
provisions of Sec. 301.7216-2(d)(2).
    (iv) Otherwise compensated. A tax return preparer described in 
paragraph (b)(2)(i)(C) of this section includes any person who--
    (A) Is compensated for preparing a tax return for another person, 
but not in the course of a business; or
    (B) Is compensated for helping, on a casual basis, a relative, 
friend, or other acquaintance to prepare their tax return.
    (v) Exclusions. A person is not a tax return preparer merely because 
he leases office space to a tax return preparer, furnishes credit to a 
taxpayer whose tax return is prepared by a tax return preparer, 
furnishes information to a tax return preparer at the taxpayer's 
request, furnishes access (free or otherwise) to a separate person's tax 
return preparation Web site through a hyperlink on his own Web site, or 
otherwise performs some service that only incidentally relates to the 
preparation of tax returns.
    (vi) Examples. The application of Sec. 301.7216-1(b)(2) may be 
illustrated by the following examples:

    Example 1. Bank B is a tax return preparer within the meaning of 
paragraph (b)(2)(i)(A) of this section, and an Authorized IRS e-file 
Provider. B employs one individual, Q, to solicit the necessary tax 
return information for the preparation of a tax return; another 
individual, R, to prepare the return on the basis of the information 
that is furnished; a secretary, S, who types the information on

[[Page 512]]

the returns into a computer; and an administrative assistant, T, who 
uses a computer to file electronic versions of the tax returns. Under 
these circumstances, only R is a tax return preparer for purposes of 
section 7701(a)(36), but all four employees are tax return preparers for 
purposes of section 7216, as provided in paragraph (b) of this section.
    Example 2. Tax return preparer P contracts with department store D 
to rent space in D's store. D advertises that taxpayers who use P's 
services may charge the cost of having their tax return prepared to 
their charge account with D. Under these circumstances, D is not a tax 
return preparer because it provides space, credit, and services only 
incidentally related to the preparation of tax returns.

    (3) Tax return information--(i) In general. The term tax return 
information means any information, including, but not limited to, a 
taxpayer's name, address, or identifying number, which is furnished in 
any form or manner for, or in connection with, the preparation of a tax 
return of the taxpayer. This information includes information that the 
taxpayer furnishes to a tax return preparer and information furnished to 
the tax return preparer by a third party. Tax return information also 
includes information the tax return preparer derives or generates from 
tax return information in connection with the preparation of a 
taxpayer's return.
    (A) Tax return information can be provided directly by the taxpayer 
or by another person. Likewise, tax return information includes 
information received by the tax return preparer from the IRS in 
connection with the processing of such return, including an 
acknowledgment of acceptance or notice of rejection of an electronically 
filed return.
    (B) Tax return information includes statistical compilations of tax 
return information, even in a form that cannot be associated with, or 
otherwise identify, directly or indirectly, a particular taxpayer. See 
Sec. 301.7216-2(o) for limited use of tax return information to make 
statistical compilations without taxpayer consent and to use the 
statistical compilations for limited purposes.
    (C) Tax return information does not include information identical to 
any tax return information that has been furnished to a tax return 
preparer if the identical information was obtained otherwise than in 
connection with the preparation of a tax return.
    (D) Information is considered ``in connection with tax return 
preparation,'' and therefore tax return information, if the taxpayer 
would not have furnished the information to the tax return preparer but 
for the intention to engage, or the engagement of, the tax return 
preparer to prepare the tax return.
    (ii) Examples. The application of this paragraph (b)(3) may be 
illustrated by the following examples:

    Example 1. Taxpayer A purchases computer software designed to assist 
with the preparation and filing of her income tax return. When A loads 
the software onto her computer, it prompts her to register her purchase 
of the software. In this situation, the software provider is a tax 
return preparer under paragraph (b)(2)(i)(B) of this section and the 
information that A provides to register her purchase is tax return 
information because she is providing it in connection with the 
preparation of a tax return.
    Example 2. Corporation A is a brokerage firm that maintains a Web 
site through which its clients may access their accounts, trade stocks, 
and generally conduct a variety of financial activities. Through its Web 
site, A offers its clients free access to its own tax preparation 
software. Taxpayer B is a client of A and has furnished A his name, 
address, and other information when registering for use of A's Web site 
to use A's brokerage services. In addition, A has a record of B's 
brokerage account activity, including sales of stock, dividends paid, 
and IRA contributions made. B uses A's tax preparation software to 
prepare his tax return. The software populates some fields on B's return 
on the basis of information A already maintains in its databases. A is a 
tax return preparer within the meaning of paragraph (b)(2)(i)(B) of this 
section because it has prepared and provided software for use in 
preparing tax returns. The information in A's databases that the 
software accesses to populate B's return, i.e., the registration 
information and brokerage account activity, is not tax return 
information because A did not receive that information in connection 
with the preparation of a tax return. Once A uses the information to 
populate the return, however, the information associated with the return 
becomes tax return information. If A retains the information in a form 
in which A can identify that the information was used in connection with 
the preparation of a return, the information in that form is tax return 
information. If, however, A retains the information in a database in 
which A cannot identify whether the information was used in

[[Page 513]]

connection with the preparation of a return, then that information is 
not tax return information.

    (4) Use--(i) In general. Use of tax return information includes any 
circumstance in which a tax return preparer refers to, or relies upon, 
tax return information as the basis to take or permit an action.
    (ii) Example. The application of this paragraph (b)(4) may be 
illustrated by the following example:

    Example. Preparer G is a tax return preparer as defined by paragraph 
(b)(2)(i)(A) of this section. If G determines, upon preparing a return, 
that the taxpayer is eligible to make a contribution to an individual 
retirement account (IRA), G will ask whether the taxpayer desires to 
make a contribution to an IRA. G does not ask about IRAs in cases in 
which the taxpayer is not eligible to make a contribution. G is using 
tax return information when it asks whether a taxpayer is interested in 
making a contribution to an IRA because G is basing the inquiry upon 
knowledge gained from information that the taxpayer furnished in 
connection with the preparation of the taxpayer's return.

    (5) Disclosure. The term disclosure means the act of making tax 
return information known to any person in any manner whatever. To the 
extent that a taxpayer's use of a hyperlink results in the transmission 
of tax return information, this transmission of tax return information 
is a disclosure by the tax return preparer subject to penalty under 
section 7216 if not authorized by regulation.
    (6) Hyperlink. For purposes of section 7216, a hyperlink is a device 
used to transfer an individual using tax preparation software from a tax 
return preparer's Web page to a Web page operated by another person 
without the individual having to separately enter the Web address of the 
destination page.
    (7) Request for consent. A request for consent includes any effort 
by a tax return preparer to obtain the taxpayer's consent to use or 
disclose the taxpayer's tax return information. The act of supplying a 
taxpayer with a paper or electronic form that meets the requirements of 
a revenue procedure published pursuant to Sec. 301.7216-3(a) is a 
request for a consent. When a tax return preparer requests a taxpayer's 
consent, any associated efforts of the tax return preparer, including, 
but not limited to, verbal or written explanations of the form, are part 
of the request for consent.
    (c) Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act. Any applicable requirements of the 
Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, Public Law 106-102 (113 Stat. 1338), do not 
supersede, alter, or affect the requirements of section 7216 and 
Sec. Sec. 301.7216-1 through 301.7216-3. Similarly, the requirements of 
section 7216 and Sec. Sec. 301.7216-1 through 301.7216-3 do not 
override any requirements or restrictions of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, 
which are in addition to the requirements or restrictions of section 
7216 and Sec. Sec. 301.7216-1 through 301.7216-3.
    (d) Effective/applicability date. This section applies to 
disclosures or uses of tax return information occurring on or after 
January 1, 2009.

[T.D. 9375, 73 FR 1067, Jan. 7, 2008]