Filing assistance for special needs taxpayers
Sometimes, even when the tax question
is a common one, getting the answer is not easy. This
is particularly true for taxpayers with special needs,
such as physical disabilities, hearing impairments or
language issues.
The Internal
Revenue Service offers help for special-needs taxpayers
through local IRS offices or IRS-supported volunteer
programs operated nationwide during tax-filing season.
The agency also operates a special phone line for hearing-impaired
taxpayers and produces some tax materials in Braille.
Special
filing needs
If you are unable to complete your return because of
a physical disability, call your nearest Taxpayer Assistance
Center for assistance or guidance for further help.
The IRS maintains a locator
map to help you find the nearest office.
The Volunteer Income Tax Assistance
Program, or VITA program, also might be able
to help. VITA has IRS-trained volunteers who
provide free tax assistance at neighborhood
locations, such as churches, schools, libraries
and community centers. VITA is aimed at those
who may find it difficult to pay for tax assistance.
These may include people with low or fixed incomes,
non-English speakers, the elderly and people
with disabilities or special needs.
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The Tax Counseling for the Elderly
program is designed primarily for those age
60 or older, particularly those individuals
confined to their homes or retirement communities.
Again, IRS-trained volunteers from local nonprofit
organizations provide free tax counseling and
basic income tax return preparation to senior
citizens. Volunteers may travel to an individual's
home in cases where the taxpayer is unable to
get to a local TCE site.
To find a local VITA or TCE clinic, call
the IRS toll-free at (800) 829-1040 or your nearest
local IRS office. Also check with AARP,
the national advocacy group for older Americans. AARP
is the largest Tax Counseling for the Elderly participant.
If you cannot
afford to pay for tax help, you may be eligible for
assistance at IRS-supported
tax clinics that operate nationwide and are designed
to help eligible filers resolve tax disputes or matters
that have gone to litigation.
Help
for those with hearing, sight needs
Hearing-impaired taxpayers can get telephone help in
English and Spanish from the IRS by contacting
the agency via a special hookup. The toll-free number
is (800) 829-4059 and is available 24 hours a day. Taxpayers
without TTY/TDD equipment should check with local agencies
or their state's relay service about getting access.
For taxpayers with vision problems, the
IRS offers downloadable Braille versions
of more than 100 tax publications and more than twice that number of forms on its Web site.
While the IRS will not accept these downloaded forms
for filing purposes, the materials do offer visually
impaired filers access to IRS information for reference
purposes. They are available in an executable (.exe)
format that contains a text-only file as well as
one in Braille format (.brf) for Braille embossing. The text-only
files can be used with screen enlargers, screen readers,
refreshable Braille displays and most other accessibility
software.
Some Braille forms also are available
at libraries that are part of the Library of
Congress' National Library Service for the Blind
and Physically Handicapped. To locate your nearest
library, write to the National Library Service
at 1291 Taylor St., N.W., Washington, D.C.,
20542.
You can call the library service at (202) 707-5100
if you are in the local Washington, D.C., calling area or
toll-free from elsewhere at (800) 424-8567. The library
service also can be reached by:
- Fax at (202) 707-0712.
- TDD at (202) 707-0744.
- E-mail at nls@loc.gov.
For information on tax provisions
that might affect persons with disabilities,
see IRS
Publication 907, Tax Highlights for Persons
with Disabilities.
| -- Updated: March 3, 2009 |
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