10.30—Solicitation.
(a)
Advertising and solicitation
restrictions. (1) A practitioner may not, with
respect to any Internal Revenue Service matter, in
any way use or participate in the use of any form
or public communication or private solicitation
containing a false, fraudulent, or coercive
statement or claim; or a misleading or deceptive
statement or claim. Enrolled agents or enrolled
retirement plan agents, in describing their
professional designation, may not utilize the term
of art “certified” or imply an employer/employee
relationship with the Internal Revenue Service.
Examples of acceptable descriptions for enrolled
agents are “enrolled to represent taxpayers before
the Internal Revenue Service,” “enrolled to
practice before the Internal Revenue Service,” and
“admitted to practice before the Internal Revenue
Service.” Similarly, examples of acceptable
descriptions for enrolled retirement plan agents
are “enrolled to represent taxpayers before the
Internal Revenue Service as a retirement plan
agent” and “enrolled to practice before the
Internal Revenue Service as a retirement plan
agent.”
(2)
A practitioner may not make, directly or
indirectly, an uninvited written or oral
solicitation of employment in
matters related to the Internal Revenue Service if
the solicitation violates Federal or State law or
other applicable rule, e.g., attorneys are
precluded from making a solicitation that is
prohibited by conduct rules applicable to all
attorneys in their State(s) of licensure. Any
lawful solicitation made by or on behalf of a
practitioner eligible to practice before the
Internal Revenue Service must, nevertheless,
clearly identify the solicitation as such and, if
applicable, identify the source of the information
used in choosing the recipient.
(b) Fee information.
(1)
A
practitioner may publish the availability of a
written schedule of fees and disseminate the
following fee information—
(ii)
Any statement of fee information
concerning matters in which costs may be incurred
must include a statement disclosing whether
clients will be responsible for such costs.
(2)
A practitioner may charge no more than the
rate(s) published under paragraph (b)(1) of this
section for at least 30 calendar days after the
last date on which the schedule of fees was
published.
(c)
Communication of fee
information. Fee information may be
communicated in professional lists, telephone
directories, print media, mailings, electronic
mail, facsimile, hand delivered flyers, radio,
television, and any other method. The method
chosen, however, must not cause the communication
to become untruthful, deceptive, or otherwise in
violation of this part. A practitioner may not
persist in attempting to contact a prospective
client if the prospective client has made it known
to the practitioner that he or she does not desire
to be solicited. In the case of radio and
television broadcasting, the broadcast must be
recorded and the practitioner must retain a
recording of the actual transmission. In the case
of direct mail and e-commerce communications, the
practitioner must retain a copy of the actual
communication, along with a list or other
description of persons to whom the communication
was mailed or otherwise distributed. The copy must
be retained by the practitioner for a period of at
least 36 months from the date of the last
transmission or use.
(d) Improper associations.
A
practitioner may not, in matters related to the
Internal Revenue Service, assist, or accept
assistance from, any person or entity who, to the
knowledge of the practitioner, obtains clients or
otherwise practices in a manner forbidden under
this section.
(Approved by the Office of Management and
Budget under Control No. 1545-1726)
Code of Federal Regulations
Code of Federal Regulations
Code of Federal Regulations
160