No, they can insist on being given whatever books & records exist, in whatever format they exist. I'd say there's crossed wires there - most people with a business of any kind of size will use excel or bookkeeping software to prepare their books, so the tax official will want the soft copy of such a record, rather than a printout.
I'm in no way suggesting no Revenue officer has ever been mean or intimidating to a taxpayer, but I'm very conscious that we only have one part of a story here.
This post will be deleted if not edited immediately wept. I got a bill of 2,200 from the auditors for the rental of a cubicle in their office for one day. A senior partner walked in on the meeting introduced him self and left. There was no further interaction. When I queried this bill (bear in mind the revenue spent day 2 in my house) I was told that I should have had insurance to cover the cost of a revenue audit.
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Such a bill makes no sense. I'd love to see it. I can't see any insurer paying it either - they're not mugs. You could have hired a hotel room for €100.
Did the accounting firm leave you alone with the Inspector in this cubicle, without any of their staff present, for the entire duration of the audit interview?
Relax, the issue of "false declarations" rarely arise in routine small sole trader audits. The emphasis, both in the Code of Practice for Revenue Audit and in real life situations, is on co-operation with the Inspector who completes the audit. Once you co-operate reasonably with the Inspector, and particularly as there are outside extenuating factors in your case, you should be fine in that regard.
Thanks. These posts are actually putting a little clarity in my head.
I didn't know one could have insurance for an audit. I'd have gone to my solicitor if presented with a bill for €2200 if they did no work. Surely the accountants bill must show something on it, what does it say? It seems from your reply that it's for work on a revenue audit. They are your accountants so they must have been dealing with revenue for you?
Also sounds like a big firm if it's got cubicles and senior partners etc.
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