Service bureau infrastructure provides electronic filing capabilities to tax professionals without requiring an individual EFIN. California EROs must understand specific operational and compliance requirements when leveraging this model.
1. EFIN Alternative Structure
Service bureaus operate under their own Electronic Filing Identification Number. Tax preparers submit returns through the bureau's infrastructure rather than obtaining independent IRS authorization. This arrangement transfers technical filing responsibility while the preparer maintains professional obligations for return accuracy and client relationship management.
California EROs using service bureaus must verify the provider maintains active IRS approval status and California Franchise Tax Board authorization for state return transmission.

2. California FTB Integration Requirements
The Franchise Tax Board mandates specific data transmission protocols separate from federal requirements. Service bureaus must support California's e-file system architecture including:
- Web File integration for state returns
- Business Entity returns (Form 100, 100S, 100W, 565, 568)
- Individual return transmission (Form 540, 540NR)
- Payment processing through FTB Web Pay
Confirm your service bureau maintains current year California certification. The FTB publishes approved transmitter lists annually. Non-compliance results in rejected state returns and processing delays.
3. Signature Authorization Protocols
IRS Form 8879 establishes taxpayer consent for electronic filing. Service bureau arrangements require additional documentation:
- Preparer must retain signed 8879 forms for three years
- Bureau cannot access taxpayer signatures directly
- Preparer authorizes transmission on taxpayer's behalf
- California requires separate signature authorization for state returns when filed independently
Document retention remains the preparer's responsibility regardless of service bureau involvement. The IRS holds preparers accountable for unauthorized filing claims.

4. Data Security Standards Under California Law
California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) and California Privacy Rights Act (CPRA) impose strict data handling requirements. EROs using service bureaus must:
- Execute Business Associate Agreements defining data processing terms
- Verify bureau maintains SOC 2 Type II certification or equivalent
- Confirm encryption standards for data in transit and at rest
- Establish incident response procedures for breach notification
Service bureaus handling California taxpayer data must comply with CPRA's expanded consumer rights including data deletion requests and opt-out mechanisms. Preparers remain liable for third-party vendor compliance failures.
5. State E-File Mandate Compliance
California requires electronic filing for preparers meeting volume thresholds. The mandate applies regardless of infrastructure model:
- Preparers filing 100+ individual returns must e-file
- No exemption exists for service bureau users
- Threshold applies per preparer, not per firm location
- FTB tracks compliance through PTIN and business entity registration
Service bureaus must provide documentation of filing volumes and transmission confirmations to support preparer compliance reporting.
6. Fee Structure Implications
Service bureau pricing models vary significantly:
- Per-return transmission fees
- Subscription-based unlimited filing
- Tiered pricing by return complexity
- Additional charges for state returns, amendments, extensions
California's dual-filing requirement (federal and state) increases per-return costs compared to single-jurisdiction states. Calculate total annual expenses including:
- Base transmission fees
- State return charges
- Software licensing (if separate from bureau services)
- Bank product fees for refund advances
- Support and technical assistance charges
Compare total infrastructure costs against EFIN application benefits for practices exceeding 500 annual returns.

7. IRS Publication 1345 Compliance
Service bureaus must operate under IRS Publication 1345 requirements governing Reporting Agents and acceptance agents. Key provisions affecting California EROs:
- Bureau cannot alter return data after preparer submission
- Rejection notices must forward to preparer within one business day
- Acknowledgment files remain preparer's responsibility
- Bureau must maintain separate transmission logs per preparer
EROs cannot delegate IRS e-Services account management to service bureaus. Portal access and Disclosure Authorization remain individual preparer responsibilities.
8. Software Compatibility Requirements
Service bureaus typically support specific tax software platforms. California EROs must confirm:
- Integration capability with existing practice management software
- Support for California-specific forms and schedules
- Real-time transmission status updates
- Bank product compatibility for refund options
Limited software integration forces manual data re-entry and increases error risk. Evaluate bureau partnerships with major vendors (Drake, ProSeries, Lacerte, UltraTax) before committing to service agreements.
9. Practitioner PIN Management
EROs must obtain and protect their Electronic Filing Identification Number (EFIN) equivalent through the service bureau system. California-specific considerations:
- Separate credentials required for FTB Web File access
- Bureau assigns unique preparer identification codes
- PTIN verification occurs at bureau level
- Annual credential renewal follows IRS suitability review timeline
Credential compromise requires immediate notification to both IRS and FTB. Service bureaus must implement multi-factor authentication for preparer portal access under IRS security requirements.

10. Professional Liability Boundaries
Service bureau use does not transfer professional responsibility. California EROs remain liable for:
- Return accuracy and tax law application
- Due diligence requirements (EITC, dependent claims, filing status)
- Penalty exposure for negligence or misconduct
- Client communication and case management
The bureau assumes transmission-related technical failures. Preparers maintain full accountability for preparer penalties under IRC Section 6694 and California Revenue and Taxation Code Section 19167.
Professional liability insurance must explicitly cover service bureau arrangements. Standard policies may exclude third-party transmission failures or data breach incidents originating from external vendors.
Infrastructure Decision Framework
California EROs evaluate service bureau adoption based on practice characteristics:
- Annual filing volume under 500 returns favors bureau model
- Multi-location practices benefit from centralized infrastructure
- Seasonal preparers avoid fixed EFIN maintenance costs
- Startup practices access professional-grade systems without capital investment
Practices exceeding 1,000 annual returns typically justify independent EFIN investment for cost efficiency and operational control.
Regulatory Monitoring Obligations
California's evolving tax law requires ongoing compliance monitoring. Service bureaus must update systems for:
- Annual FTB form revisions
- California conformity adjustments to federal tax law
- New credit and deduction programs
- Changed e-file specifications
EROs must verify bureau update schedules align with filing season readiness requirements. Delayed system updates cause transmission rejections and extended processing times during peak periods.
SEO Title: Service Bureau Infrastructure Guide for California EROs
Slug: service-bureau-infrastructure-california-eros
Excerpt: California EROs using service bureau infrastructure must understand EFIN alternatives, FTB integration, data security requirements, and professional liability boundaries.
Tags: ERO Operations, Service Bureau, California Tax, E-File Infrastructure, Tax Professional Compliance, EFIN Alternatives, Electronic Filing
