What an Enrolled Agent can do for Texas taxpayers

An Enrolled Agent in Texas holds the IRS’s highest non-attorney credential and may represent any taxpayer — in Texas or anywhere else — in any matter before the IRS. For Texas residents, that means an EA can prepare your federal return, e-file it, respond to an IRS notice on your behalf, negotiate an installment agreement or offer in compromise, and represent you in an IRS examination or collection due process hearing. Because the credential is federal, an EA in Texas is also fully qualified to handle returns and IRS issues for clients in any other state.

For Texas state-tax matters, individual EAs vary in their depth of experience with the state’s personal income tax forms, sales-and-use tax filings, and property-tax appeals. Many EAs in Texas have substantial state-tax practice; others focus exclusively on federal returns and refer state work to a CPA. Ask about state-tax experience when you contact a preparer.

Recommended: a deeper background read on tax-professional credentialing →

How to verify an Enrolled Agent’s credentials in Texas

The IRS publishes a free, queryable Directory of Federal Tax Return Preparers with Credentials and Select Qualifications at irs.treasury.gov/rpo/rpo.jsf. Search by ZIP code, last name, or credential to confirm an active EA filing-season status in Texas. The IRS RPO directory is the authoritative source — check there first. Our PTIN verification guide walks through the process step by step.

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Each city page within Texas includes a credential breakdown identical to this one but scoped to that city. Use the city links above to drill in further.