General Instructions
Section references are to the Internal Revenue Code unless
otherwise noted.
Future developments . For the latest
information about developments related to Form W-9 and its
instructions, such as legislation enacted after they were
published, go to
www.irs.gov/FormW9 .
Purpose of Form
An individual or entity (Form W-9 requester) who is required
to file an information return with the IRS must obtain your
correct taxpayer identification number (TIN) which may be
your social security number (SSN), individual taxpayer
identification number (ITIN), adoption taxpayer
identification number (ATIN), or employer identification
number (EIN), to report on an information return the amount
paid to you, or other amount reportable on an information
return. Examples of information returns include, but are not
limited to, the following.
Form 1099-INT (interest earned or paid)
Form 1099-DIV (dividends, including those from stocks or
mutual funds)
Form 1099-MISC (various types of income, prizes, awards,
or gross proceeds)
Form 1099-B (stock or mutual fund sales and certain other
transactions by brokers)
Form 1099-S (proceeds from real estate transactions)
Form 1099-K (merchant card and third party network
transactions)
Form 1098 (home mortgage interest), 1098-E (student loan
interest), 1098-T (tuition)
Form 1099-C (canceled debt)
Form 1099-A (acquisition or abandonment of secured
property)
Use Form W-9 only if you are a U.S. person (including a
resident alien), to provide your correct TIN.
If you do not return Form W-9 to the requester with a
TIN, you might be subject to backup withholding. See What
is backup withholding, later.
By signing the filled-out form, you:
Certify that the TIN you are giving is correct (or you are
waiting for a number to be issued),
Certify that you are not subject to backup withholding, or
Claim exemption from backup withholding if you are a U.S.
exempt payee. If applicable, you are also certifying that
as a U.S. person, your allocable share of any partnership
income from a U.S. trade or business is not subject to the
withholding tax on foreign partners' share of effectively
connected income, and
Certify that FATCA code(s) entered on this form (if any)
indicating that you are exempt from the FATCA reporting,
is correct. See What is FATCA reporting, later, for
further information.
Note : If you are a U.S. person and a
requester gives you a form other than Form W-9 to request
your TIN, you must use the requester’s form if it is
substantially similar to this Form W-9.
Definition of a U.S. person . For federal
tax purposes, you are considered a U.S. person if you are:
An individual who is a U.S. citizen or U.S. resident
alien;
A partnership, corporation, company, or association
created or organized in the United States or under the
laws of the United States;
An estate (other than a foreign estate); or
A domestic trust (as defined in Regulations section
301.7701-7).
Special rules for partnerships .
Partnerships that conduct a trade or business in the United
States are generally required to pay a withholding tax under
section 1446 on any foreign partners’ share of effectively
connected taxable income from such business. Further, in
certain cases where a Form W-9 has not been received, the
rules under section 1446 require a partnership to presume
that a partner is a foreign person, and pay the section 1446
withholding tax. Therefore, if you are a U.S. person that is
a partner in a partnership conducting a trade or business in
the United States, provide Form W-9 to the partnership to
establish your U.S. status and avoid section 1446
withholding on your share of partnership income.
In the cases below, the following person must give Form W-9
to the partnership for purposes of establishing its U.S.
status and avoiding withholding on its allocable share of
net income from the partnership conducting a trade or
business in the United States.
In the case of a disregarded entity with a U.S. owner, the
U.S. owner of the disregarded entity and not the entity;
In the case of a grantor trust with a U.S. grantor or
other U.S. owner, generally, the U.S. grantor or other
U.S. owner of the grantor trust and not the trust; and
In the case of a U.S. trust (other than a grantor trust),
the U.S. trust (other than a grantor trust) and not the
beneficiaries of the trust.
Foreign person . If you are a foreign person
or the U.S. branch of a foreign bank that has elected to be
treated as a U.S. person, do not use Form W-9. Instead, use
the appropriate Form W-8 or Form 8233 (see Pub. 515,
Withholding of Tax on Nonresident Aliens and Foreign
Entities).
Nonresident alien who becomes a resident alien . Generally, only a nonresident alien individual may use
the terms of a tax treaty to reduce or eliminate U.S. tax on
certain types of income. However, most tax treaties contain
a provision known as a “saving clause.” Exceptions specified
in the saving clause may permit an exemption from tax to
continue for certain types of income even after the payee
has otherwise become a U.S. resident alien for tax purposes.
If you are a U.S. resident alien who is relying on an
exception contained in the saving clause of a tax treaty to
claim an exemption from U.S. tax on certain types of income,
you must attach a statement to Form W-9 that specifies the
following five items.
The treaty country. Generally, this must be the same
treaty under which you claimed exemption from tax as a
nonresident alien.
The treaty article addressing the income.
The article number (or location) in the tax treaty that
contains the saving clause and its exceptions.
The type and amount of income that qualifies for the
exemption from tax.
Sufficient facts to justify the exemption from tax under
the terms of the treaty article.
Example . Article 20 of the U.S.-China income tax treaty allows an
exemption from tax for scholarship income received by a
Chinese student temporarily present in the United States.
Under U.S. law, this student will become a resident alien
for tax purposes if his or her stay in the United States
exceeds 5 calendar years. However, paragraph 2 of the first
Protocol to the U.S.-China treaty (dated April 30, 1984)
allows the provisions of Article 20 to continue to apply
even after the Chinese student becomes a resident alien of
the United States. A Chinese student who qualifies for this
exception (under paragraph 2 of the first protocol) and is
relying on this exception to claim an exemption from tax on
his or her scholarship or fellowship income would attach to
Form W-9 a statement that includes the information described
above to support that exemption.
If you are a nonresident alien or a foreign entity, give the
requester the appropriate completed Form W-8 or Form 8233.
Backup Withholding
What is backup withholding? Persons making
certain payments to you must under certain conditions
withhold and pay to the IRS 24% of such payments. This is
called “backup withholding.” Payments that may be subject to
backup withholding include interest, tax-exempt interest,
dividends, broker and barter exchange transactions, rents,
royalties, nonemployee pay, payments made in settlement of
payment card and third party network transactions, and
certain payments from fishing boat operators. Real estate
transactions are not subject to backup withholding.
You will not be subject to backup withholding on payments
you receive if you give the requester your correct TIN, make
the proper certifications, and report all your taxable
interest and dividends on your tax return.
Payments you receive will be subject to backup
withholding if:
You do not furnish your TIN to the requester,
You do not certify your TIN when required (see
the instructions for Part II for details ),
The IRS tells the requester that you furnished an
incorrect TIN,
The IRS tells you that you are subject to backup
withholding because you did not report all your interest
and dividends on your tax return (for reportable interest
and dividends only), or
You do not certify to the requester that you are not
subject to backup withholding under 4 above (for
reportable interest and dividend accounts opened after
1983 only).
Certain payees and payments are exempt from backup
withholding. See Exempt payee code , later,
and the separate Instructions for the Requester of Form W-9
for more information.
Also see Special rules for partnerships ,
earlier.
What is FATCA Reporting?
The Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA) requires a
participating foreign financial institution to report all
United States account holders that are specified United
States persons. Certain payees are exempt from FATCA
reporting. See
Exemption from FATCA reporting code , later,
and the Instructions for the Requester of Form W-9 for more
information.
Updating Your Information
You must provide updated information to any person to whom
you claimed to be an exempt payee if you are no longer an
exempt payee and anticipate receiving reportable payments in
the future from this person. For example, you may need to
provide updated information if you are a C corporation that
elects to be an S corporation, or if you no longer are tax
exempt. In addition, you must furnish a new Form W-9 if the
name or TIN changes for the account; for example, if the
grantor of a grantor trust dies.
Penalties
Failure to furnish TIN . If you fail to
furnish your correct TIN to a requester, you are subject to
a penalty of $50 for each such failure unless your failure
is due to reasonable cause and not to willful neglect.
Civil penalty for false information with respect to
withholding . If you make a false statement with no reasonable basis
that results in no backup withholding, you are subject to a
$500 penalty
Criminal penalty for falsifying information . Willfully falsifying certifications or affirmations may
subject you to criminal penalties including fines and/or
imprisonment.
Misuse of TINs . If the requester discloses
or uses TINs in violation of federal law, the requester may
be subject to civil and criminal penalties.
Specific Instructions
Line 1
You must enter one of the following on this line; do not
leave this line blank. The name should match the name on
your tax return.
If this Form W-9 is for a joint account (other than an
account maintained by a foreign financial institution
(FFI)), list first, and then circle, the name of the person
or entity whose number you entered in Part I of Form W-9. If
you are providing Form W-9 to an FFI to document a joint
account, each holder of the account that is a U.S. person
must provide a Form W-9.
Individual . Generally, enter the name
shown on your tax return. If you have changed your last
name without informing the Social Security Administration
(SSA) of the name change, enter your first name, the last
name as shown on your social security card, and your new
last name.Note: ITIN applicant : Enter your individual name as it was entered on your
Form W-7 application, line 1a. This should also be the
same as the name you entered on the Form 1040/1040A/1040EZ
you filed with your application.
Sole proprietor or single-member LLC .
Enter your individual name as shown on your
1040/1040A/1040EZ on line 1. You may enter your business,
trade, or “doing business as” (DBA) name on line 2.
Partnership, LLC that is not a single-member LLC, C
corporation, or S corporation . Enter the entity's name as shown on the entity's tax
return on line 1 and any business, trade, or DBA name on
line 2.
Other entities . Enter your name as shown
on required U.S. federal tax documents on line 1. This
name should match the name shown on the charter or other
legal document creating the entity. You may enter any
business, trade, or DBA name on line 2.
Disregarded entity . For U.S. federal tax
purposes, an entity that is disregarded as an entity
separate from its owner is treated as a “disregarded
entity.” See Regulations section 301.7701-2(c)(2)(iii).
Enter the owner's name on line 1. The name of the entity
entered on line 1 should never be a disregarded entity.
The name on line 1 should be the name shown on the income
tax return on which the income should be reported. For
example, if a foreign LLC that is treated as a disregarded
entity for U.S. federal tax purposes has a single owner
that is a U.S. person, the U.S. owner's name is required
to be provided on line 1. If the direct owner of the
entity is also a disregarded entity, enter the first owner
that is not disregarded for federal tax purposes. Enter
the disregarded entity's name on line 2, “Business
name/disregarded entity name.” If the owner of the
disregarded entity is a foreign person, the owner must
complete an appropriate Form W-8 instead of a Form W-9.
This is the case even if the foreign person has a U.S.
TIN.
Line 2
If you have a business name, trade name, DBA name, or
disregarded entity name, you may enter it on line 2.
Line 3
Check the appropriate box on line 3 for the U.S. federal tax
classification of the person whose name is entered on line
1. Check only one box on line 3.
IF the entity/person on line 1 is a(n) ...
THEN check the box for ...
Corporation
Individual
Sole proprietorship, or
Single-member limited liability company (LLC)
owned by an individual and disregarded for U.S.
federal tax purposes.
Individual/sole proprietor or single-member LLC
LLC treated as a partnership for U.S. federal tax
purposes,
LLC that has filed Form 8832 or 2553 to be taxed
as a corporation, or
LLC that is disregarded as an entity separate from
its owner but the owner is another LLC that is not
disregarded for U.S. federal tax purposes.
Limited liability company and enter the appropriate
tax classification. (P= Partnership; C= C corporation;
or S= S corporation)
Partnership
Trust/estate
Line 4, Exemptions
If you are exempt from backup withholding and/or FATCA
reporting, enter in the appropriate space on line 4 any
code(s) that may apply to you.
Exempt payee code.
Generally, individuals (including sole proprietors) are
not exempt from backup withholding.
Except as provided below, corporations are exempt from
backup withholding for certain payments, including
interest and dividends.
Corporations are not exempt from backup withholding for
payments made in settlement of payment card or third party
network transactions.
Corporations are not exempt from backup withholding with
respect to attorneys’ fees or gross proceeds paid to
attorneys, and corporations that provide medical or health
care services are not exempt with respect to payments
reportable on Form 1099-MISC.
The following codes identify payees that are exempt from
backup withholding. Enter the appropriate code in the space
in line 4.
An organization exempt from tax under section 501(a), any
IRA, or a custodial account under section 403(b)(7) if the
account satisfies the requirements of section 401(f)(2)
The United States or any of its agencies or
instrumentalities
A state, the District of Columbia, a U.S. commonwealth or
possession, or any of their political subdivisions or
instrumentalities
A foreign government or any of its political subdivisions,
agencies, or instrumentalities
A corporation
A dealer in securities or commodities required to register
in the United States, the District of Columbia, or a U.S.
commonwealth or possession
A futures commission merchant registered with the
Commodity Futures Trading Commission
A real estate investment trust
An entity registered at all times during the tax year
under the Investment Company Act of 1940
A common trust fund operated by a bank under section
584(a)
A financial institution
A middleman known in the investment community as a nominee
or custodian
A trust exempt from tax under section 664 or described in
section 4947
The following chart shows types of payments that may be
exempt from backup withholding. The chart applies to the
exempt payees listed above, 1 through 13.
IF the payment is for ...
THEN the payment is exempt for ...
Interest and dividend payments
All exempt payees except for 7
Broker transactions
Exempt payees 1 through 4 and 6 through 11 and all C
corporations. S corporations must not enter an exempt
payee code because they are exempt only for sales of
noncovered securities acquired prior to 2012.
Barter exchange transactions and patronage dividends
Exempt payees 1 through 4
Payments over $600 required to be reported and direct
sales over $5,0001
Generally, exempt payees 1 through 52
Payments made in settlement of payment card
Exempt payees 1 through 4
1 See Form 1099-MISC, Miscellaneous Income, and
its instructions.
2 However, the following payments made to a
corporation and reportable on Form 1099-MISC are not exempt
from backup withholding: medical and health care payments,
attorneys’ fees, gross proceeds paid to an attorney
reportable under section 6045(f), and payments for services
paid by a federal executive agency.
Exemption from FATCA reporting code . The
following codes identify payees that are exempt from
reporting under FATCA. These codes apply to persons
submitting this form for accounts maintained outside of the
United States by certain foreign financial institutions.
Therefore, if you are only submitting this form for an
account you hold in the United States, you may leave this
field blank. Consult with the person requesting this form if
you are uncertain if the financial institution is subject to
these requirements. A requester may indicate that a code is
not required by providing you with a Form W-9 with “Not
Applicable” (or any similar indication) written or printed
on the line for a FATCA exemption code.
An organization exempt from tax under section 501(a) or
any individual retirement plan as defined in section
7701(a)(37)
The United States or any of its agencies or
instrumentalities
A state, the District of Columbia, a U.S. commonwealth or
possession, or any of their political subdivisions or
instrumentalities
A corporation the stock of which is regularly traded on
one or more established securities markets, as described
in Regulations section 1.1472-1(c)(1)(i)
A corporation that is a member of the same expanded
affiliated group as a corporation described in Regulations
section 1.1472-1(c)(1)(i)
A dealer in securities, commodities, or derivative
financial instruments (including notional principal
contracts, futures, forwards, and options) that is
registered as such under the laws of the United States or
any state
A real estate investment trust
A regulated investment company as defined in section 851
or an entity registered at all times during the tax year
under the Investment Company Act of 1940
A common trust fund as defined in section 584(a)
A bank as defined in section 581
A broker
A trust exempt from tax under section 664 or described in
section 4947(a)(1)
A tax exempt trust under a section 403(b) plan or section
457(g) plan
Note : You may wish to consult with the
financial institution requesting this form to determine
whether the FATCA code and/or exempt payee code should be
completed.
Line 5
Enter your address (number, street, and apartment or suite
number). This is where the requester of this Form W-9 will
mail your information returns. If this address differs from
the one the requester already has on file, write NEW at the
top. If a new address is provided, there is still a chance
the old address will be used until the payor changes your
address in their records.
Line 6
Enter your city, state, and ZIP code.
Part I. Taxpayer Identification Number (TIN)
Enter your TIN in the appropriate box . If
you are a resident alien and you do not have and are not
eligible to get an SSN, your TIN is your IRS individual
taxpayer identification number (ITIN). Enter it in the
social security number box. If you do not have an ITIN, see
How to get a TIN below.
If you are a sole proprietor and you have an EIN, you may
enter either your SSN or EIN.
If you are a single-member LLC that is disregarded as an
entity separate from its owner, enter the owner’s SSN (or
EIN, if the owner has one). Do not enter the disregarded
entity’s EIN. If the LLC is classified as a corporation or
partnership, enter the entity’s EIN.
Note : See
What Name and Number To Give the Requester , later,
for further clarification of name and TIN combinations.
How to get a TIN . If you do not have a TIN,
apply for one immediately. To apply for an SSN, get Form
SS-5, Application for a Social Security Card, from your
local SSA office or get this form online at
www.SSA.gov . You may also get this form by calling 1-800-772-1213. Use
Form W-7, Application for IRS Individual Taxpayer
Identification Number, to apply for an ITIN, or Form SS-4,
Application for Employer Identification Number, to apply for
an EIN. You can apply for an EIN online by accessing the IRS
website at
www.irs.gov/Businesses
and clicking on Employer Identification Number (EIN) under
Starting a Business. Go to
www.irs.gov/Forms
to view, download, or print Form W-7 and/or Form SS-4. Or,
you can go to
www.irs.gov/OrderForms
to place an order and have Form W-7 and/or SS-4 mailed to
you within 10 business days.
If you are asked to complete Form W-9 but do not have a TIN,
apply for a TIN and write “Applied For” in the space for the
TIN, sign and date the form, and give it to the requester.
For interest and dividend payments, and certain payments
made with respect to readily tradable instruments, generally
you will have 60 days to get a TIN and give it to the
requester before you are subject to backup withholding on
payments. The 60-day rule does not apply to other types of
payments. You will be subject to backup withholding on all
such payments until you provide your TIN to the requester.
Note : Entering “Applied For” means that you
have already applied for a TIN or that you intend to apply
for one soon.
Caution : A disregarded U.S. entity that has
a foreign owner must use the appropriate Form W-8.
Part II. Certification
To establish to the withholding agent that you are a U.S.
person, or resident alien, sign Form W-9. You may be
requested to sign by the withholding agent even if item 1,
4, or 5 below indicates otherwise.
For a joint account, only the person whose TIN is shown in
Part I should sign (when required). In the case of a
disregarded entity, the person identified on line 1 must
sign. Exempt payees, see
Exempt payee code , earlier.
Signature requirements . Complete the
certification as indicated in items 1 through 5 below.
Interest, dividend, and barter exchange accounts opened
before 1984 and broker accounts considered active during
1983 . You must give your correct TIN, but you do not have to
sign the certification.
Interest, dividend, broker, and barter exchange
accounts opened after 1983 and broker accounts
considered inactive during 1983 . You must sign the certification or backup withholding
will apply. If you are subject to backup withholding and
you are merely providing your correct TIN to the
requester, you must cross out item 2 in the certification
before signing the form.
Real estate transactions . You must sign
the certification. You may cross out item 2 of the
certification.
Other payments . You must give your
correct TIN, but you do not have to sign the certification
unless you have been notified that you have previously
given an incorrect TIN. “Other payments” include payments
made in the course of the requester’s trade or business
for rents, royalties, goods (other than bills for
merchandise), medical and health care services (including
payments to corporations), payments to a nonemployee for
services, payments made in settlement of payment card and
third party network transactions, payments to certain
fishing boat crew members and fishermen, and gross
proceeds paid to attorneys (including payments to
corporations).
Mortgage interest paid by you, acquisition or
abandonment of secured property, cancellation of debt,
qualified tuition program payments (under section 529),
ABLE accounts (under section 529A), IRA, Coverdell ESA,
Archer MSA or HSA contributions or distributions, and
pension distributions . You must give your correct TIN, but you do not have to
sign the certification.
What Name and Number To Give the Register
For this type of account:
Give name and SSN of:
Individual
Two or more individuals (joint account) other than
an account maintained by an FFI
Two or more U.S. persons (joint account maintained
by an FFI)
Custodial account of a minor (Uniform Gift to
Minors Act)
a. The usual revocable savings trust (grantor is
also trustee) b. So-called trust account that
is not a legal or valid trust under state law
Sole proprietorship or disregarded entity owned by
an individual
Grantor trust filing under Optional Form 1099
Filing Method 1 (see Regulations section
1.671-4(b)(2)(i)(A))
The individual
The actual owner of the account or, if combined
funds, the first individual on the account1
Each holder of the account
The minor2
a.The grantor-trustee1 b.The
actual owner1
The owner3
The grantor*
For this type of account:
Give name and EIN of:
Disregarded entity not owned by an individual
A valid trust, estate, or pension trust
Corporation or LLC electing corporate status on
Form 8832 or Form 2553
Association, club, religious, charitable,
educational, or other taxexempt organization
Partnership or multi-member LLC
A broker or registered nominee
Account with the Department of Agriculture in the
name of a public entity (such as a state or local
government, school district, or prison) that
receives agricultural program payments
Grantor trust filing under the Form 1041 Filing
Method or the Optional Form 1099 Filing Method 2
(see Regulations section 1.671-4(b)(2)(i)(B))
The owner
Legal entity4
The corporation
The organization
The partnership
The broker or nominee
The public entity
The trust
1 List first and circle the name of the person
whose number you furnish. If only one person on a joint
account has an SSN, that person’s number must be furnished.
2 Circle the minor’s name and furnish the minor’s
SSN.
3 You must show your individual name and you may
also enter your business or DBA name on the “Business
name/disregarded entity” name line. You may use either your
SSN or EIN (if you have one), but the IRS encourages you to
use your SSN.
4 List first and circle the name of the trust,
estate, or pension trust. (Do not furnish the TIN of the
personal representative or trustee unless the legal entity
itself is not designated in the account title.) Also see
Special rules for partnerships, earlier.
*Note : The grantor also must provide a Form
W-9 to trustee of trust.
Note : If no name is circled when more than
one name is listed, the number will be considered to be that
of the first name listed.
Secure Your Tax Records From Identity Theft
Identity theft occurs when someone uses your personal
information such as your name, SSN, or other identifying
information, without your permission, to commit fraud or
other crimes. An identity thief may use your SSN to get a
job or may file a tax return using your SSN to receive a
refund.
To reduce your risk:
Protect your SSN,
Ensure your employer is protecting your SSN, and
Be careful when choosing a tax preparer.
If your tax records are affected by identity theft and you
receive a notice from the IRS, respond right away to the
name and phone number printed on the IRS notice or letter.
If your tax records are not currently affected by identity
theft but you think you are at risk due to a lost or stolen
purse or wallet, questionable credit card activity or credit
report, contact the IRS Identity Theft Hotline at
1-800-908-4490 or submit Form 14039.
For more information, see Pub. 5027, Identity Theft
Information for Taxpayers.
Victims of identity theft who are experiencing economic harm
or a systemic problem, or are seeking help in resolving tax
problems that have not been resolved through normal
channels, may be eligible for Taxpayer Advocate Service
(TAS) assistance. You can reach TAS by calling the TAS
toll-free case intake line at 1-877-777-4778 or TTY/TDD
1-800-829-4059.
Protect yourself from suspicious emails or phishing
schemes . Phishing is the creation and use of email and websites
designed to mimic legitimate business emails and websites.
The most common act is sending an email to a user falsely
claiming to be an established legitimate enterprise in an
attempt to scam the user into surrendering private
information that will be used for identity theft.
The IRS does not initiate contacts with taxpayers via
emails. Also, the IRS does not request personal detailed
information through email or ask taxpayers for the PIN
numbers, passwords, or similar secret access information for
their credit card, bank, or other financial accounts.
If you receive an unsolicited email claiming to be from the
IRS, forward this message to
phishing@irs.gov . You may also report misuse of the IRS name, logo, or
other IRS property to the Treasury Inspector General for Tax
Administration (TIGTA) at 1-800-366-4484. You can forward
suspicious emails to the Federal Trade Commission at
spam@uce.gov or report them at www.ftc.gov/complaint. You
can contact the FTC at
www.ftc.gov/idtheft
or 877-IDTHEFT (877-438-4338). If you have been the victim
of identity theft, see
www.IdentityTheft.gov
and Pub. 5027.
Visit
www.irs.gov/IdentityTheft
to learn more about identity theft and how to reduce your
risk.
Privacy Act Notice
Section 6109 of the Internal Revenue Code requires you to
provide your correct TIN to persons (including federal
agencies) who are required to file information returns with
the IRS to report interest, dividends, or certain other
income paid to you; mortgage interest you paid; the
acquisition or abandonment of secured property; the
cancellation of debt; or contributions you made to an IRA,
Archer MSA, or HSA. The person collecting this form uses the
information on the form to file information returns with the
IRS, reporting the above information. Routine uses of this
information include giving it to the Department of Justice
for civil and criminal litigation and to cities, states, the
District of Columbia, and U.S. commonwealths and possessions
for use in administering their laws. The information also
may be disclosed to other countries under a treaty, to
federal and state agencies to enforce civil and criminal
laws, or to federal law enforcement and intelligence
agencies to combat terrorism. You must provide your TIN
whether or not you are required to file a tax return. Under
section 3406, payers must generally withhold a percentage of
taxable interest, dividend, and certain other payments to a
payee who does not give a TIN to the payer. Certain
penalties may also apply for providing false or fraudulent
information.