Sara Lassila, CPA, Inc.

Sara Lassila, CPA, Inc. Certified Public Accountant with 30+ years of experience serving individual, business, and nonprofit

Sara Lassila is a Certified Public Accountant, Certified Global Management Accountant, and QuickBooks ProAdvisor. She has her own practice located in Navarre/Orono, Minnesota. Her firm provides accounting services for many service industry, homeowners associations, and nonprofit businesses. The firm also provides income tax consulting and preparation services for business corporations (both for-pr

ofit and non-profit), Sub-S corporations, individuals, sole-proprietors, and partnerships. She has worked with business owners, association board members, and property managers for over 30 years. Sara specializes in the corporate arena with emphasis in the Common Interest Community and business corporations. Common Interest Communities are homeowner associations such as condominium, townhome, single family, twin home, time share, and cooperative communities. As a QuickBooks Professional Advisor she provides consulting and support to many small businesses and homeowners associations that use the QuickBooks software. Sara is active member of the Community Association’s Institute - Minnesota Chapter (CAI-MN). She was Chapter President in 2008 and has served on several Committees. She has authored several articles for the Minnesota Community Living Magazine and given many educational presentations for CAI-MN and for Association Boards of Directors. Sara’s Homeowner Association financial statements were selected by Thomson Reuters to be published in the 2016 Trends volume of PPC’s Guide to Preparing Financial Statements. Sara’s example financial statements are available to be used as guides by Certified Public Accountants across the Nation. Sara was also interviewed by HOALeader about tax exempt status for homeowners associations. Her interview was published in the February 5, 2016 Tip of the Week. She is a member of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA), the AICPA Tax & Nonprofit Sections and the Minnesota Society of Certified Public Accountants.

05/11/2026

Great Article from the Journal of Accountancy about IRS notices:

CP53E notice tied to paper-check transition causes confusion
By Martha Waggoner
May 8, 2026

Fraudulent or legitimate? In error or correct?

Those are among the questions taxpayers and tax professionals are asking after the IRS sent over a million CP53E notices to taxpayers advising them to update their bank information within 30 days for a direct deposit. Some are skeptical because the notices include a QR code, and some practitioners say their clients owe money and are not due a refund.

The IRS created the CP53E notice before the most recent filing season as part of the transition from paper checks to electronic payments and deposits ordered by President Donald Trump in Executive Order 14247. As of March, an estimated 1.4 million taxpayers had received the notice, according to a letter from members of the House Ways and Means Committee to Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent.

The notices caused some accounting firms to warn of possible fraud, with the QR code among the parts raising suspicions. Firms’ frequent advice: log on to irs.gov and bypass the QR code.

“Scammers are creating highly convincing fake CP53E notices, often featuring QR codes or links that lead to credential-stealing websites,” Pennsylvania firm Brinker Simpson warned on its site. “The IRS has begun using QR codes on some legitimate correspondence, which makes the fakes harder to spot at a glance. The safest assumption is that any QR code or link in a notice you receive should not be used until the notice itself has been verified through official channels.”

A Bank of Iowa blog post said: “Recently, some legitimate IRS CP53E notices may include a QR code which takes you to the IRS site. But, scammers may also use QR codes, so to be safe, we recommend that you do not use the QR code. Instead, manually type IRS.gov into your browser and log in to your official account to verify the notice and update banking information.”

CPAs’ experiences
Sadie Richardson, CPA, estimated that six of her clients received the CP53E notice. The firm where she works, Tax Specialists of Northern Colorado, had 25 to 30 clients receive the notice.

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When Richardson first saw the notice, she didn’t think it was a scam. She didn’t scan the QR code, however, because “it’s just kind of like clicking on a link. I’m not going to scan a random QR code either,” she said. Instead, she has helped clients set up their account on IRS.gov and search for the notice there.

Even notices confirmed to have come from the IRS have caused problems. Richardson said some clients questioned why she had told them that they had a balance due when the notice said the IRS needed banking information to deposit a refund.

“They’re all confused and concerned that we did something wrong, or that something’s wrong somewhere,” she said. “I’ve had to explain to them, I don’t believe you actually do have a refund. I think this is a mistake or preemptive for future years or something. But I haven’t quite found an answer yet, so I’m just trying to reassure them that it doesn’t necessarily mean something’s wrong.”

Mark Gallegos, CPA, MST, a tax partner on Porte Brown’s accounting and consulting services team in the Elgin, Ill., office, said only a few of his clients lack an online account with the IRS. But among those few, several received fraudulent CP53E notices.

“What I tell clients is if you get one of those notices, if you’re not comfortable scanning it, give us a call, email us, get us a copy of that letter,” he said. “And I’ll help you set up an ID.me account. I’d rather do that than (have) someone say, ‘Hey, I just scanned this thing, and it took me to a site where I can put all my bank account information in. And a lot of people, unfortunately, will do that because they don’t know what’s going on, and they’re like, ‘Oh, I can just handle this myself.’ And then, in the blink of an eye, money is drawn from the account.”

AICPA response
The AICPA posted an advisory about the CP53E confusion, saying the IRS is aware that some notices may have been sent in error, including when overpayments are scheduled to be applied to 2026 estimated tax or when a balance is due. “Until further guidance is issued, the IRS is not recommending any further action,” the advisory said.

The AICPA said it is aware that some notices may be fraudulent and advised that taxpayers be sure to verify that any QR code links to irs.gov.

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Treasury
For a taxpayer who doesn’t respond to the notice — and who is due a refund — the IRS said it will issue a paper check after six weeks.

Treasury did not respond to an email seeking comment on CP53E notices.

— NOTE from me: If you receive a notice from the IRS or the State about your taxes be sure to contact your tax preparer to assist in responding. If you self prepare your returns, be sure to use your personal IRS account online with the IRS to check on any notice. Beware of scammers!

04/08/2026

Scam Alert - if you receive a call from 806-801-2238 about fraudulent activity on a Wells Fargo account, IT IS A SCAM!
One of my clients had a call today.

The fraudster listed several transactions and sounded like they knew a lot about the account. When my client asked why they needed so much information, the "Supervisor" got on the phone and was also very convincing.

My client finally said he thought the call was a fraud and that he would call Wells Fargo directly. The "Supervisor" responded with "I hope you die slowly" and hung up.

Follow up with a call to Wells Fargo where the representative responded that Wells Fargo does not call and she was able to verify that there were no issues on the account.

They are looking for information from you to hack your account. BEWARE!!!

Good morning from the indoor garden.
03/11/2026

Good morning from the indoor garden.

Have you thought about setting up a Trump Account?Trump Accounts give the next generation a jump start on saving.The Wor...
02/17/2026

Have you thought about setting up a Trump Account?

Trump Accounts give the next generation a jump start on saving.

The Working Families Tax Cuts allows parents, guardians and other authorized individuals to establish a new type of individual retirement account for their children, called Trump Accounts. The account is for a child who has not turned age 18 before the end of the calendar year in which the election is made and has a valid Social Security number.

The account features a pilot program contribution of $1,000 for children born between Jan. 1, 2025, and Dec. 31, 2028, and who are U.S. citizens with a valid Social Security number.

More information can be found at

Trump Accounts are a historic new savings tool created under the One Big Beautiful Bill to give children in America a real financial head start.

02/09/2026

Disaster Declaration may affect when and how you file your taxes. The below is from the IRS for taxpayers living in certain counties in Montana.

Tax professionals with clients in the State of Montana should be aware the IRS announced tax relief for individuals and businesses affected by severe storms and flooding that began on Dec. 10, 2025. These taxpayers now have until May 1, 2026, to file various federal individual and business tax returns and make tax payments.
Following the disaster declaration issued by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), individuals and households that reside or have a business in the Blackfeet Indian Reservation, Lincoln, and Sanders counties qualify for tax relief.

Be advised that there are other States that have disaster declarations.

01/28/2026

Before handing off your QuickBooks data file or letting your tax preparer know that your QuickBooks Online Data is ready, be sure that you have Reconciled all the Bank accounts - checking, savings and Reconciled all the credit cards and Reconciled all the loan accounts. Reconciliations should ideally be done every month for business accounts, maybe every quarter depending on your transaction volume. If the accounts are not reconciled, your accountant may need to do this for you and there will be a fee for this service in addition to the tax preparation fee. Reconciled accounts means all your business activity is captured. It means your tax preparer can generate an accurate tax trial balance for preparing your business taxes.

If you need assistance reconciling accounts, let your accountant and tax preparer know now.

01/25/2026

Tip for QuickBooks Online users:
When starting a Bank reconciliation and you see the Notice "Some things are not Categorized"
STOP and go back to the bank feed and Add/Match the transactions that are listed.
You haven't captured all your accounting transactions until you have accepted them through the bank feed and they will not be listed when you start the reconciliation.
Avoid rework - when you see a Warning, don't bypass it.

01/09/2026

ON my wish list!

01/08/2026

The IRS announced that tax filing season begins January 26, 2026!
Gather all your documents, check your mail and online access for anything that may be missing.
Make your appointment with your tax advisor!

A special message from one of my tax news feeds today.  I am not the author, but I wish I was.  Genius!
12/20/2025

A special message from one of my tax news feeds today. I am not the author, but I wish I was. Genius!

Address

2500 Shadywood Road Suite 100
Orono, MN
55331

Opening Hours

Monday 10am - 5pm
Tuesday 10am - 5pm
Wednesday 10am - 5pm
Thursday 10am - 5pm
Friday 10am - 5pm

Telephone

(952) 474-1631

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