Probate Q&A Series

How can I get an estate tax ID number? – North Carolina

Short Answer

In North Carolina, the estate’s “tax ID number” is usually a federal Employer Identification Number (EIN) issued by the IRS. The personal representative (executor or administrator) typically applies using IRS Form SS-4, most often through the IRS online EIN application for an immediate number. If someone else (like an attorney) is getting the EIN on the estate’s behalf, the personal representative still needs to authorize that on the SS-4 and sign where required.

Understanding the Problem

In a North Carolina estate administration, the key question is: how can a personal representative obtain the estate’s tax identification number so estate paperwork can be signed and returned and the estate can handle tax reporting correctly. This issue commonly comes up when the personal representative lives in a different jurisdiction but is administering a North Carolina estate and needs the correct number for banks, investment accounts, and tax forms. The decision point is simply obtaining the correct estate tax ID (the estate’s EIN) in a way that matches the personal representative’s authority and timing in the estate process.

Apply the Law

Under North Carolina practice, the estate is a separate taxpayer for certain purposes after death, and the fiduciary administering the estate may have state and federal filing and payment duties. North Carolina’s fiduciary income tax rules place the responsibility to file and pay on the fiduciary administering the estate, which is one reason the estate needs its own taxpayer identification number for income that arises during administration and for fiduciary returns.

Key Requirements

  • Proper applicant (personal representative): The person appointed by the Clerk of Superior Court to administer the estate (executor/administrator) is the one who generally applies for the estate EIN and signs the application when required.
  • Correct IRS method (SS-4 / online EIN): The EIN is obtained from the IRS, commonly by completing Form SS-4 (often through the IRS online EIN system for immediate issuance).
  • Use the EIN for estate income and accounts: Once issued, the EIN should be used for estate bank/investment accounts and for reporting estate income so it is not reported under the decedent’s Social Security number.

What the Statutes Say

Analysis

Apply the Rule to the Facts: Here, the personal representative is handling a North Carolina estate while living in another jurisdiction and needs to sign and return a federal tax ID application for the estate. Because the estate may receive income during administration (for example, interest earned after death), the estate should have its own EIN so financial institutions and tax reporting can be tied to the estate rather than the decedent’s Social Security number. The personal representative typically completes (and signs where required) IRS Form SS-4, and can usually obtain the EIN quickly through the IRS online system.

Process & Timing

  1. Who files: The personal representative (executor/administrator). Where: With the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), usually through the IRS online EIN application or by submitting IRS Form SS-4. What: IRS Form SS-4 (Application for Employer Identification Number). When: Typically soon after qualification, and before opening an estate bank account or moving income-producing assets into estate administration.
  2. How the number is issued: If the online EIN application is used and all fields are completed, the EIN is generally issued immediately. If the EIN is requested by other methods, processing can take longer.
  3. After the EIN is issued: Use the EIN to open the estate checking account and to update payors (banks, brokerages, and others) so that interest/dividends and year-end tax forms report under the estate EIN. If a bank requests it for an interest-bearing estate account, the personal representative may also need to provide a completed IRS Form W-9 using the estate EIN.

Exceptions & Pitfalls

  • Mixing the decedent’s Social Security number with the estate: A common mistake is opening estate accounts or leaving income-producing assets reporting under the decedent’s Social Security number after death. That can trigger mismatched tax forms and extra steps to correct reporting. For related guidance, see tax forms issued under the deceased person’s Social Security number instead of the estate’s EIN.
  • Third-party designee issues: If someone else is obtaining the EIN (for example, an attorney helping the personal representative), the SS-4 must be completed in a way that properly authorizes that person, and the personal representative must sign where required for that authorization to be valid.
  • Accounting year confusion: Early in administration, the estate may not have decided on an accounting period. Leaving the accounting-year question blank on the SS-4 is often appropriate at that stage, depending on the estate’s situation.
  • Bank account timing: Banks commonly require Letters and the estate EIN to open an estate account. For more on timing, see whether an EIN is needed before opening an estate bank account.

Conclusion

In North Carolina, an estate tax ID number is usually the estate’s federal EIN from the IRS. The personal representative generally obtains it by completing IRS Form SS-4 (often through the IRS online EIN application for immediate issuance) and then uses that EIN for estate accounts and tax reporting so income is not reported under the decedent’s Social Security number. The most important next step is to submit the SS-4 promptly so the EIN is in place before opening estate accounts and handling income-producing assets.

Talk to a Probate Attorney

If a personal representative is dealing with a North Carolina estate from out of state and needs the estate EIN to sign tax paperwork and open estate accounts, our firm has experienced attorneys who can help explain the steps, required documents, and timing. Call us today at [CONTACT NUMBER].

Disclaimer: This article provides general information about North Carolina law based on the single question stated above. It is not legal advice for your specific situation and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Laws, procedures, and local practice can change and may vary by county. If you have a deadline, act promptly and speak with a licensed North Carolina attorney.