April 12, 2016

Office Depot Offers Free Document Shredding for Tax Season

According to Office Depot’s monthly Personal Shopper Index, only 44 percent shred paper during tax season. Improper disposal of documents that contain personal information can increase the risk of identity theft. At Office Depot and OfficeMax retail ...

Was your client named in the Panama Papers scandal? Need to purge a few million documents before the auditors get there? We would never suggest such a thing, of course, but Office Depot is offering free shredding of private and personal document during tax season. You’ll need this coupon, though.

According to Office Depot’s monthly Personal Shopper Index, only 44 percent shred paper during tax season. Improper disposal of documents that contain personal information can increase the risk of identity theft. At Office Depot and OfficeMax retail locations, you can get a coupon for five pounds of free bulk bin shredding now through April 23

“During tax season, our information can be at risk. At Office Depot, we want to help provide solutions and services such as shredding to help our customers protect their personal information,” said Dave Centrella, senior vice president, print and services for Office Depot, Inc.

For additional shredding needs, get a coupon for $2 off a minimum 5 pound purchase of bulk bin shredding services at both Office Depot and OfficeMax stores now through March 26[2]. Visit our Same Day Printing page for your coupon. Shoppers can also save during tax week with 20 percent off same-day print, fax, shredding and overnight shipping from April 3-9[3]. Visit us online for your coupon.

 

 

 

Sign in to get access to this free resource, and all of our whitepapers and reports.

Download this content today!

Register to get free access to this content, as well as newsletters, continuing education, podcasts, and more…

Tags: Taxes

Judge Temporarily Halts DOJ ‘Anti-Weaponization Fund’

IRS May 29, 2026 

Judge Temporarily Halts DOJ ‘Anti-Weaponization Fund’

The Justice Department announced the creation of the fund as part of settling a $10 billion lawsuit President Donald Trump brought against his own government, alleging violations of federal law for releases of his tax return information in his first term.

Leave a Reply