Loan File Completeness · 3 free runs · Nothing uploaded

The missing K-1, named.

Load the tax return and the K-1s from a full-doc file. The tool reads the Schedule E, lists every partnership and S corporation the return itself names, matches each one to a K-1 for the same tax year, and names what isn’t there — with the exact line that proves it. The manual cross-check becomes one pass. Certain, or it says so. Everything is read in your browser and never uploaded.

The documents

The return (with its Schedule E) and the K-1s — one PDF or several, read locally.

Run the check
  • The return is its own checklist: Schedule E Part II names the entities; each one issues a K-1. The tool reconciles the file against what the return itself demands — no guidelines needed.
  • Certain or it abstains. A scanned page, an unreadable year, a name it can’t tie — each is named, and the tool refuses to certify past it. It never calls a file complete past an uncertainty, and never calls a document missing while an unreadable page could be it.
  • Structure only: no income math, no underwriting or credit judgment, no authenticity judgment, no tax advice.
  • Nothing you load here is uploaded or stored — the reading happens in this tab. The first-run email is your run key; it is the only thing that leaves the page.

The findings

Every claim anchored to a line, a file, and a page.

Choose the return and the K-1s, then run the check. Everything stays in this tab.

Built for the full-doc moment every broker knows: a pile of returns and K-1s, and the one question that costs hours — is anything missing? Schedule E names three entities, the file holds two K-1s: the third is missing, and this page shows the line that says so. Works the other way too — a K-1 for a year whose return isn’t in the file names the missing return. Pair it with the Reading Receipt to prove every page of what you do have was read.