View Poll Results: Would you use IRS option to prepare your taxes ?
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Use IRS option
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41 |
48.24% |
Continue to prepare myself
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35 |
41.18% |
Continue to use a pro
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9 |
10.59% |
I don't pay taxes
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0 |
0% |
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IRS Pushed to Offer Free Online Tax Filing
05-16-2023, 04:28 AM
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#1
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Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Cville
Posts: 1,483
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IRS Pushed to Offer Free Online Tax Filing
I read yesterday online and read n the WSJ this morning that IRS is considering a free online tax file option.
Would you continue to use your favorite software or use the IRS option ?
Would you continue to pay a pro to prepare and submit your return, if that is your practice today ?
__________________
FIRE 31 Aug, 2018 - Always leave every place better than you found it, always give more than expected or Due
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05-16-2023, 04:39 AM
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#2
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Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
Join Date: Jul 2020
Posts: 1,074
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Our credit union did taxes as a service till last year. We qualified for the IRS free tax service this year, used it and got our refunds in short order... just cost $19 for the state stuff...
__________________
Went from EMS to PDN
Earn Money Sleeping/ Paid Doing Nothing
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05-16-2023, 04:59 AM
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#3
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Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: Chattanooga
Posts: 3,595
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I've done my own taxes since 1974, so no reason to change now. Add to equation I did post retirement part time work with H&RB for five years and then worked the VITA program for two years.
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Earning money is an action, saving money is a behavior, growing money takes a well diversified portfolio and the discipline to ignore market swings.
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05-16-2023, 05:09 AM
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#4
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Full time employment: Posting here.
Join Date: Aug 2013
Location: New Jersey
Posts: 596
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I’ll continue to spend a total of $25 to prepare federal and state returns on my computer.
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05-16-2023, 06:08 AM
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#5
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Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
Join Date: Nov 2015
Posts: 2,521
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I'd have to see what they develop and its functionality. Based on other government developed systems I'd expect it to fall short of what the private sector offers.
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05-16-2023, 06:34 AM
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#6
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Full time employment: Posting here.
Join Date: Oct 2013
Posts: 903
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It's about time. I've always thought the government should send a prefilled out version of their own software to you with what they already know, already filled in. Then the taxpayer just modifies or adds what's needed, and done! This is way overdue.
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05-16-2023, 06:43 AM
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#7
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Administrator
Join Date: Apr 2006
Posts: 20,978
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As I have since 1976, I will continue to do my own taxes at home (though now with software to help fill out the forms) and then mail them in. I am 100% certain that whatever the IRS produces for online filing, it will not work properly for me and will just cause agita. My way is simple and effective.
__________________
Living an analog life in the Digital Age.
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05-16-2023, 06:49 AM
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#8
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Recycles dryer sheets
Join Date: Feb 2018
Location: North Central MA
Posts: 69
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I'll continue to do my own taxes.
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05-16-2023, 06:51 AM
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#9
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Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: NC
Posts: 19,599
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I have done my own with TurboTax desktop for about 20 years, and I enjoy doing it.
Many countries have exact withholding tax systems so returns aren’t necessary for most taxpayers. But they can file returns for exceptions.
Some countries send their taxpayers a tax return already filled in, and the taxpayers need only approve or recommend changes. Since the IRS has most of our info, that’s what I’d like to see.
Free from the IRS would be great, but I suspect it would be like the free Turbo Tax return - only free for the simplest returns, not applicable for most taxpayers.
The fundamental problem with the US tax code is the unnecessary complexity. All that code and there are still loopholes galore, it’s ridiculous. Simplifying would be easy, but it will never happen…
Quote:
At last count, 36 countries, including Germany, Japan, and the United Kingdom, permit return-free filing for some taxpayers.
Nearly all countries that offer return-free systems have “exact-withholding” systems, of which there are two types: “cumulative” systems (used in the United Kingdom and Russia) and “final-withholding” systems (used in Germany and Japan). Some countries combine one of these approaches with other requirements. In Chile, for example, taxpayers are not eligible if they wish to file for refunds of excess withholdings.
Denmark and Sweden, both small countries, operate tax agency reconciliation systems. About 87 percent of Denmark’s taxpayers and 74 percent of Sweden’s had their returns filled out by the tax authorities in 1999. Spain, Estonia, Finland, Norway, and Iceland have also implemented tax agency reconciliation systems.
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https://www.taxpolicycenter.org/brie...rn-free-filing
__________________
No one agrees with other people's opinions; they merely agree with their own opinions -- expressed by somebody else. Sydney Tremayne
Retired Jun 2011 at age 57
Target AA: 50% equity funds / 40% bonds / 10% cash
Target WR: Approx 2.5% Approx 20% SI (secure income, SS only)
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05-16-2023, 07:08 AM
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#10
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Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Cville
Posts: 1,483
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Midpack
The fundamental problem with the US tax code is the unnecessary complexity. All that code and there are still loopholes galore, it’s ridiculous. Simplifying would be easy, but it will never happen…
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A couple years ago there was talk of simplification, postcard sized for simple returns. I did taxes while in the Army and most of the forms just required entering income from W2, any interest income, and tax withheld. Then a simple lookup for tax obligation and enter either refund or owed. I did them in the lobby of the PX one year with a card table and a stack of forms.
Alas, when I went to print 2022 return it was 72 pages. About 1/2 were empty pages, others had one or 2 numbers for an entire page. YMMV, on another post there was a subscriber that only has $15K in income each year so pays no taxes. Gotta hope that is only 10-15 pages
__________________
FIRE 31 Aug, 2018 - Always leave every place better than you found it, always give more than expected or Due
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05-16-2023, 07:12 AM
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#11
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Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: Florida's First Coast
Posts: 6,765
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I already use it. Turbo Tax is fighting it! They do not want it to happen.
You still do your own taxes; it is just free to do so. I have done it for the last 3 years.
__________________
"Never Argue With a Fool, Onlookers May Not Be Able To Tell the Difference." - Mark Twain
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05-16-2023, 07:12 AM
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#12
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Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
Join Date: Mar 2014
Location: Dallas
Posts: 1,015
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Quote:
Originally Posted by frayne
I've done my own taxes since 1974, so no reason to change now. Add to equation I did post retirement part time work with H&RB for five years and then worked the VITA program for two years.
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Same here. Since 1998 (first time I made any money). Although I use tax software now (so much easier than doing paper returns back in the days). Depending on what IRS ends up offering, I still may have to use a commercial software since my return is now over 100 pages long (business income, rentals, etc.).
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05-16-2023, 07:15 AM
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#13
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Full time employment: Posting here.
Join Date: Jul 2019
Location: Dalton
Posts: 566
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Well since we have retired now I'll keep letting the good people at the AARP free tax filing people do ours. I can do it myself but why. Kinda on the same line as I can mow my own yard but why, when I can help out the economy by paying my yard guy, less sweat for me.
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05-16-2023, 07:19 AM
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#14
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Moderator
Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: Flyover country
Posts: 23,413
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As I read the article, it only refers to filing the return for free, which most people already get with current tax software (at least for federal). It does not refer to preparation of the return.
__________________
I thought growing old would take longer.
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05-16-2023, 07:21 AM
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#15
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Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Washington, DC
Posts: 11,014
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Like others I am skeptical but you should have provided a wait and see option. Our taxes are pretty simple in my opinion, but it does require dividends, CGs, a retirement K1. I doubt IRS wants to be responsible for maintaining a complex tax prep code base. More likely, they will offer a free EZ system for very simple returns with no complexity and point us back to commercial outfits for anything more. I want Federal and state efile, nothing less will suffice.
__________________
Every man is, or hopes to be, an Idler. -- Samuel Johnson
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05-16-2023, 07:22 AM
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#16
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Administrator
Join Date: Apr 2006
Posts: 20,978
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Quote:
Originally Posted by RetireBy90
.....
Alas, when I went to print 2022 return it was 72 pages. About 1/2 were empty pages, others had one or 2 numbers for an entire page. ....
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You might consider simplifying your life. Our 2022 return was 6 pages - 2 for the Form 1040 and 2 each for our two form 8606's (because we have a basis in our IRAs). 2021 was slightly larger, at 10 pages, because the young wife earned $300 making theatrical costumes, so we had to also file Schedule 1, Schedule C and Form 8995. She donated all the money back to the theater troupe, so she finally convinced them not to pay her in the first place, and we're back down to 6 pages.
__________________
Living an analog life in the Digital Age.
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05-16-2023, 07:23 AM
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#17
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Moderator
Join Date: Nov 2015
Posts: 12,255
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I'll continue to use TaxAct and file myself. It's super convenient in that it remembers and reminds me if I don't include something I had the year prior, and all the history is easy to access. I always find a discount for it, we have use the basic version.
I'd have a look at the free IRS one but it would have to be quite good, which would be unlikely in its first or second iteration.
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05-16-2023, 07:30 AM
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#18
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Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: NC
Posts: 19,599
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Quote:
Originally Posted by braumeister
As I read the article, it only refers to filing the return for free, which most people already get with current tax software (at least for federal). It does not refer to preparation of the return.
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Well that changes the thread considerably…
__________________
No one agrees with other people's opinions; they merely agree with their own opinions -- expressed by somebody else. Sydney Tremayne
Retired Jun 2011 at age 57
Target AA: 50% equity funds / 40% bonds / 10% cash
Target WR: Approx 2.5% Approx 20% SI (secure income, SS only)
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05-16-2023, 08:02 AM
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#19
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Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
Join Date: Nov 2009
Posts: 6,509
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Quote:
Originally Posted by frayne
I've done my own taxes since 1974, so no reason to change now. Add to equation I did post retirement part time work with H&RB for five years and then worked the VITA program for two years.
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Same here, since 1985. I have gradually, over the years, done some things to help make the overall filing a little easier: getting a PC so I could design a spreadsheet which mimics the tax form's calculations, using the free fillable forms, and making payments and receiving refunds electronically, to name three.
I have also been doing the tax returns for 3 other people: my snake-bit friend, my ladyfriend, and, most recently, my dad.
The worst instance of wasting time and effort is including Schedule 3 to copy the excess APTC credit from form 8962 only to copy it again onto form 1040. That, and the repayment of excess APTC credit, used to be part of form 1040.
__________________
Retired in late 2008 at age 45. Cashed in company stock, bought a lot of shares in a big bond fund and am living nicely off its dividends. IRA, SS, and a pension await me at age 60 and later. No kids, no debts.
"I want my money working for me instead of me working for my money!"
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05-16-2023, 08:22 AM
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#20
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Full time employment: Posting here.
Join Date: May 2011
Posts: 597
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Al18
I’ll continue to spend a total of $25 to prepare federal and state returns on my computer.
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+1
Don't see any reason to change this.
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you interpret daily life according to your ideas of what is possible or not possible - Seth Speaks
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