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Online Free Tax E-Filing options for 2023 (IRS FreeFile, United Way, Cash App/Credit Karma, various free basic programs)

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Hello! This post is an update to one from last year and will briefly yet comprehensively discuss all known free online tax filing options for 2023, aka FY 2022. While slickdeals is a site specializing in discounts to paid products, hopefully this post will alert people to the fact that they most likely have multiple free tax filing options available. Based on last year's tax returns, over 70% of Americans are eligible for the IRS Free File program alone, to say nothing of all the other free tax filing offerings available.

These free tax filing options essentially break down into 5 categories:
  1. IRS Free-File [irs.gov] (IRS provided and endorsed free tax software [irs.gov] or forms [irs.gov])
  2. Premium tax software provided by an organization (United Way's MyFreeTaxes [myfreetaxes.com], MilTax [militaryonesource.mil])
  3. Cash App Taxes [cash.app] (comprehensive tax software provided for free by a company)
  4. Various free offers for basic returns (loss-leader programs provided by tax software companies)
  5. In-person volunteer tax clinics (VITA & TCE [irs.gov])

The last category is somewhat beyond the scope of this post, which will focus on online options, i.e. ones you can explore during or immediately after reading this post. However, as a general overview, Tax Counseling for the Elderly (TCE) is designed to help seniors over age 60, while Volunteer Income Tax Assistance (VITA) targets people with either:
  • incomes below $60,000
  • disabilities
  • limited English language skills

While participants in VITA are wide and varied, most TCE clinics are run by AARP's Tax-Aide program [aarp.org] which further opens eligibility to those over 50 years old. Please be aware that while the eligibility requirements are general and not hard-and-fast, and the assistants are qualified [irs.gov], it would still be inappropriate for someone with lists of stock transactions and itemized deductions half-a-mile long to roll in and thrust a large stack of tax documents at a volunteer. Lastly, most VITA and TCE providers [treasury.gov] don't start running clinics until early February.

With that out of the way:

IRS Free File
Most Commonly Filed Federal Forms

The IRS Free File [irs.gov] program is the result of a long-standing compromise between large tax software providers, such as H&R Block and Intuit, and the IRS: the IRS will not produce any free publicly-funded guided tax software and in return these companies will make available free versions of their cash cows to low- and moderate- income earners. While the offerings in this program tend to be the most restrictive in terms of whether you qualify to file for free, in turn the ability of the companies involved to upsell you services, hide necessary tax forms behind a paywall, or sell your data to third party partners is also greatly restricted. All participants in this program are required to provide the most commonly filed forms. [irs.gov]

Most major tax software players participate in this program except for H&R Block (left 2020) and Intuit TurboTax (quit 2021). The remaining major participants are:

Furthermore active duty military with AGI's below $73,000 are eligible for all the above offers.

I do not currently know whether the above offers allow free state filings from multiple states.

Please note that while direct links have been provided above, they have been provided for investigative convenience. In the likely event they are broken by re-directs either at slickdeals or by the providers themselves, they should remain accessible via the IRS's Free File listings [irs.gov]. There are additional offers available there from smaller providers for federal-only free filings I have omitted from the above list for simplicity's sake. Lastly, there is an option for people whose AGI is over $73,000 to directly fill out the forms [freefilefillableforms.com] themselves online without the aid of guided tax software.

United Way's MyFreeTaxes
Most forms available

Since 2009 United Way has been offering free access to one tax prep provider with looser restrictions than the IRS FreeFile offers above. Most recently this provider has been TaxSlayer.
  • MyFreeTaxes [myfreetaxes.com] via TaxSlayer
    • AGI of $73,000 or less
    • Any age
    • Unlimited states, including Puerto Rico (1040PR)
    • Also includes Non-resident alien filing (1040-NR)

Note that the questionnaire they use also has options for (a) in-person tax help and (b) those with AGI's above $73,000. These are just links to the VITA program and the IRS's Free Fillable Forms [freefilefillableforms.com] discussed earlier.

As this is a charitable program, my personal recommendation is to use the IRS's Free File options, one of which is also TaxSlayer, unless you don't meet the qualifications. It is likely United Way has to pay more for this service the more people file using it. If you do use MyFreeTaxes, consider donating to United Way.

MilTax (DoD)
Most forms available

The Department of Defense makes comprehensive tax software called MilTax [militaryonesource.mil] available for free to active military personnel. It is supposedly purpose built to handle tax situations common among deployed service members and their families. Additionally they offer in-person support through the VITA program.

Cash App Taxes
Many forms available

For several years Credit Karma [creditkarma.com] operated a home-grown free tax filing service, before recently selling it [forbes.com] to Square, the online payment company, due to anti-trust concerns arising from Intuit buying Credit Karma. Post-sale this product is now called Cash App Taxes [cash.app] and is linked to the smartphone app of the same name. Thus in order to use this service, you must first download the app and sign up to do your taxes through it, at which point you can sign-in via a browser.

Helpfully they publish a large list of unsupported tax situations [cash.app] which include residents of Puerto Rico, multiple state filings, foreign income, and married-filing-separately in community property states such as Arizona, California, Idaho, Louisiana, New Mexico, or Wisconsin.

Intuit TurboTax Free Edition and Live Assisted Basic
Form 1040 only

TurboTax is the granddaddy of all tax software, and Intuit has a very limited free offer [intuit.com] available to filers of Form 1040 only, with no additional tax forms appended. For those who don't know tax lingo, this means only:
  • W-2 income
  • Limited (less than $1,500) interest and dividend income reported on a 1099-INT or 1099-DIV
  • standard deduction (not itemized deductions)
  • Earned Income Tax Credit (EIC)
  • Child tax credits
  • Student loan interest deduction

Additionally if you file before 3/31/23 you will have access to limited live help via Live Assisted Basic. However if you require so much live help that the assistant signs your tax return as the preparer, you will be charged for the full live support package. Other than those substantial caveats, this free offer is good for
  • Any AGI
  • Any age
  • Any state (including, apparently, multiple states)

H&R Block Free Online
A bit more than Form 1040

H&R Block, the #2 tax software maker after Intuit, offers a similar free online [hrblock.com] product that states it "offers more for free than TurboTax Free Edition," including unemployment income (1099-G), and tuition reimbursement. They helpfully list both supported federal forms [hrblock.com] and state forms [hrblock.com]. However, they do not provide any free live help.
  • Any AGI
  • Any age
  • Any state (including, apparently, multiple states)

TaxSlayer Simply Free
Form 1040 only

TaxSlayer's non-IRS-Free-File offering is for a very basic [taxslayer.com] Form 1040 only tax return, with only phone and email support. 1 free state filing is also included.
  • Any AGI
  • Any age
  • Any state

The rest
State additional; or free if you aren't required to file a state return

TaxAct [taxact.com]'s non-IRS-Free-File offer allows for more situations than a simple 1040-only return, but also includes "unlimited" live help. State filing is $39.99 each.

FreeTaxUSA [freetaxusa.com]'s normal pricing is free federal filing, with all forms supported, and each state costing $14.99. Live support also isn't free.

OnlineTaxes [olt.com] also has normal pricing of $0 on their federal return, all forms supported, with each state costing $9.99.

These offers may be appropriate for people who live in a state that does not have a state income tax and therefore does not require state income tax filing. These states are:
  • AK, FL, NV, SD, TX, WA, WY
Also, two states don't require residents to file state income returns unless they received 1099-INT or 1099-DIV income statements.
  • NH, TN

Data Privacy Caveats


The companies offering tax software provide free offerings, either on their own or through the IRS FreeFile program, for three main reasons:
  1. As a political maneuver to stop the IRS from stepping in and releasing its own free software
  2. To better collect valuable personal data on filers
  3. To upsell consumers on more expensive paid options and support

The last of these options is believed to be the reason Intuit TurboTax and H&R Block exited the FreeFile program: FreeFile's terms restrict the ability of companies to advertise paid upgrades to the tax filer while in app. Thus, if you choose to use any of the options above that aren't sponsored by a organization or part of the IRS Free File program, be wary of straying into paid-support or additional-form territory that will convert a free tax filing into a potentially expensive one.

As for the second reason, the Cleveland Plain-Dealer published an article [cleveland.com] in 2012 and 2019 looking at the personal data sharing policies of the major tax software providers of tax software, both installed and online, paid and free. Indeed, paying for electronic tax filing doesn't protect you from data privacy invasions:
Quote :
Fox noted that, years ago, an executive with one tax prep software company bragged to investors that consumers came in every year and updated their data files - voluntarily and while actually paying the company.
In addition to companies themselves using (or misusing) your tax and personal data, a further concern for online tax preparation and filing is the use of third-party frameworks in building and operating such sites and the data they might leak. Recently a long-running investigation [themarkup.org] by The Markup of the Meta Pixel, an analytic tool Facebook's parent company provides for free for use on interactive websites, discovered [themarkup.org] it was being used at TaxAct, TaxSlayer, and H&R Block, and was transmitting sensitive tax data back to Meta. Additionally, TaxAct was also using Google Analytics, which was likewise harvesting sensitive user data from the pages it was active on. While this all appears to have been an accidental breech of customer privacy (on the part of the tax companies) the fact remains Google and Facebook have collected tax data from millions of people just from this single method.

Whether such websites - which can at least be somewhat inspected by privacy advocates, as above - are worse than discrete software, which is more of a black box trusted to run on your personal computer, is left up to the reader.

Lastly keep in mind that any tax data can be acquired through purchase of the company itself, as occurred when Credit Karma Taxes was purchased by Square.

Disclaimer: all of the above does not constitute an endorsement of any particular service nor should be regarded as tax advice. Corrections and comments welcome.
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Created 01-24-2023 at 01:12 AM by verdure
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Joined May 2020
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vic.martinez
01-26-2023 at 09:35 AM.
01-26-2023 at 09:35 AM.
Hi everyone, I hope someone can help me. This is my first year doing taxes but I'm confused so there are state and federal taxes but do these apps like Cash App do both? Then I print out the forms and mail them or is everything electronic? Also how do I make sure I did it right—should I be using multiple software applications to compare and how do I prevent it from submitting two tax forms? Sorry to bother anyone with these questions I just wasn't sure where else to ask. Thank you
Reply
Joined Apr 2016
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Dealzez
01-26-2023 at 10:01 AM.
01-26-2023 at 10:01 AM.
Thanks for this extensive list. Anyone know if any of these places allow filing for past years? I need to do the last 3 years of taxes. Usually I just buy old unopened versions of TT or HRBlock on eBay for like $5-10. Tia
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Joined Nov 2017
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caligurl29
01-26-2023 at 11:45 AM.
01-26-2023 at 11:45 AM.
for those of us in commiefornia: does cash app fix/adjust the CA tax at some point to NOT include the middle class tax rebate 1099MISC?
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Joined May 2015
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verdure
01-26-2023 at 02:40 PM.
01-26-2023 at 02:40 PM.
Quote from Dealzez :
Thanks for this extensive list. Anyone know if any of these places allow filing for past years? I need to do the last 3 years of taxes. Usually I just buy old unopened versions of TT or HRBlock on eBay for like $5-10. Tia
The IRS says [irs.gov]:
Quote :
Please note you can only file your current year tax return using IRS Free File. You cannot process a prior year return using IRS Free File.

Prior year returns can only be filed electronically by registered tax preparers [irs.gov] for the two previous tax years. The IRS does not allow electronic filing for prior year returns through self-preparation websites. You must print, sign, and mail prior year returns. Our Directory of Federal Tax Return Preparers with Credentials and Select Qualifications [treasury.gov] can help you find preparers in your area who currently hold professional credentials recognized by the IRS, or who hold an Annual Filing Season Program Record of Completion. You can also check the professional organizations [irs.gov] many tax preparers belong to.
You could try a free VITA/TCE [irs.gov] tax clinic if you qualify, but be aware if your previous returns or amendments are too complicated they might not be "within scope [irs.gov]" of the clinic.

However as I do more digging on this and various other questions here, it seems that the TaxSlayer package the UnitedWay offers at myfreetaxes.com [myfreetaxes.com] is the same tax software that the VITA/TCE clincs use: the redirect page at myfreetaxes states it, and the pdf I linked above suggests they use TaxSlayer generally. So if you qualify for that ($73,000 AGI, any age and state) you may be able to file previous year returns electronically (or at least be able to print them out like the IRS wants).
Reply
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Dealzez
01-26-2023 at 02:46 PM.
01-26-2023 at 02:46 PM.
Quote from verdure :
The IRS says [irs.gov]:

You could try a free VITA/TCE [irs.gov] tax clinic if you qualify, but be aware if your previous returns or amendments are too complicated they might not be "within scope [irs.gov]" of the clinic.

However as I do more digging on this and various other questions here, it seems that the TaxSlayer package the UnitedWay offers at myfreetaxes.com [myfreetaxes.com] is the same tax software that the VITA/TCE clincs use: the redirect page at myfreetaxes states it, and the pdf I linked above suggests they use TaxSlayer generally. So if you qualify for that ($73,000 AGI, any age and state) you may be able to file previous year returns electronically (or at least be able to print them out like the IRS wants).

Thank you. Yeah, I figured I'd have to print the old ones.
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ChaChing23
01-26-2023 at 02:47 PM.
01-26-2023 at 02:47 PM.
Quote from Dealzez :
Anyone know if any of these places allow filing for past years? I need to do the last 3 years of taxes.
https://www.freetaxusa.com/prior-year.jsp

free tax usa dot com (with no spaces)
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Joined May 2015
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verdure
01-26-2023 at 02:50 PM.
01-26-2023 at 02:50 PM.
Quote from vic.martinez :
Hi everyone, I hope someone can help me. This is my first year doing taxes but I'm confused so there are state and federal taxes but (1) do these apps like Cash App do both? (2) Then I print out the forms and mail them or is everything electronic? Also how do I make sure I did it right—(3) should I be using multiple software applications to compare and how do I prevent it from submitting two tax forms? Sorry to bother anyone with these questions I just wasn't sure where else to ask. Thank you
  1. Yes. If you look at my OP again you will see I take great pains to note the states where each of the offers allows free electronic filing for both federal and state. Some offers are good for only half the states, some all, and a few none. Specifically, cash.app taxes does both.
  2. Everything is electronic. These are free e-filing options for the current tax year, i.e. your taxes from 2022, due April 18, 2023.
  3. My suggestion is yes, use at least two of these offers (if you qualify) to sanity check your results. This is what I've done in the past and what I'm planning to do this year. You will get your final results before you are given options to file electronically, save, or print a paper copy.
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verdure
01-26-2023 at 02:59 PM.
01-26-2023 at 02:59 PM.
Quote from riverhorse :
If you also have 1099 income, of last year's free providers- Cash app was the only one that also handled that (and State too- some didn't give you State free. I actually had 2 States, but nobody gonna do multiple States free).
One thing bugged me though: my capital One account was hijacked and I only used it for 2 things all year: DD the tax refund and some clinical trial money from NYU - both around the same time.
So besides hacking, either NYU or Square Cash has some thief insider. I lean towards the latter (Cap1 refused to reveal what method was used). Anyone have any similar occurrence? (I moved out all cash from both Cap & Cash and didn't lose anything)
I am no help concerning your larger question, but I did want to point out that, at least this year, there are apparently several options for free multiple state filings, namely:
  1. https://myfreetaxes.com/ (Nearly all forms)
  2. https://turbotax.intuit.com/perso...dition.jsp (1040 only)
  3. https://www.hrblock.com/online-ta...ax-filing/ (1040 + a few other common forms)
I'd love if others would try them out and report back.

Quote from yevgenimir21 :
If i moved from one state to another in june and have several W2 forms , will free software be helpful and which one ?
All 3 offers listed above should work for multiple states, and pretty much everything should work for multiple W-2's.
1
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Last edited by verdure January 26, 2023 at 03:06 PM.
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verdure
01-26-2023 at 03:10 PM.
01-26-2023 at 03:10 PM.
Quote from Sithrebel15 :
Be very careful with some of these. For example credit karma tax misses some important factors that reduce your education credits and doesn't mention the reductions at all in the box to enter your qualifying expenses.
Agree, it pays - if you have the time and qualify for multiple offerings - to do your taxes in two or more competing products to see if one catches something the other doesn't.
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verdure
01-26-2023 at 03:14 PM.
01-26-2023 at 03:14 PM.
Quote from AlwaysBePirate :
Thank you. Very informative.

Edit: Tried both free versions- Turbo Tax and HR block. They really try hard to get you upgrade. Free TurboTax is absolute bare bones. So if you have anything other than w2 and income simple interest don't even bother (no HSA even if through work on W2 or IRA).
HRBlock a little better but you might have to file paper return if you want it for free. I am referring to free versions with no income limit. Just FYI
Thank you very much for trying and reporting back. Yes, it is speculated that the ability to upsell the customer to a more lucrative tier is the primary reason Intuit and H&R Block left the IRS FreeFile program, which severely restricts that sort of thing.
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vic.martinez
01-26-2023 at 03:30 PM.
01-26-2023 at 03:30 PM.
Quote from verdure :
  1. Yes. If you look at my OP again you will see I take great pains to note the states where each of the offers allows free electronic filing for both federal and state. Some offers are good for only half the states, some all, and a few none. Specifically, cash.app taxes does both.
  2. Everything is electronic. These are free e-filing options for the current tax year, i.e. your taxes from 2022, due April 18, 2023.
  3. My suggestion is yes, use at least two of these offers (if you qualify) to sanity check your results. This is what I've done in the past and what I'm planning to do this year. You will get your final results before you are given options to file electronically, save, or print a paper copy.

Thank you so much! I'm going to try and do cash app and turbo tax since I only have w2 income and nothing else. Hopefully there are no issues. Have a great day!
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verdure
01-26-2023 at 03:36 PM.
01-26-2023 at 03:36 PM.
Quote from alchemista :
What's the catch with cash app taxes? They don't just do it out of the kindness of their hearts. Are their info sharing terms more permissive than the others? Do they show ads throughout the process and sell your contact?
When Credit Karma started their tax site it was a way to augment their ability to refer "pre-approved" credit card offers by getting a hold of consumer income data. Square isn't a paid referrer like Credit Karma was/is but they must want the same data since they have no tax product to upsell you on like the "real" tax companies.

It isn't all that hard to come up with a decent best-effort tax preparation site however. It's the 10% last most complicated stuff, covering every tax situation accurately, that is so much harder to do, which is why cash.app has such a long unsupported situations [cash.app] list.

So the "catch" as I see it is cash.app taxes sits in the middle between full-service tax software from IRS FreeFile and United Way you have to meet income qualifications for, and barebones free offers from companies who want to upsell you to paid tax software; it does most of everything, but not super well. They aim for the sweet spot of doing as little tax work to support as many potential returns as possible.

For example, and I haven't put this in the main post yet because I just found it, but like previous years cash.app doesn't have all states supported quite yet and will be adding them on a rolling, ad-hoc basis. IIRC last year this process went into the middle of March. As of Jan. 23 [cash.app]:
Quote :
Cash App Taxes is open for state filing in several states and if your state isn't open yet - don't worry - you can get a head start on your state return now by entering your data so you'll be ready to submit your state return when we open for filing! We are in the process of opening state e-filing and we'll be able to help you e-file in 40 states and the District of Columbia for free!

Note we don't support part year or non resident state returns

All states we support are open for data entry in Cash App Taxes now!

We'll email you when your state is ready for e-filing if you get started on it now - so don't delay. States currently open for e-filing in Cash App Taxes are:
  1. Arizona
  2. Connecticut
  3. Georgia
  4. Illinois
  5. Michigan
  6. Ohio
  7. Oklahoma
  8. Pennsylvania
  9. South Carolina
  10. Virginia
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Last edited by verdure January 26, 2023 at 03:40 PM.
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cobra11murderer
01-26-2023 at 07:48 PM.
01-26-2023 at 07:48 PM.
I'm gonna stick to B&R block cost software just for the fact if irs comes after.. of course it really depends like what all you have your toes in.. if I wasn't buying selling crypto on a few things I mean this list would be perfect
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DroopyOregon
01-27-2023 at 06:17 PM.
01-27-2023 at 06:17 PM.
Quote from cobra11murderer :
I'm gonna stick to B&R block cost software just for the fact if irs comes after.. of course it really depends like what all you have your toes in.. if I wasn't buying selling crypto on a few things I mean this list would be perfect

Is hrblock able to import your crypto transactions from coinbase, or what would you suggest?
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div222
01-28-2023 at 12:11 AM.
01-28-2023 at 12:11 AM.
Quote from caligurl29 :
for those of us in commiefornia: does cash app fix/adjust the CA tax at some point to NOT include the middle class tax rebate 1099MISC?
I filled in preliminary info and so far did not see any way to adjust MCTR... As of today Ca still was not accepting returns, maybe they will fix it later?
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