1: Free Tax USA
https://www.freetaxusa.
2: Cash App Taxes (Formally Credit Karma Tax)
https://cash.app/taxes
3: OnlineTaxes
https://olt.com/
4: MyFreeTaxes (for AGI $89,000 or less)
https://myfreetaxes.com/
5: IRS Free File: Do your Taxes for Free (for AGI $89,000 or less)
https://www.irs.gov/file-your-taxes-for-free
https://irs.treasury.go
6: IRS Free Fillable Forms: Do your Taxes for Free (no AGI limit)
https://www.irs.gov/e-file-provid...able-forms
List of states with free state e-file directly on their website [thefinancebuff.com]
(requires transferring data from your tax software to the state website)
You can apply Amazon digital credits to save even more (YMMV). However it only applies to the "normal" listing; NOT the GC offer.

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TT strongly pushes Premier and Home & Business but the fact is that TT Deluxe can handle every situation that these more expensive versions can. The only exception that I am aware of is the ability to create W2 and 1099 forms for employees in H&B.
Deluxe has everything for all investment types, everything for owners of rental properties, everything for self-employed (1099-NEC/Schedule C filers), everything for those who do itemized deductions.
The higher versions offer more guidance but Deluxe has all the forms required and will still walk you through all of it.
Note that Turbotax Online is completely different, Deluxe Online is purposely limited forcing more complex returns to use the more expenisve Online versions than Deluxe.
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Agreed; www.freetaxusa.
People complaining the Gov should do this or at least offer free software yet are buying from companies that pay to stop it.
Same price on Amazon:
https://www.amazon.com/TurboTax-D...B0FWV56H48
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Same price on Amazon:
https://www.amazon.com/TurboTax-D...B0FWV56H48
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
We file our income tax yearly so we see how much of our salary is being collected by our federal and state government.
We pay sales tax on top of the listed store prices (pretty sure the only country that does that) so we see how much of the salary we have already been taxed on is taxed a second time by state and local government when we buy something with that salary.
About the only thing we don't have tax transparency on is gasoline. When you drive across a state line and see gas prices drastically change, it would be easy to miss the fact that one state has a high gas tax, while the neighboring state is lower but you will never know by how much unless you search that out since it is hidden in the price.
This is probably at least part of the reason we pay around an average of 23% in total taxes in the USA for a median income while they pay around 45% in total taxes in Europe where taxes are less transparent to the citizens for that same average income tax bracket.
My vote would be to keep your tax burden front-and-center so tax increases are less likely to "sneak" into place over time.
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