will now answer your tax questions for "free" according to a radio ad I heard today (in month of January) - of course what they will do is let you ask your question and then a "tax expert" will call you back to discuss your question )AND I'm SURE try to sell you Turbo Tax!) - I cannot imagine getting "free" tax advice from Turbo Tax but they'll get a LOT of less sophisticated tax clients I guess?
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Omnipresent
Luke, TurboTax is growing everywhere, like a fungus. Like our discussion about false advertising, they don't do it either, but they do stretch the imagination for those of us in our profession who know better. If you're like most of us, you go behind TT and find thousands of dollars every year.
What I really don't like is our bank. By their own policy (so they say), they refuse to advertise local businesses, even those who bank with them. They will not allow billboards, flyers, anything on their premises which portends expertise even by their constituent clientele.
Absolutely not! No way! Nada!
But there are flyers in your statement advertising TurboTax. Go to their website to check your account, and a TT ad covers your whole screen so you have to opt out just to look at your account. Why does the bank accept advertising money from Intuit when it is their cardinal rule not to advertise for ANYONE??
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Virtually none
Luke, I would say virtually none of them are ever detected. Primarily because TT does not make the kind of mistakes that would raise a red flag. For exemple, I have never known TT to make a calculation error.
The problems I correct are bad assumptions and misunderstandings on the part of the taxpayer, and they are almost always in the government's favor. One $1800 error I caught was a taxpayer renting out farmland, so he entered the rental proceeds on Sch F and got hung for $1800 in SE tax.
As badly as I detest TurboTax, their product is not flawed. The $1800 above would never be caught by the government. In fact, TurboTax doesn't even know that the farmland is rented either.
Where I'm miffed is the omnipresent, incessant advertising which tells the high school dropout he can be as competent as a CPA for a lousy 40 bucks.
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Exactly right
Originally posted by Nashville View PostLuke, I would say virtually none of them are ever detected. Primarily because TT does not make the kind of mistakes that would raise a red flag. For exemple, I have never known TT to make a calculation error.
The problems I correct are bad assumptions and misunderstandings on the part of the taxpayer, and they are almost always in the government's favor. One $1800 error I caught was a taxpayer renting out farmland, so he entered the rental proceeds on Sch F and got hung for $1800 in SE tax. As badly as I detest TurboTax, their product is not flawed. The $1800 above would never be caught by the government. In fact, TurboTax doesn't even know that the farmland is rented either.
Originally posted by Nashville View PostWhere I'm miffed is the omnipresent, incessant advertising which tells the high school dropout he can be as competent as a CPA for a lousy 40 bucks.
TurboTax online federal (short form) is free and state is $27.95 -- here's the link:
Last edited by Black Bart; 01-07-2010, 09:31 AM.
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