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    #16
    Seems to me that most complaints about the price of ATX software next year is the cost of e-filing. Why not just file paper returns next year?

    Personally, I have refused to e-file tax returns as filing client tax returns is not my responsibility and my clients are not the type that care or request e-filing anyway.

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      #17
      Originally posted by OldJack View Post

      Personally, I have refused to e-file tax returns as filing client tax returns is not my responsibility and my clients are not the type that care or request e-filing anyway.
      Personally, I wouldn’t send in a paper return, I been e-filing the very first year it started,
      In fact, I was one of two firms in Oregon to test there e-filing when they started.
      I think e-filing is the only way to file, especially when you have a complicated return.
      Just my opinion, not looking for a debate on e-filing.

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        #18
        I'm a middle-of-the-roader on efiling

        I prefer NOT to efile, but if a client has a large refund, I will efile it.
        I can't understand how a more complicated return is easier to efile. The biggest advantage of efilng is that you save a few cents on paper (big deal).

        A return can be completely error-free, but ,in order to efile, there are several additional things that must be entered, all of which can create an error which only affects the ability to efile it.

        Another pain in the neck (or other part of the anatomy)-- if you use ATX-- is that even if you updated your program and all the forms yesterday, if you efile today, and don't update, the return will not efile. It will transmit, then you have to update and resubmit.

        At least the Form 8453 is seldom necessary anymore. Someday the IRS may actually provide a way to make efiling more attractive to tax preparers. I realize that many already seem to like it for some reason. (saving paper, additional error checks, verification of SSNs--but RALs are the big driving force)

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          #19
          Biggest Advantage to E-Filing

          .... is that you can shove a form in front of your client's nose, tell him to sign it, and send him on his way.

          I know that many taxpayers aren't going to review their returns, or understand what they find on them anyway. But if the medical profession requires "informed consent," at least giving the patient a chance to ask questions and give some thought to the proposed treatment, I can't understand why tax practitioners don't share that philosophy.

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            #20
            >>I know that many taxpayers aren't going to review their returns<<

            I find that clients are happy with my service when I take a few minutes to sit down and review the tax return with them, show them where to sign, and offer suggestions on tax planning for the next year. Those few minutes makes your higher fee worth more to the client than the cheaper tax preparer down the street. Clients want personal service and are willing to pay for the trust you will create when providing that service. Do you really want to be know as the cheapest tax preparer in town?

            edit: not meaning you George.

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              #21
              [QUOTE=OldJack;37278 I find that clients are happy with my service when I take a few minutes to sit down and review the tax return with them [/QUOTE]

              I find that some of my clients are not that happy when I insist they stay with me while I work on their return, at least every year or so, but they usually end up seeing the advantage of having more than five minutes of communication with their tax preparer, and I often end up extricating some information from them that is helpful or needed in tax return preparation or tax planning.

              I know that many practitioners follow the "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" method of return preparation -- send out a 30-page organizer for the client to spend two hours completing before sending it back for 15 minutes of data entry. If it's not in the organizer, it's not on the return. These are the clients, however, who are figuring out that TurboTax is just a $30 organizer, with the added advantage of allowing the user to play around with the numbers until the desired refund is reached.

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                #22
                Money is not part of the reason,

                but I like e-filing and I usually require it. I don't get many returns that are ineligible for this service. The main reason I like it is that the return I prepare is the return that ends up in the government computer. I have had paper returns that got letters because of keying errors made when the agencies had paper returns. I have also had cases where supposedly I left off a W2 or other document showing withholding when I assembled a paper return. I've obviously have had problems with returns that got e-filed but as far as I know the problems were not caused by the e-filing. On the other hand, my clients are not the RAL crowd so I don't especially have my clients demanding e-filing.

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                  #23
                  Discounts are nice, but

                  this is the first time in many years that I'm going to pass up the discounts in order to delay the purchase decision until it absolutely has to be made. Given a software price of $1,000 to $2,000 and the uncertainty surrounding ATX, I think I'm going to plan to spend the extra $100 - $200 to keep my options open until the last possible minute. A wrong decision could cost a lot more in wasted time than the foregone discount.
                  "The only function of economic forecasting is to make astrology look respectful" - John Kenneth Galbraith

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                    #24
                    Originally posted by OldJack View Post
                    Personally, I have refused to e-file tax returns as filing client tax returns is not my responsibility and my clients are not the type that care or request e-filing anyway.
                    We don't have a choice in Minnesota. It is mandated here by the State.

                    I was like you. I refused to e-file, until I was forced to. Now that Mommy State made me eat my peas, I rather like them. If I now had the choice again, I would stick with e-filing.

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                      #25
                      Love efling

                      I love electronically filing tax returns. When I started out I filed direct with the IRS and then when Taxslayer Pro offered efling free I filed through them.

                      I feel like I am giving my clients the best possible service when I electronically file their returns. The paper return that I give them is exactly what the IRS receives. No keypunch errors. The client knows that the return has reached the IRS. No more wondering if it got lost in the mail. They get their refunds faster through efiling and direct deposit. If they owe money, the return is at least filed and they only have to remember to mail the payment in.They have the option to pay when they file also.

                      I know it is their responsibility to send it in but if with so little effort I can help them with that part too, I am glad to do it. I haven't had anyone refuse electronic filing when I explain the benefits.

                      Linda F

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                        #26
                        [QUOTE=Bees Knees;37320]We don't have a choice in Minnesota. It is mandated here by the State. QUOTE]

                        But you do have a choice. You can pay $5 per paper return, instead. I think that's illegal, but there are enough good Germans in Minnesota that they will follow their marching orders. (My father, of German heritage, grew up near International Falls and later, Bemidji.)

                        My estimate is that it would cost $15 of my time to do the clerical work for e-filing. If my clients don't want to pay another $5 to file a paper return, I'm looking for a way to reduce my workload anyway.

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                          #27
                          Originally posted by Bees Knees View Post
                          We don't have a choice in Minnesota. It is mandated here by the State.

                          I was like you. I refused to e-file, until I was forced to. Now that Mommy State made me eat my peas, I rather like them. If I now had the choice again, I would stick with e-filing.
                          So what would Mommy State do if you sent them a paper tax return? And if the taxpayer sent them a self-prepared paper tax return?

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                            #28
                            I haven't had anyone refuse electronic filing when I explain the benefits.
                            Do you mention the benefit of the irs agent going through their file during an efile audit of your office?
                            "Taxation is the price we pay for failing to build a civilized society." ~ Mark Skousen

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                              #29
                              Originally posted by Anarchrist View Post
                              Do you mention the benefit of the irs agent going through their file during an efile audit of your office?
                              Would you care to elaborate on this observation?
                              Only in government or politics is a "cut in spending" really an increase. It's just not as much of an increase as they wanted it to be, therefore a "cut".

                              Comment


                                #30
                                Customer PR

                                Originally posted by OldJack View Post

                                I find that clients are happy with my service when I take a few minutes to sit down and review the tax return with them, show them where to sign, and offer suggestions on tax planning for the next year. Those few minutes makes your higher fee worth more...
                                I do it this way too and it works just fine except I feel like a psychiatrist/bartender sometimes, as they frequently take that few minutes (or sometimes 30) to tell me their problems: money, kids (that's a big one), or the gory details of their operation, occasionably (and regrettably) including a viewing of the scar.

                                In Re: efiling -- I agree with Linda, I want to help them if I can, but 30+ years have taught me that you can't give people too much credit or credit where it's not due -- if there's some blame that can be cast on either you or them for mistakes and foul-ups, it'll generally (not always) be hurled your way because they're just people and this is business -- it's not social work. Like Jack, I prefer to let them mail their own stuff and if the refund doesn't show up or the check didn't get cashed, then noboby's asking me "Did you send off (efile) my tax return?" Also, there's no "tracking" (acknowledged, accepted, denied, etc.) required. If there's a problem, you can deal with it after tax season.

                                Too, as Joe said, the bigger and more complex the return, the more efile info that has to be entered, increasing the possiblity of mistakes (I'll take my chances with IRS keypunch errors--it happens, but it's rare).

                                What's driving efile from my point of view (about a third of my trade) is that many people seem to want/need their money faster nowadays. Not necessarily like RALers (who want it PDQ), but the 10-14 days direct deposit seems more "normal" to them now rather than the old IRS 4-6-8 weeks turnaround time and many are willing to pay for the extra clerical time involved.

                                Actually, this debate will probably be moot in the not-too-distant future. Everson, having correctly concluded that smaller-firm CPAs and their complex-return clients haven't the slightest interest in efile, will take off the gloves and simply mandate it for any professional doing over 100 returns; followed by phased-in reductions to zero.
                                Last edited by Black Bart; 04-26-2007, 06:18 AM.

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