Haven't Filed Yet? IRS Site Best for Free Tax Tools
Time was -- say, last year -- that a decent buck was made on the software and tools used in preparing business and personal taxes. H&R Block(HRB) , Intuit(INTU) -- heck, even Microsoft(MSFT) , made big bucks helping firms and people stay on the right side of the tax boogey man.
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| Forget QuickBooks or TurboTax. The government has all the tax tools and resources you need. |
"I think we are up to $17 billion in market cap," Scott Cook, founder and chairman of the executive committee for Intuit, told me earlier this month. "And QuickBooks will be the foundation for further growth in other products as well."
Tax prep even had a lucrative Web 2.0 spin. Startups like Wave Accounting and Xero Accounting were turning counting beans into gold. Jamie Sutherland, the president of U.S. operations for Xero, told me this week that revenues more than doubled this year from $9 million to $19 million.
"The Web changes everything," Sutherland said.
Tax prep tools would be just another booming business in the digital age, save one small fact: Every player in this bean-counting tool market now faces an unstoppable foe -- the IRS itself.
With tax time looming -- remember, you have until midnight Tuesday to file -- tax payers face a bizarre new reality: IRS.gov is the place for tax returns.
By any rational measure -- utility, breadth of product, opportunity cost, all of 'em -- IRS.gov now offers the single most powerful, easiest to use and most efficient means of filing tax returns. Period.
Lenin would have loved it.
Want to get your taxes done by April 17? Simply surf over to IRS.gov and start browsing through the ridiculously rich offering of video tutorials, e-filing options and no-cost tools. There is so much stuff here that if you learned it all you could probably pass the CPA exam.
