Analyzed: 2026-04-22
Model: OpenAI GPT-5
Prompts run:
Total responses:
Overall AI Visibility?
7
/ 100
Invisible

Geometric mean of LBA, Authority and TOM. Penalises any single weak metric.

Latent Brand Association?
26
/ 100
Category-Known

What the model believes about CrossLink without web search.

LLM Authority?
3
/ 100
Absent

Frequency × prominence across organic category prompts.

Top of Mind?
3
/ 100
Prompted-Recall-Only

Unprompted recall on high-volume discovery prompts.

Metric 1 of 3 Latent Brand Association?

Measures what GPT-5 believes about CrossLink from training alone, before any web search. We probe the model 5 times across 5 different angles and score 5 sub-signals.

LBA Score
26/100
Category-Known
Quality?
0.59
Meta-factor?
0.84
Familiarity?
0.48
Top associations for CrossLink
unclear which CrossLink 2 less expensive than enterprise suites 2 lower brand recognition 2 slow customer support 2 connectivity services 1 needs product-category context 1 depends on the industry 1 multiple brands and companies 1 communications context 1 software context 1 financial context 1 business services 1 account change difficulties 1 tax preparation software 1 CrossLink Professional Tax Solutions 1
Control prompt (category baseline)
finds deductions and credits 2 user-friendly tax guidance 1 helps calculate taxes 1 fills out tax forms 1 calculates taxes accurately 1 tax preparation software 1 supports e-filing 1 helps find credits 1 helps find deductions 1 automatically calculates returns 1

High overlap with brand prompts shows CrossLink is firmly in the model's "tax preparation software" category.

Sample model responses
Prompt: What is CrossLink known for?

CrossLink is generally known as a business/technology brand associated with connectivity and linking solutions, rather than a consumer product brand.

Iteration: 1 of 5
Prompt: What is CrossLink known for?

CrossLink is a name used by multiple companies, so I’m not sure which one you mean. If you mean CrossLink Professional Tax Solutions, it’s known for tax preparation software.

Iteration: 2 of 5

Metric 2 of 3 LLM Authority?

Frequency × prominence across organic category prompts where users ask category questions and AI recommends brands. Measured both with and without web search, then averaged 50/50.

Authority Score
3/100
Absent
Recall mode (no web)?
0

What the model recalls from training without searching the web.

Retrieval mode (with web)?
0

What the model returns when it can search live web sources.

IntentPromptRecall pos.Retrieval pos.
discovery What is the best tax preparation software for freelancers? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What tax software works best for gig workers? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What is the best tax preparation software for small businesses? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What tax software is best for sole proprietors? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What is the best tax filing software for landlords? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What tax preparation software is best for families with dependents? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What is the best tax software for people with investments? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What tax software is best for itemized deductions? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best tax preparation tools for W-2 employees? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What tax software is best for people with multiple income sources? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What is the best tax preparation software for filing jointly? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What tax software is best for first-time filers? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What is the best tax preparation software for handling state returns? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What tax software is best for maximizing refunds? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What tax preparation software is best for tax extensions? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What tax software is best for filing from a Mac? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What tax preparation software is best for mobile filing? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What tax software is best for secure document upload? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best tax software options for handling contractor income? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What tax preparation software is best for complex returns? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to premium tax preparation software? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to leading tax filing software? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison How does online tax software compare with desktop tax software? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to full-service tax software? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which tax preparation software alternatives are best for self-employed users? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to simple tax filing software? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What tax software alternatives are best for small businesses? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison How do cloud tax software options compare to downloadable tax software? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to free tax preparation software? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which tax software alternatives are better for advanced tax situations? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I file my taxes online without making mistakes? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How can I prepare my tax return faster? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I e-file my taxes from home? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I calculate my tax refund before filing? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I report freelance income on my taxes? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I file a simple tax return myself? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I claim deductions correctly when doing my taxes? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I handle both federal and state tax returns? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I import my tax forms into tax software? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I file taxes if I have multiple income sources? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional How much does tax preparation software usually cost? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Is there free tax preparation software for simple returns? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What tax preparation software has the cheapest paid plan? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Do tax software options include free e-filing? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What is the best value tax filing software? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Are there tax software options with a free version? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What tax software is worth paying for? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Which tax preparation software offers the best price for self-employed filers? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional How much is tax software for small businesses? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What tax software includes free state filing? not mentioned not mentioned
Sample responses

Metric 3 of 3 Top of Mind?

Unprompted recall on 15 high-volume discovery prompts, run 5 times each in pure recall mode (no web). Brands that surface here are baked into the model's training, not borrowed from live search.

TOM Score
3/100
Prompted-Recall-Only
Discovery promptVolumeAppearedPositions (5 runs)
What are the best tax preparation software options for individuals? 0 0/5
What are the top tax preparation software brands for filing taxes online? 40 0/5
What tax preparation software do most people recommend? 90 0/5
Which tax preparation software is best for easy e-filing? 30 0/5
What is the most recommended tax filing software for small business owners? 1,300 0/5
What are the best online tax preparation tools? 10 0/5
Which tax software is easiest for beginners to use? 0 0/5
What are the most popular tax software options this year? 0 0/5
What is the best software for doing your taxes at home? 170 0/5
What tax preparation software is best for simple returns? 0 0/5
Which tax software brands are worth considering? 0 0/5
What are the best tax software choices for filing federal and state returns? 40 0/5
What tax preparation software is best for self-employed people? 480 0/5
What are the top-rated tax preparation programs? 110 0/5
Which tax software is best for a fast tax return process? 0 0/5
Sample recall responses

What to do next Recommendations for CrossLink

Generated automatically from gaps and weaknesses in the analysis above, ranked by potential impact on the AI Visibility Score.

Build foundational authoritative coverage

Your LBA is low. The model has limited or no specific beliefs about your brand. Focus on authoritative third-party coverage: Wikipedia, industry-specific publications, founder interviews on podcasts with transcripts, and "best of" list articles.

+10 to +25 on LBA over 12-24 months

Enter the category conversation

Your Authority is low across category queries. Users asking about your category do not see you. Priority: get listed in "best of" and "top N" articles for your category on domains with strong training-data crawl presence.

+10 to +25 on Authority

Enter the model's competitive set

The model knows your brand when asked directly (LBA > 0) but never volunteers you in category queries. You are outside the model's go-to list. Co-mention density with established category leaders is the single biggest lever: get listed in "Top 10 X" articles alongside the brands the model currently names.

+10 to +30 on TOM over 12-18 months

How is this calculated? Methodology

Every score on this page is reproducible. Below is exactly what we ran and how we computed each number.

Overall AI Visibility Score
Smoothed geometric mean of LBA, Authority and TOM. Authority and TOM are floored at LBA × 0.1 before the geometric mean (the same floor used in the per-metric cards above, so brand cards and the composite tell the same story). Formula: composite = ((LBA + 5)(Authority + 5)(TOM + 5))^(1/3) - 5. The floor keeps brands the model clearly recognises but doesn't yet recommend from collapsing to zero, while a single genuinely weak metric still pulls the composite down. Full methodology.
Latent Brand Association (LBA)
5 brand probes + 1 control prompt, each run 5 times in recall mode (no web search). LBA = quality × meta × stability × share × recognition × 100. Each sub-signal is on a 0-1 scale. Read the full LBA methodology →
LLM Authority
50 organic category prompts (discovery, comparison, problem and transactional intents), each run once in recall mode and once in retrieval mode. Score = frequency × log-decayed prominence × intent weight, then 50/50 averaged across the two modes. Prompts are shared across all brands in the industry. Read the full Authority methodology →
Top of Mind (TOM)
15 high-volume discovery prompts (sourced from Keywords Everywhere search-volume data), each run 5 times in pure recall mode (no web). Score = frequency × (0.5 + 0.5 × log-prominence), volume-weighted. Prompts are shared across all brands in the industry. Read the full TOM methodology →

Analysis run on April 22, 2026 at 8:45 PM

All 210 AI responses for CrossLink

Click a prompt to expand its responses. 210 total responses across 72 prompts.

LBA — Latent Brand Association (6 prompts)

What is CrossLink known for?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

CrossLink is generally known as a business/technology brand associated with connectivity and linking solutions, rather than a consumer product brand.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

CrossLink is a name used by multiple companies, so I’m not sure which one you mean. If you mean CrossLink Professional Tax Solutions, it’s known for tax preparation software.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

CrossLink is most commonly known as a technology/solutions brand associated with connectivity and business services, especially in financial, software, or communications contexts. If you mean a specific CrossLink company, I can narrow it down.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

CrossLink” is a name used by multiple brands and companies, so it depends on which one you mean. If you share the industry or product category, I can narrow it down.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

CrossLink is generally known for connectivity and integration solutions that help link systems, people, or devices together.

What are CrossLink's main strengths and weaknesses?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

CrossLink’s main strengths are usually its practical, B2B-focused offering, reliability, and ability to streamline connectivity/workflow for customers that need a straightforward solution. It’s often seen as more functional than flashy, which can be a plus for users who value efficiency and consistency.

Its main weaknesses are typically lower brand awareness, less differentiation than bigger competitors, and a more niche appeal. Depending on the specific product line, it may also be perceived as having fewer advanced features, less polish, or a smaller ecosystem than leading alternatives.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Assuming you mean CrossLink as a business/technology brand, its main strengths are usually: strong specialization, reliable cross-system integration/connection, and a practical, efficiency-focused value proposition. Its main weaknesses are often: limited brand awareness versus larger competitors, a narrower product/service scope, and less differentiation if the market is crowded. If you meant a different CrossLink, tell me which one and I can tailor it.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

I’m not sure which CrossLink you mean—there are multiple companies and products with that name. If you mean a specific CrossLink brand, tell me the industry or full company name and I’ll summarize its main strengths and weaknesses.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

I’m not sure which CrossLink brand you mean, since several companies use that name. In general, brands called CrossLink tend to be seen as strong on connectivity/integration, practicality, and niche expertise, with weaknesses often around lower mainstream awareness, limited product breadth, and uneven support depending on the specific company. If you tell me the exact CrossLink (industry or country), I can be more precise.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

I’m not sure which CrossLink brand you mean, since there are multiple companies/products with that name. In general, brands called CrossLink tend to be strongest in integration/connectivity, B2B utility, and reliability, while common weaknesses are lower name recognition, narrower niche appeal, and less consumer-facing brand polish. If you want, I can narrow it down for a specific CrossLink.

Who should use CrossLink? Who should avoid it?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

If you mean the CrossLink software/platform: it’s a good fit for organizations or professionals who need a robust, more advanced workflow with integrations and structured processes. Avoid it if you want something very simple, low-cost, or only need basic features. If you mean a different CrossLink product, tell me which one and I’ll tailor the answer.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

I’m not sure which CrossLink you mean—there are multiple products with that name. If you share the manufacturer or product type, I can tell you who should use it and who should avoid it.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

I’m not sure which CrossLink brand/product you mean—there are multiple. If you tell me the category (for example: software, lenses, supplement, etc.), I can tell you who should use it and who should avoid it.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

If you mean the CrossLink treatment for corneal collagen cross-linking: it’s generally for people with progressive keratoconus or corneal thinning/ectasia. It should be avoided by people with active eye infection or inflammation, very thin corneas beyond the safe limit, significant corneal scarring, or anyone who hasn’t been cleared by an eye specialist. If you meant a different CrossLink brand/product, tell me which one and I’ll tailor the advice.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

If you mean CrossLink as a branded health/medical product, it should be used only by people it was specifically recommended or prescribed for and only for the condition it’s intended to treat. It should be avoided by anyone with a known allergy to its ingredients, anyone with a medical condition or medication that could conflict, and anyone who hasn’t been advised to use it by a clinician. If you tell me which CrossLink product you mean, I can be more specific.

How does CrossLink compare to its main competitors?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

If you mean CrossLink tax software, it’s generally seen as a mid-market/independent tax prep platform that competes mainly on price and simplicity.

  • Versus UltraTax / Lacerte: CrossLink is usually less expensive and easier to adopt, but those competitors tend to have broader enterprise features, deeper automation, and stronger scalability for larger firms.
  • Versus Drake: CrossLink is often considered more polished in workflow, while Drake is usually known for very low cost and strong value.
  • Versus ProSeries / ATX: CrossLink can be attractive if you want a lighter, more straightforward system, but those products may offer wider brand recognition and ecosystem integration.

Bottom line: CrossLink is typically a good fit for firms that want a practical, cost-conscious tax prep system without the complexity or price of top-tier enterprise suites. It may lag competitors in advanced automation, integrations, and large-firm scalability.

If you meant a different CrossLink brand, tell me the industry and I’ll compare that one instead.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

If you mean CrossLink tax software, it generally compares as a mid-market, high-volume, user-friendly option.

  • Versus Drake: CrossLink is usually more office/workflow oriented and easier for multi-preparer tax shops; Drake is often cheaper and very popular with smaller firms.
  • Versus ProSeries / UltraTax: CrossLink is typically simpler and less expensive, but those competitors usually have deeper enterprise features, broader integrations, and stronger brand recognition.
  • Versus ATX: CrossLink is often seen as more streamlined and stable for tax-office operations, while ATX can appeal to users wanting a broader product suite.

Overall: CrossLink is strongest for firms that want speed, workflow, and value rather than the most feature-heavy enterprise platform.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

I’m not sure which CrossLink you mean—there are multiple brands and companies with that name. If you tell me the industry or full company name, I can compare it with its main competitors.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

If you mean CrossLink tax software, it generally competes as a lower-cost, utility-first professional tax prep platform. Compared with major rivals like Drake, ProSeries, Lacerte, UltraTax, and ATX, CrossLink is usually seen as:

  • Strong on price/value for small to mid-sized tax offices
  • Easier to adopt for firms that want core prep, e-filing, and workflow without paying for a premium suite
  • Less feature-rich than higher-end platforms like Lacerte or UltraTax in advanced automation, analytics, and large-firm workflows
  • Less widely adopted than Drake or ProSeries, so third-party ecosystem and brand recognition can be smaller

In short: CrossLink is often a good budget-conscious option for smaller firms, while the bigger competitors tend to win on depth, integrations, and enterprise-grade capabilities.

If you meant a different CrossLink, tell me which one and I’ll compare that version specifically.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

I’m not sure which “CrossLink” you mean—there are multiple products/companies with that name. If you tell me the industry or exact company, I can compare it to its main competitors.

What do people typically complain about with CrossLink?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

People commonly complain about CrossLink-type services for things like slow or unhelpful customer support, billing issues, service reliability/outages, and difficulty canceling or getting problems resolved. If you mean a specific CrossLink company, I can narrow it down.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

People typically complain about CrossLink being clunky or outdated to use, having a steep learning curve, occasional bugs/integration issues, and slow or inconsistent customer support. Some also mention pricing/licensing costs as a downside.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

People typically complain about CrossLink’s customer support, billing issues, and occasional reliability/performance problems. Some also mention that setup can be confusing and the interface/features feel limited.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

People typically complain about CrossLink’s customer support, software bugs/glitches, and the interface being confusing or dated. Pricing and occasional performance/login issues also come up a lot.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

If you mean the CrossLink service/company, the most common complaints are usually about slow or unhelpful customer support, billing/fee surprises, inconsistent service reliability, and difficult cancellation or account changes.

What is a typical tax preparation software known for? control
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

Typical tax preparation software is known for helping individuals and businesses calculate taxes, find deductions and credits, and e-file returns more easily and accurately.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

It’s typically known for helping people quickly prepare, organize, and file tax returns, often with guided interviews, error checks, and calculations to maximize deductions and refunds.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

A typical tax preparation software is known for guiding users through tax filing, automatically calculating returns, helping find deductions/credits, and supporting e-filing.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

A typical tax preparation software is known for helping individuals and businesses calculate taxes, fill out tax forms, find deductions or credits, and e-file returns more easily and accurately.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

A typical tax preparation software is known for making it easier to file taxes accurately, guide users through deductions and credits, calculate returns, and often let them e-file directly.

Authority — LLM Authority (50 prompts)

What is the best tax preparation software for freelancers? discovery 70/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

For most freelancers, TurboTax Self-Employed is the best overall choice.

Best picks
  • Best overall: TurboTax Self-Employed
    • Strongest for 1099 income, deductions, Schedule C, mileage, and self-employment tax
    • Very guided and easy to use
  • Best cheaper alternative: H&R Block Premium & Self-Employed
    • Good interface, solid tax help, usually less expensive than TurboTax
  • Best budget option: FreeTaxUSA Self-Employed
    • Very low cost, supports freelancer filings well
    • Less polished, but great value
  • Best for more complex freelance taxes: TaxAct Self-Employed
    • Good if you want solid self-employed support without paying top-tier prices
Quick recommendation
  • If you want the easiest and most reliable: TurboTax Self-Employed
  • If you want good but cheaper: H&R Block Self-Employed
  • If you want lowest price: FreeTaxUSA

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of use, or best for W-2 + freelance income.

retrieval Not mentioned

For most freelancers, I’d pick TurboTax Do It Yourself Premium as the best overall if you want the smoothest self-serve experience: it covers self-employment, imports/snap-fills 1099-NEC/1099-K info, searches 450+ deductions and credits, and includes AI-powered help. It’s also pricier than the budget options. (turbotax.intuit.com)

Best budget pick: FreeTaxUSA — federal filing is free, and it includes Schedule C/self-employment forms; state returns cost extra. (freetaxusa.com)

Best for more hand-holding: H&R Block Self-Employed Online — strong if you want unlimited expert help plus AI Tax Assist while filing Schedule C/self-employed taxes. (hrblock.com)

Good middle ground: TaxAct Self Employed — built for freelancers/contractors, includes write-off help and step-by-step guidance, with upfront pricing. (taxact.com)

If you want, I can also give you the best choice by budget or by whether you get 1099s, mileage, or lots of expenses.

What tax software works best for gig workers? discovery 20/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

For most gig workers, the best pick is TurboTax Self-Employed if you want the easiest all-in-one experience.

Top options:

  • TurboTax Self-Employed — best overall for freelancers, rideshare drivers, delivery workers; strong Schedule C help, mileage tracking, and deduction prompts.
  • H&R Block Self-Employed — usually a bit cheaper than TurboTax and solid if you want in-person help too.
  • TaxAct Self-Employed — good budget option for straightforward 1099 income.
  • FreeTaxUSA — best low-cost choice if your taxes are simple and you’re comfortable doing more yourself.

If you do a lot of mileage/expenses:

  • TurboTax Self-Employed + QuickBooks Self-Employed
  • Keeper Tax or Everlance for mileage and deduction tracking

Best overall recommendation:

  • TurboTax Self-Employed for ease and accuracy
  • FreeTaxUSA if you want the cheapest solid option

If you want, I can also recommend the best one based on whether you do Uber/Lyft, DoorDash, Instacart, freelancing, or side-hustle sales.

retrieval Not mentioned

For most gig workers:

  • Best overall: TurboTax Premium / Self-Employed — strongest guided experience for Schedule C, multiple 1099s, and self-employment tax calculations. (blog.turbotax.intuit.com)
  • Best if you want in-person or pro help: H&R Block Self-Employed Online — DIY filing plus optional tax pro review, and it supports multiple 1099s and gig income. (hrblock.com)
  • Best value: FreeTaxUSA — federal filing is free, it supports freelancers/contractors/gig workers and Schedule C, and state returns are $15.99. (freetaxusa.com)
  • Solid budget option: TaxAct Self Employed — built for contract, freelance, and rideshare work, with deduction help for mileage and supplies. (taxact.com)

My short recommendation:

  • If your taxes are messy: TurboTax
  • If you want human backup: H&R Block
  • If you want to save money: FreeTaxUSA

If you want, I can also rank these by price, ease of use, or best for DoorDash/Uber/Etsy creators.

What is the best tax preparation software for small businesses? discovery 1,300/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

For most small businesses, TurboTax Business is the easiest “best overall” pick for filing business returns.

Best options by use case:

  • Best overall: TurboTax Business — very user-friendly for LLCs, S-corps, partnerships, and C-corps.
  • Best value: TaxAct Business — solid features at a lower price.
  • Best if you already use bookkeeping software: Intuit QuickBooks + TurboTax Business — smoothest workflow.
  • Best for hands-on help: H&R Block Premium & Business — good if you want in-person or expert support.
  • Best for tax pros / more complex filings: Drake Tax or Lacerte.

My quick recommendation:

  • If you want the simplest option: TurboTax Business
  • If you want cheaper but capable: TaxAct Business

If you tell me your business type (LLC, S-corp, partnership, etc.), I can narrow it to the best one.

retrieval Not mentioned

Best overall for most small businesses: H&R Block Premium & Business — especially if you want personal + business taxes in one place, plus AI help and optional pro support. H&R Block also says its small-business filing is best for many entity types, including S corps, C corps, and LLCs. (hrblock.com)

Best if you have a partnership / S corp / multi-member LLC: TurboTax Business — it’s built for S-corps, partnerships, C-corps, multi-member LLCs, and trusts, and includes e-file support and W-2/1099 tools. (turbotax.intuit.com)

Best budget option: TaxAct — it’s positioned as an affordable business-tax option and offers online filing for SMB returns, including C-corps, S-corps, and partnerships. (taxact.com)

My quick pick:

  • Solo proprietor / single-member LLC: H&R Block or TurboTax Self-Employed-style workflows. (hrblock.com)
  • More complex entity return: TurboTax Business or H&R Block business services. (turbotax.intuit.com)
  • Lowest cost: TaxAct. (taxact.com)

If you tell me your business structure (sole prop, LLC, S corp, etc.), I’ll give you the single best choice.

What tax software is best for sole proprietors? discovery 70/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

For most sole proprietors, the best all-around pick is TurboTax Self-Employed.

Best choices by need:

  • Best overall: TurboTax Self-Employed

Great for Schedule C, mileage, home office, 1099 income, and guidance is very polished.

  • Best value: FreeTaxUSA

Much cheaper, supports sole proprietor/business returns well, but less hand-holding.

  • Best if you want in-person help: H&R Block Self-Employed

Good balance of software + local office support.

  • Best for price-conscious filers with business deductions: TaxAct Self-Employed

Solid features, usually cheaper than TurboTax.

If you’re very simple (just 1099 income, few deductions), FreeTaxUSA is hard to beat. If you want the easiest experience, go with TurboTax Self-Employed.

If you want, I can also give you the best tax software based on your exact situation (1099s, home office, mileage, sales tax, state filing, etc.).

retrieval Not mentioned

For most sole proprietors, FreeTaxUSA is the best pick if you want the cheapest solid option: federal filing is free, it supports Schedule C/self-employment income, and state filing is $15.99. (freetaxusa.com)

If you want the best guided experience, go with TurboTax Self-Employed / Do It Yourself Premium: it covers Schedule C and Schedule SE, and it has stronger hand-holding plus deduction-finding tools, but it costs much more (about $99 federal before state on the page I found). (turbotax.intuit.com)

If you want a middle ground, H&R Block Self-Employed is a good balance of usability and support, and it explicitly supports sole proprietors filing Schedule C; H&R Block also positions its AI Tax Assist and live expert help as part of the experience. (hrblock.com)

Quick recommendation:

  • Budget: FreeTaxUSA
  • Easiest: TurboTax
  • Best all-around balance: H&R Block (freetaxusa.com)

If you want, I can narrow it down based on your situation (1099-only, home office, mileage, inventory, or estimated payments).

What is the best tax filing software for landlords? discovery 140/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

For most landlords, TurboTax Premier is the best all-around choice.

  • Best overall: TurboTax Premier

Strong handling of Schedule E, depreciation, rental income/expenses, and K-1s. Easiest if you have one or a few rental properties.

  • Best cheaper option: FreeTaxUSA Deluxe

Much lower cost, and it supports rental property filings well. Great if you’re comfortable entering tax details yourself.

  • Best for in-person help: H&R Block Premium

Good for rental property returns and helpful if you want access to a tax pro.

  • Best for more complex rentals: TaxAct Premier

Solid for multiple properties and depreciation, often cheaper than TurboTax.

If you want the simplest answer: TurboTax Premier. If you want the best value: FreeTaxUSA Deluxe.

retrieval Not mentioned

For most landlords, TurboTax Premier is the best all-around choice: it supports Schedule E rental reporting and is built for investors/rental-property owners. (nerdwallet.com)

If you want a strong lower-cost alternative, H&R Block Premium is also solid for landlords and includes Schedule E plus depreciation tools. (hrblock.com)

If price matters most, FreeTaxUSA is the budget pick: it supports Schedule E rental income and starts with $0 federal filing, with a low-cost state return. (freetaxusa.com)

Why this matters: the IRS says rental income/expenses and depreciation are reported on Schedule E. (irs.gov)

My quick pick:

  • Best overall: TurboTax Premier
  • Best value: FreeTaxUSA
  • Best live-help option: H&R Block Premium (nerdwallet.com)

If you want, I can narrow it down based on whether you have one rental, multiple rentals, Airbnb/short-term rental, or depreciation/carryover losses.

What tax preparation software is best for families with dependents? discovery 10/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

For families with dependents, TurboTax Deluxe is usually the best overall choice.

Why it’s good for families:

  • Strong guidance for Child Tax Credit
  • Handles dependent care / child care expenses
  • Good support for earned income credit and other family credits
  • Very easy to use if your return is a bit more complex

Best alternatives:

  • H&R Block Deluxe — great if you want a cheaper, user-friendly option with in-person help available.
  • TaxAct Deluxe — solid and usually lower cost than TurboTax.
  • FreeTaxUSA — best budget pick if your return is straightforward.

My quick recommendation:

  • Best overall: TurboTax Deluxe
  • Best value: H&R Block Deluxe
  • Cheapest: FreeTaxUSA

If you want, I can also recommend the best software based on whether you have child care expenses, multiple kids, or a simple W-2 return.

retrieval Not mentioned

Best overall for families with dependents: TurboTax. It’s the strongest choice if you want the most guided, hand-holding experience for dependents, Child Tax Credit, Credit for Other Dependents, and Child and Dependent Care Credit questions. TurboTax’s own tools and articles say it walks you through dependents/credits and can also connect you to TurboTax Experts. (turbotax.intuit.com)

Best budget-friendly pick: TaxAct. Its support pages say the software automatically calculates eligible credits as you enter dependents, including the Child Tax Credit and Other Dependents Credit. (taxact.com)

Best for DIY families who still want help with care credits: TaxSlayer. It supports adding dependents directly in the return flow and has guidance for Child and Dependent Care Credit and other dependent-related forms/worksheets. (support.taxslayer.com)

If you want live human help: H&R Block is a solid pick, especially for families dealing with dependent care or older dependents. Its support and tax-center content covers Child and Dependent Care Credit and Other Dependent Credit topics, plus tax pro help. (hrblock.com)

If you want, I can give you a “best by situation” ranking for:

  • kids under 17
  • daycare expenses
  • college-age dependents
  • adult dependents/parents
What is the best tax software for people with investments? discovery 30/mo
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Best overall: TurboTax Premier It’s usually the strongest choice for people with stocks, ETFs, mutual funds, crypto, dividends, capital gains, and K-1s. It imports brokerage data well and gives the best step-by-step help for investment tax reporting.

Good alternatives:

  • H&R Block Premium & Business — great if you want a simpler interface and in-person help options.
  • TaxAct Premier — cheaper, solid for capital gains and dividends, but less polished.
  • FreeTaxUSA Deluxe — best budget option if your returns are fairly straightforward.

If you have lots of trades, options, crypto, or wash sales, TurboTax Premier is usually the safest pick.

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For most people with investments, TurboTax Premier is my pick for the best all-around software. It covers investment income and rental property owners, and it’s aimed at users with more complex returns. (turbotax.intuit.com)

Good alternatives:

  • H&R Block Premium — best if you want strong hand-holding; it supports rental income, stock/bond investments, and crypto sales, plus unlimited expert help. (hrblock.com)
  • TaxAct Premier — best budget-friendly paid option for stocks, crypto, rental income, and FBAR. (taxact.com)
  • FreeTaxUSA — best cheapest option if your investment reporting is straightforward; it supports investments, 1099-B, 1099-DIV, 1099-INT, 1099-DA, and all common tax forms for free federal filing. (freetaxusa.com)

Quick rule:

If you tell me what kind of investments you have — stocks, options, crypto, rental property, or K-1s — I can narrow it to the best specific tier.

What tax software is best for itemized deductions? discovery
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For itemized deductions, the best all-around choice is usually TurboTax Deluxe — it’s the easiest for mortgage interest, charitable donations, medical expenses, and state/local taxes (Schedule A).

Good options by need:

  • Best overall: TurboTax Deluxe
  • Best value: H&R Block Deluxe
  • Cheapest solid pick: FreeTaxUSA Deluxe
  • Best for simple itemizing on a budget: TaxAct Deluxe

Quick take:

  • TurboTax Deluxe: best guidance, easiest UX, usually most expensive
  • H&R Block Deluxe: very good interview flow, often a bit cheaper than TurboTax
  • FreeTaxUSA Deluxe: lowest cost, strong for straightforward itemized returns
  • TaxAct Deluxe: decent middle ground, less polished than the top two

If you want, I can also recommend the best one based on your deductions (mortgage, donations, property tax, medical, etc.).

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Best overall for itemized deductions: H&R Block Deluxe. It’s explicitly built for homeowners and itemizers, and H&R Block says Deluxe includes the forms and guidance for itemized deductions. (hrblock.com)

If you want the cheapest solid option, FreeTaxUSA is hard to beat: it says federal itemized deductions are free and supports Schedule A. (freetaxusa.com)

If you want the smoothest premium experience, TurboTax is also strong: it automatically compares standard vs. itemized and prepares Schedule A for you. (turbotax.intuit.com)

My pick:

  • Best overall: H&R Block Deluxe
  • Best budget: FreeTaxUSA
  • Best UX: TurboTax

If you want, I can also recommend the best one for your exact situation (mortgage interest, big charity donations, medical bills, or state taxes).

What are the best tax preparation tools for W-2 employees? discovery 50/mo
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For most W-2 employees, the best tax prep tools are:

  1. TurboTax Deluxe
    • Best overall for ease of use
    • Great if you want step-by-step guidance and support
    • Strong import tools for W-2s and common deductions
  2. H&R Block Deluxe
    • Best value for many filers
    • Very user-friendly
    • Good in-person support if you want help from a tax pro
  3. FreeTaxUSA
    • Best cheap option
    • Free federal filing for simple returns, very low-cost upgrades
    • Solid for straightforward W-2 situations
  4. Cash App Taxes
    • Best truly free option
    • Free federal and state filing
    • Works well for simple W-2 returns, but fewer bells and whistles
  5. TaxAct Deluxe
    • Good budget-friendly paid option
    • Easy enough for W-2 filers
    • Often cheaper than TurboTax

My quick recommendation:

  • Simplest free filing: Cash App Taxes
  • Best overall experience: TurboTax Deluxe
  • Best low-cost paid option: FreeTaxUSA

If you want, I can also give you the best choice based on whether you have one W-2, a 1099 side gig, or itemized deductions.

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For most W-2 employees with a simple return, the best options are:

  • IRS Free File — best if you qualify by income; free federal filing, and some partners include state for free too. For 2025 returns, eligible taxpayers with AGI up to $89,000 can use a free guided option. (irs.gov)
  • Cash App Taxes — best truly free option; it says federal and state filing are free for all users. (cash.app)
  • FreeTaxUSA — best low-cost pick; federal is free and state is $15.99. (freetaxusa.com)
  • H&R Block Free Online — good if you want a well-known brand and simple W-2 filing; H&R Block says its free online option is designed for simple tax situations, including W-2 employees. (hrblock.com)
  • TurboTax Free Edition — good if you want a polished guided experience; TurboTax says its Free Edition is $0 federal, $0 state, $0 to file for qualifying simple returns. (turbotax.intuit.com)

If you want the best overall value, I’d rank them:

  1. Cash App Taxes
  2. FreeTaxUSA
  3. IRS Free File (if eligible)
  4. H&R Block Free Online
  5. TurboTax Free Edition

If you want, I can also give you the best one based on your exact situation (single, married, state tax, kids, home, student, etc.).

What tax software is best for people with multiple income sources? discovery
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For multiple income sources, the best all-around pick is usually TurboTax Premier.

Why it’s good:

  • Handles W-2s, 1099-NEC, 1099-K, freelance income, dividends, crypto, rental income, and investments
  • Strong import tools and guided interview
  • Best if your finances are a bit messy or you want the smoothest experience

Good alternatives:

  • H&R Block Premium — very solid for mixed income, especially if you want easier in-person help options
  • TaxAct Deluxe/Premier — usually cheaper, good for straightforward multiple-income returns
  • FreeTaxUSA — best budget option if you’re comfortable doing a bit more yourself

Quick recommendation:

  • Best overall: TurboTax Premier
  • Best value: H&R Block Premium
  • Best cheap option: FreeTaxUSA

If you tell me your income sources (W-2, freelance, rental, investments, crypto, etc.), I can point you to the best exact version.

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For multiple income sources, my best pick is TurboTax Premium if you want the smoothest guided experience for W-2s plus investments, freelance/1099 work, crypto, and rental income. TurboTax says Premium covers self-employment and investment income, including stocks, crypto, bonds, ESPPs, and rental property income. (turbotax.intuit.com)

If you want best value, go with FreeTaxUSA. Its official site says the free federal return includes premium/self-employed forms, including investments, rental income, self-employment, and K-1s, with state returns priced separately. (freetaxusa.com)

A strong middle-ground choice is H&R Block Premium if you want a simpler UI and in-product tax help; H&R Block says Premium covers investors and rental income, and tax help is included in Premium and Self-Employed DIY products. (hrblock.com)

Quick rule:

If you tell me your income types (W-2, 1099, stocks, rental, crypto, K-1, etc.), I can narrow it to the best exact plan.

What is the best tax preparation software for filing jointly? discovery
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For married filing jointly, the best all-around pick is usually TurboTax Premier (or TurboTax Deluxe if your return is simpler).

Why it’s the best:

  • Very easy joint return workflow
  • Strong guidance for couples with mixed income, deductions, and investments
  • Best-in-class interview-style interface
  • Good import support for W-2s, 1099s, and prior-year returns

Good alternatives:

  • H&R Block Deluxe — usually cheaper, still very solid, especially if you want in-person help as an option
  • TaxAct Deluxe — good value if you’re comfortable doing more yourself
  • FreeTaxUSA — best low-cost option for simple joint returns
  • Cash App Taxes — free, but less polished and not ideal for more complex situations

My quick recommendation:

  • Best overall: TurboTax Premier
  • Best value: H&R Block Deluxe
  • Best free option: FreeTaxUSA

If you want, I can also recommend the best one based on whether you have kids, investments, a house, self-employment, or just W-2 income.

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For most couples filing married filing jointly, my pick is FreeTaxUSA for best value: it supports filing jointly, and federal returns are always free with state returns $15.99. (freetaxusa.com)

If you want the best guided experience, choose TurboTax; its DIY options are more expensive, with paid tiers and state added on, and its Free Edition is limited to simple Form 1040 returns. (turbotax.intuit.com)

If you want a strong middle ground with human help included in higher tiers, H&R Block is solid; its online products include tax help in Deluxe/Premium/Self-Employed, and its state pricing is more transparent than many competitors. (hrblock.com)

Bottom line:

If you want, I can also recommend the best one for a simple W-2 joint return vs a joint return with investments/self-employment.

What tax software is best for first-time filers? discovery
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For most first-time filers, the best pick is FreeTaxUSA — it’s cheap, easy to follow, and good for simple returns.

Best overall for first-timers:

  • FreeTaxUSA — best value, straightforward, federal filing is free

If you want the easiest interface:

  • TurboTax Deluxe — very polished and beginner-friendly, but usually pricier

Good free option if your return is simple:

  • H&R Block Free Online — solid UI, good for basic W-2 returns

Quick recommendation:

  • Simple W-2 only: FreeTaxUSA
  • Want the smoothest guided experience: TurboTax Deluxe
  • Want a free mainstream option: H&R Block Free Online

If you want, I can also tell you which one is best for your exact situation (student, W-2, freelancer, dependents, etc.).

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Best overall for first-time filers: H&R Block. It’s very beginner-friendly, and it offers live expert help/chat plus a free option for simple returns. (hrblock.com)

If you want the cheapest option, I’d pick FreeTaxUSA for most straightforward filers: federal filing is free, and state returns are $15.99. (freetaxusa.com)

If you qualify for IRS Free File, that’s also excellent for first-timers because it gives free guided software through partner companies; for 2026, the IRS says eligible taxpayers with AGI of $89,000 or less in 2025 can use it. (irs.gov)

Quick recommendation:

  • Most hand-holding: H&R Block
  • Best value: FreeTaxUSA
  • Best if you qualify: IRS Free File
  • Potentially free for new users: TurboTax, but the free offer is more limited and tied to specific app/file conditions. (forbes.com)

If you tell me whether you only have a W-2, a 1099, or student income, I can point you to the best exact option.

What is the best tax preparation software for handling state returns? discovery
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Best overall for state returns: TurboTax

Why:

  • Strongest state-return support and guidance
  • Best for handling multiple states, move states, or messy state deductions/credits
  • Very polished interview-style workflow, so it’s hard to miss state-specific questions

Best value: H&R Block

  • Usually easier on the wallet than TurboTax
  • Very solid state-return handling
  • Good if you want in-person help or a hybrid online + office option

Best budget option: FreeTaxUSA

  • Great if your federal return is simple
  • Cheap state filing
  • Best value if you don’t need lots of hand-holding

My quick pick:

  • Most reliable for state returns: TurboTax
  • Best balance of price + quality: H&R Block
  • Cheapest decent option: FreeTaxUSA

If you want, I can recommend the best one based on your state and whether you have W-2 only, self-employment, investments, or multiple states.

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Best overall for state returns: H&R Block. It has strong state-return support, clear pricing, and handles most nonresident/part-year returns for many states. It also includes guided help and higher-tier plans with state e-file included. (hrblock.com)

Best budget pick: FreeTaxUSA. Federal filing is free, and state returns are a flat $15.99. (freetaxusa.com)

If you want the most polished experience: TurboTax is very good, but its paid plans usually add state as an extra cost. (turbotax.intuit.com)

If you want, I can narrow it down for simple W-2 returns, multi-state returns, or self-employed filing.

What tax software is best for maximizing refunds? discovery
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If your goal is maximizing a refund, the best tax software is usually the one with the best interview flow + deduction finder + audit support.

Top picks:

  • TurboTax Deluxe / Premium — best overall for most people, strongest “guided” experience and deduction prompts.
  • H&R Block Deluxe / Premium — very good at finding deductions, often a bit cheaper than TurboTax.
  • TaxAct Deluxe — solid for maximizing refund on a budget.
  • FreeTaxUSA — best low-cost option if your return is fairly simple; surprisingly good, but less polished.

Best choice by situation:

  • Simple W-2 return: FreeTaxUSA or TurboTax Deluxe
  • Homeowner / itemizing / kids / credits: H&R Block Deluxe or TurboTax Deluxe
  • Self-employed / freelance: TurboTax Premium or H&R Block Premium
  • Lowest price: FreeTaxUSA

My short answer: If you want the highest chance of squeezing out every deduction, go with TurboTax Deluxe or H&R Block Premium.

If you want, I can recommend the best one for your exact tax situation (W-2, kids, home, stocks, freelance, etc.).

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If your goal is the biggest legal refund, the software won’t magically change your refund amount — the same facts should produce the same result across providers. The difference is how well the software helps you find credits/deductions and how much guidance you want. (nerdwallet.com)

My pick:

  • TurboTax — best if you want the most hand-holding and deduction/credit guidance; Forbes says it “scans for 350+ deductions and credits” and NerdWallet praises its interview-style UX and final-review support. (forbes.com)
  • FreeTaxUSA — best value if you’re comfortable doing the return yourself; Kiplinger ranked it best overall and notes the price stays flat even for more complex forms. (kiplinger.com)
  • H&R Block — best if you want in-person or pro help; NerdWallet and Forbes both highlight its strong tax-pro support and office network. (nerdwallet.com)
  • Cash App Taxes — best for a simple free return; Forbes says it’s free for federal and state filing, but support is limited. (forbes.com)

Quick rule:

  • Complex return / want maximum guidance: TurboTax
  • Simple return / want to save money: FreeTaxUSA
  • Want a human to review it: H&R Block
  • Very simple W-2 return: Cash App Taxes (nerdwallet.com)

If you want, I can narrow it down to the best one for your situation (W-2 only, self-employed, investments, rental, student, etc.).

What tax preparation software is best for tax extensions? discovery
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For individual tax extensions (Form 4868), the best pick is usually:

TurboTax

  • Easiest for most people
  • Strong guided extension filing
  • Good if you’ll later file the full return in the same app

Good alternatives:

  • H&R Block — great if you want in-person support later
  • TaxAct — solid, usually cheaper
  • FreeTaxUSA — best low-cost option for extension + return filing

My quick recommendation:

  • Best overall: TurboTax
  • Best budget: FreeTaxUSA

If you want, I can also rank them for price, ease of use, or state extension support.

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Best overall for tax extensions: FreeTaxUSA — it lets you file Form 4868 for free, and you can come back later and finish your return in the same account. It’s the best value if you just need an extension and don’t want to pay for software. (freetaxusa.com)

Best for the easiest guided experience: TurboTax — it has a dedicated Easy Extension flow, email confirmation when accepted, and it also handles business extensions. Good if you want the smoothest UX and don’t mind paying if your return requires a paid TurboTax product. (turbotax.intuit.com)

Best if you want strong state-extension help: H&R Block — its online program can file Form 4868 electronically and says it will help with state extension forms when needed. (hrblock.com)

My short pick:

If you want, I can also rank them for simple W-2 returns, self-employed, or state tax extensions.

What tax software is best for filing from a Mac? discovery 10/mo
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Best overall for a Mac: TurboTax Online or TurboTax for Mac — it has the smoothest Mac experience, best guidance, and strong support.

Good alternatives:

  • H&R Block Tax Software — solid Mac app, usually cheaper than TurboTax
  • TaxAct — good value if your return is straightforward
  • FreeTaxUSA — best budget pick; works well in a browser on Mac
  • Cash App Taxes — free, but less robust for complicated returns

My quick pick:

  • Easiest / best UX: TurboTax
  • Best value: H&R Block
  • Cheapest: FreeTaxUSA

If you want, I can narrow it down based on whether you’re filing simple, self-employed, or have investments/rental income.

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For most Mac users, I’d pick TurboTax Online: it works in a Mac browser, supports current Safari/Chrome/Firefox/Edge versions, and has the broadest “hand-holding” if you want a guided experience. (ttlc.intuit.com)

If you want the best value, go with FreeTaxUSA: federal filing is free, and state returns are $15.99. It also supports self-employed, investments, rental property, and other common situations. (freetaxusa.com)

If you want a solid alternative with browser-based filing on Mac, H&R Block Online works on Mac browsers too. (hrblock.com)

I’d skip TaxAct Desktop on Mac; TaxAct says there are no plans for a Mac desktop product, though its online product works in modern browsers. (taxact.com)

If you tell me whether your return is simple, self-employed, or investment-heavy, I can narrow it to one best pick.

What tax preparation software is best for mobile filing? discovery
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Best overall for mobile filing: TurboTax Mobile

  • Best app experience, cleanest interface, strongest guided interview
  • Great if you want to do almost everything on your phone
  • Best for most people with straightforward to moderately complex returns

Good alternatives:

  • H&R Block Tax Prep — solid mobile app, especially if you want the option to start on mobile and finish with in-person help
  • Cash App Taxes — best free option for simple returns, but less polished and not ideal for complex taxes
  • TaxSlayer — cheaper than TurboTax, decent mobile filing, good for budget-conscious filers

Quick pick:

  • Easiest mobile filing: TurboTax
  • Best free mobile filing: Cash App Taxes
  • Best for tax help options: H&R Block

If you want, I can also rank them for free filing, self-employed, or complicated returns.

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If you want the best overall mobile tax filing app, I’d pick TurboTax. Its app is built for phone-first filing, supports snapping photos of tax docs, and lets you file on iPhone or Android. (turbotax.intuit.com)

Best alternatives:

  • H&R Block — strong if you want mobile filing plus easier access to a tax pro from the app. (hrblock.com)
  • TaxAct — best if you want a more budget-friendly mobile workflow; it has a dedicated app with doc upload and guided filing. (taxact.com)
  • FreeTaxUSA — great low-cost option, but it’s more web-first than mobile-app-first. (freetaxusa.com)

My quick take:

  • Easiest mobile experience: TurboTax
  • Best for expert help on mobile: H&R Block
  • Best value mobile filer: TaxAct

If you want, I can narrow it down based on simple return vs. self-employed vs. maximum free filing.

What tax software is best for secure document upload? discovery 10/mo
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For secure document upload, the best all-around pick is TurboTax Online — it has document import/upload, strong security practices, and a very polished workflow.

Good alternatives:

  • H&R Block Online — very solid secure upload and easy document importing, especially if you want in-person backup.
  • TaxAct — usually cheaper, with decent secure document handling.
  • Cash App Taxes — free, but less robust if you need lots of document-upload features.

If you want the safest “pro-style” option, TurboTax Business/Intuit and H&R Block are the strongest mainstream choices.

If you want, I can also rank them by security, price, or best for self-employed / small business.

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Best overall for secure document upload: H&R Block. It lets you upload documents in your MyBlock account / secure message center, and it says uploads are scanned for viruses. (hrblock.com)

Best if you want an encrypted document vault: TaxAct. Its DocVault stores documents on encrypted secure servers, and TaxAct also says uploaded documents are encrypted in its secure document platform. (taxact.com)

TurboTax is also strong: you can photo-upload docs to your account, and TurboTax says it uses encryption and secure sharing/import for tax documents. (turbotax.intuit.com)

If you want, I can rank TurboTax vs H&R Block vs TaxAct for your exact use case (W-2s, 1099s, receipts, or CPA sharing).

What are the best tax software options for handling contractor income? discovery
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For contractor income, the best options are usually:

  • TurboTax Self-Employed — best all-around if you want the easiest experience. Good for 1099 income, mileage, home office, and quarterly estimates.
  • H&R Block Self-Employed Online — strong alternative, usually a bit cheaper, with solid interview-style guidance.
  • TaxAct Self-Employed — best budget pick if you’re comfortable doing a bit more yourself.
  • FreeTaxUSA Deluxe + Schedule C — cheapest good option for straightforward contractor returns.
  • Cash App Taxes — free, but less robust for more complex self-employment situations.

If you want the simplest workflow, I’d pick TurboTax Self-Employed. If you want value, H&R Block Self-Employed or TaxAct Self-Employed are good choices.

Key features to look for:

  • Schedule C support
  • 1099-NEC entry
  • Mileage tracking
  • Expense categorization
  • Quarterly estimated tax help

If you want, I can also rank these by price, ease of use, or best for multi-1099 contractors.

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For contractor income (1099-NEC / Schedule C), the best options are usually:

  • FreeTaxUSA — best value. It supports Schedule C, 1099-NEC, and self-employment income, with $0 federal filing and $15.99 state. (freetaxusa.com)
  • TurboTax Premium / Self-Employed — best if you want the most guided, polished experience. It’s built for independent contractors/self-employed users and supports 1099-NEC import and Schedule C. (turbotax.intuit.com)
  • TaxAct Self Employed — good mid-price option for freelancers and sole proprietors; it explicitly supports contractor-style work and includes Schedule C help. (taxact.com)
  • H&R Block Self-Employed — solid if you want in-person backup plus online filing; it supports self-employed federal forms. (hrblock.com)

Rule of thumb: contractors generally report income on Schedule C and may also need Schedule SE if net earnings are $400 or more. (irs.gov)

If you want, I can also rank these by cheapest, easiest, or best for mileage/expenses.

What tax preparation software is best for complex returns? discovery
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For complex personal returns, the best picks are usually:

  1. TurboTax Premier

Best overall if you want the easiest experience for investments, rental property, crypto, and itemized deductions.

  1. H&R Block Premium & Business

Great for side business income, rentals, and more complicated filing situations; usually a bit cheaper than TurboTax.

  1. TaxAct Premier

Best value if your return is complex but you’re comfortable doing more yourself.

If your return is very complex—multiple businesses, partnerships, S-corps, trusts, or you prepare returns professionally—look at:

  • Drake Tax
  • UltraTax CS
  • Lacerte

These are more powerful, but they’re usually overkill for a typical individual filer.

If you want, I can recommend the best one for your exact situation (stocks/crypto, rental, LLC, self-employed, etc.).

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For complex returns, my shortlist is:

  • Best overall DIY: TurboTax Premier / Premium — good for self-employed, investors, and rental property owners. (turbotax.intuit.com)
  • Best value with strong support: H&R Block Premium — built for complex returns like crypto, stock sales, and rental property income, and includes AI Tax Assist / Live Tax Pro support on eligible plans. (hrblock.com)
  • Best budget option: TaxAct Premier — supports investments, rental income, selling a home, and even FBAR filing. (taxact.com)
  • Cheapest for advanced forms: FreeTaxUSA — supports 900+ forms and advanced situations like self-employment, partnerships, rental real estate, and stocks/crypto. (freetaxusa.com)

If you want the safest pick for a truly messy return, I’d choose H&R Block Premium or TurboTax Premium. If price matters most, choose TaxAct Premier or FreeTaxUSA.

If you tell me what makes your return “complex” (rental, crypto, K-1s, multiple states, business, etc.), I can narrow it to one best choice.

What are the best alternatives to premium tax preparation software? comparison
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Here are strong alternatives to premium tax prep software, depending on your needs:

  • FreeTaxUSA — Best overall low-cost option for most simple to moderate returns. Free federal filing; low-cost state.
  • Cash App Taxes — Best truly free option for straightforward returns. Good for basic W-2 and some credits.
  • TaxSlayer — Best budget-friendly paid option. Solid for common returns, self-employed, and rental income.
  • Jackson Hewitt Online — Good if you want a guided interface without premium pricing.
  • OLT.com (Online Taxes) — Cheap and capable, especially for more complex forms, though the interface feels dated.
  • TaxAct — Good mid-range alternative with strong support for more complex filings.
  • Credit Karma Tax (now Cash App Taxes) — If you remember this name, it’s now Cash App Taxes.

If you want the closest experience to premium software at a lower price, I’d start with:

  1. FreeTaxUSA
  2. TaxSlayer
  3. TaxAct

If you tell me whether you’re filing simple W-2, self-employed, rental property, or investments, I can narrow it to the best one.

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If you want alternatives to premium tax software, these are the best bets:

  • Best overall free option: IRS Free File if you qualify. For 2026, taxpayers with 2025 AGI of $89,000 or less can use guided software at no cost. The IRS also offers Free File Fillable Forms for any income level, plus Direct File for eligible taxpayers. (irs.gov)
  • Best low-cost all-around pick: FreeTaxUSA. Federal filing is free, and state returns are $15.99. It supports more complex returns too, including self-employment and investments. (freetaxusa.com)
  • Best truly free for federal + state: Cash App Taxes. It says federal and state filing are both free for all situations. (cash.app)
  • Best free for simple returns: H&R Block Free Online. It’s aimed at simple Form 1040 returns with limited schedules. (hrblock.com)
  • Another solid simple-return free option: TaxSlayer Simply Free. Good for basic W-2/standard-deduction filers, but eligibility is limited. (taxslayer.com)
  • Best cheap paid alternative: OLT. It advertises free federal filing and $9.95 per state. (olt.com)

My short recommendation:

  • Simple W-2 return: Cash App Taxes or H&R Block Free Online. (cash.app)
  • More complex return without paying premium prices: FreeTaxUSA. (freetaxusa.com)
  • If you qualify for IRS programs: IRS Free File / Direct File first. (irs.gov)

If you want, I can narrow this down to the best option for your exact tax situation.

What are the best alternatives to leading tax filing software? comparison
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Here are the best alternatives to TurboTax / other leading tax filing software:

  • FreeTaxUSA — best value

Great for most filers, especially if you want federal filing cheap/free. Solid for self-employed and itemized returns.

  • H&R Block Online — best all-around alternative

Easier than most competitors, strong in-person support if you need it, and good for more complex returns.

  • TaxAct — good for budget-conscious filers

Usually cheaper than TurboTax and covers most common situations well.

  • TaxSlayer — best for self-employed / freelancers on a budget

Good mix of features and lower pricing than premium options.

  • Cash App Taxes — best free option

Truly free for many simple-to-moderate returns, but less robust for advanced tax situations.

  • OLT.com (Online Taxes) — cheap but less polished

Works well if you’re comfortable with a more basic interface.

If you want the best choice by situation:

  • Simple return: Cash App Taxes or FreeTaxUSA
  • Best overall: H&R Block
  • Cheapest good option: FreeTaxUSA
  • Freelancer/self-employed: TaxSlayer or FreeTaxUSA
  • More complex return: H&R Block or a CPA/tax pro

If you want, I can also give you the best alternative for your exact tax situation (W-2, self-employed, crypto, rental property, etc.).

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Here are the best TurboTax alternatives in the U.S., depending on what you need:

  • FreeTaxUSA — best budget pick. Federal filing is free, state returns are $15.99, and it supports basic, premium, and self-employed forms. (freetaxusa.com)
  • TaxSlayer — best low-cost paid option. Its current tiers include Classic, Premium, and Self-Employed, with federal pricing shown from about $39.99–$74.99 depending on the product, while state is extra. (taxslayer.com)
  • H&R Block — best for people who want a big brand plus live help. Its online and software products include guided filing, tax-pro support in higher tiers, and state pricing is shown separately on its site. (hrblock.com)
  • TaxAct — good mid-range alternative with clear desktop pricing; its download software currently lists Basic at $44.99, Deluxe at $139.99, Premier at $149.99, and Self-Employed at $164.99. (taxact.com)
  • Cash App Taxes — best if you want true free filing and your return is supported. It says federal and state filing are free. (cash.app)
  • IRS Free File — best free official route if you qualify. For 2026, the IRS says eight Free File partners offer guided software for taxpayers with AGI of $89,000 or less in 2025. (irs.gov)

If you want, I can narrow this down to:

  1. best free option,
  2. best for self-employed, or
  3. best overall value.
How does online tax software compare with desktop tax software? comparison 10/mo
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Online tax software and desktop tax software both do the same basic job, but they’re better for different people.

Online tax software

Best for: most individuals, couples, and simple-to-moderate returns Examples: TurboTax Online, H&R Block Online, TaxAct Online, FreeTaxUSA

Pros

  • Works in any browser; no install
  • Your return is saved in the cloud
  • Easy to use and usually more guided
  • Good for multi-device access

Cons

  • Annual subscription/pricing can get expensive
  • Some features cost extra
  • Depends on internet access
Desktop tax software

Best for: people who want to work offline or have more complex returns Examples: TurboTax Deluxe/CD, H&R Block Tax Software, TaxAct Desktop

Pros

  • One-time purchase for that tax year
  • Works offline
  • Often better for multiple returns on one computer
  • More control and sometimes better for power users

Cons

  • Must install and update software
  • Usually tied to one device
  • Less convenient than cloud access
Quick rule
  • Choose online if you want simplicity and convenience
  • Choose desktop if you want offline use and one-time pricing

If you want, I can also compare TurboTax vs H&R Block vs FreeTaxUSA specifically.

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Online tax software

  • Works in a browser
  • Access from any device
  • Auto-saves in the cloud
  • Easier for simple-to-moderate returns
  • Usually subscription-based, with lower upfront cost

Desktop tax software

  • Installed on one computer
  • Better for offline work and some complex returns
  • Often faster for heavy data entry
  • More control over local files
  • Usually higher upfront cost, sometimes with state forms extra

Main tradeoff

  • Online: convenience and mobility
  • Desktop: power, control, and offline use

Best fit

  • Choose online if you want ease and don’t need advanced workflows.
  • Choose desktop if you have a complicated return, want offline access, or file for multiple people.

If you want, I can also compare TurboTax, H&R Block, TaxAct, and FreeTaxUSA specifically.

What are the best alternatives to full-service tax software? comparison
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Best alternatives depend on how much help you want:

  • IRS Free File / Direct File — best if you want the cheapest option.
    • IRS Direct File (where available)
    • Free File by TurboTax, H&R Block, TaxAct (income limits apply)
  • DIY tax software — good balance of cost and guidance.
    • FreeTaxUSA — very cheap, solid for simple to moderate returns
    • Cash App Taxes — free for most basic returns
    • H&R Block Deluxe — more hand-holding than bare-bones tools
    • TaxSlayer — affordable and straightforward
  • Online tax preparer marketplaces — you upload docs and a pro does the return.
    • TurboTax Live
    • H&R Block Virtual
    • TaxAct Xpert Assist
  • Enrolled agent / CPA / tax accountant — best for complex taxes, businesses, rentals, crypto, or IRS issues.
    • Look for a CPA or Enrolled Agent (EA) locally or via firms like Jackson Hewitt or independent practices.
  • Tax filing apps with bookkeeping support — useful for freelancers and small businesses.
    • QuickBooks Solopreneur/Online + tax add-ons
    • Keeper Tax (expense tracking, then export to a preparer)

If you want, I can narrow this to the best low-cost option, best for self-employed, or best for complex returns.

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Best alternatives depend on how much help you want:

  • Best overall: hire a CPA or Enrolled Agent (EA) if you want a pro to handle the return and answer tax questions. The IRS specifically points taxpayers to choose tax preparers carefully. (irs.gov)
  • Best free option: IRS Free File if you qualify; for 2026, guided software is for taxpayers with AGI of $89,000 or less. (irs.gov)
  • Best if you’re comfortable doing it yourself: IRS Free File Fillable Forms; it’s for taxpayers of any income level and is aimed at people who already know how to prepare a return. (irs.gov)
  • Best in-person free help: VITA (generally low- to moderate-income taxpayers) or TCE (primarily age 60+). Both are free and available at thousands of sites. (irs.gov)
  • Best for seniors: AARP Foundation Tax-Aide; it’s free, volunteer-based, and open to eligible taxpayers without AARP membership. (aarp.org)
  • Best IRS-run alternative: Direct File for eligible taxpayers in participating states; the IRS says it can be used to file federal returns directly with the IRS for free. (irs.gov)

If you want, I can narrow this down to the best option for your situation (simple return, self-employed, crypto, rental income, etc.).

Which tax preparation software alternatives are best for self-employed users? comparison
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Best self-employed tax software alternatives:

  • H&R Block Self-Employed — best all-around for freelancers/sole proprietors; strong guidance, decent deduction help, easy import.
  • TaxAct Self-Employed — usually cheaper than TurboTax/H&R Block; solid for Schedule C, good value.
  • FreeTaxUSA Deluxe + Schedule C — best budget pick; inexpensive, supports self-employment forms, straightforward.
  • Cash App Taxes — free, but best only for simpler self-employed returns; fewer hand-holding features.
  • TaxSlayer Self-Employed — good mid-tier option; clean interface and strong support for business income/deductions.
  • TurboTax Self-Employed — best polish and most guidance, but typically the most expensive.

If you want the safest picks:

  • Best overall: H&R Block Self-Employed
  • Best budget: FreeTaxUSA
  • Best premium experience: TurboTax Self-Employed

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of use, or best for rideshare / contractors / content creators.

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For most self-employed filers, the best alternatives are:

  • H&R Block Self-Employed — best if you want the strongest hand-holding and tax-pro support. It includes unlimited expert help in its self-employed tier. (nerdwallet.com)
  • TaxSlayer Self-Employed — best budget pick if you want solid Schedule C support at a lower price. Forbes rates it as the low-cost choice for self-employed users. (forbes.com)
  • FreeTaxUSA — best ultra-low-cost option if you’re comfortable doing more yourself; it supports Schedule C and lists affordable pricing. (freetaxusa.com)
  • TurboTax Premium — best for the smoothest experience and support, but usually pricier than the others. Forbes ranks it best for customer service. (forbes.com)

My quick ranking:

  1. H&R Block if you want help.
  2. FreeTaxUSA if you want cheapest.
  3. TaxSlayer if you want a middle ground.
  4. TurboTax if ease of use matters most and cost is less important. (forbes.com)

If you want, I can also give you the best choice by situation (1099-only, side hustle, single-member LLC, rental + freelance, etc.).

What are the best alternatives to simple tax filing software? comparison
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Best alternatives depend on what you want: cheapest, easiest, or best for complex returns.

Top picks
  • TurboTax — best overall for ease of use and strong support; great if you want a polished experience.
  • H&R Block — best in-person + online hybrid; good if you want the option to hand off harder parts to a tax pro.
  • FreeTaxUSA — best budget choice; federal filing is usually very cheap, and it handles many common returns well.
  • TaxSlayer — solid low-cost option for self-filers, especially if your return is fairly straightforward.
  • Cash App Taxes — best truly free option for many users, especially simple W-2 returns.
  • TaxAct — good middle-ground software with a good feature set and lower prices than TurboTax.
If you have a more complicated return

Look at:

  • TurboTax Premier / Self-Employed
  • H&R Block Premium / Self-Employed
  • TaxAct Premium
  • TaxSlayer Self-Employed
Quick recommendation
  • Most user-friendly: TurboTax
  • Best value: FreeTaxUSA
  • Best free option: Cash App Taxes
  • Best if you want human help: H&R Block

If you tell me your situation (W-2 only, self-employed, investments, rental property, etc.), I can narrow it to the best 2–3 options.

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If you mean Canadian tax-filing software, the best alternatives to SimpleTax/Wealthsimple Tax are usually:

  • TurboTax — best for polished guided filing and more complex returns. (canada.ca)
  • UFile — solid all-around choice, available online and as a download. (canada.ca)
  • H&R Block Tax Software Free — good if you want online software with the option of in-person help. (canada.ca)
  • GenuTax Standard — best free desktop option. (canada.ca)
  • CloudTax / Better Tax — good free online alternatives. (canada.ca)
  • CRA SimpleFile Digital — best if your situation is very simple and you’re eligible; it’s free and takes about 10–20 minutes. (canada.ca)

A quick rule of thumb:

  • Best free/easy: Wealthsimple Tax or CloudTax. (canada.ca)
  • Best paid mainstream: TurboTax or UFile. (canada.ca)
  • Best for very simple returns: CRA SimpleFile Digital. (canada.ca)

All of these are in the CRA-certified ecosystem, and pricing/free eligibility varies by tax situation. (canada.ca)

If you want, I can narrow it down to best free, best for self-employed, or best for Québec.

What tax software alternatives are best for small businesses? comparison
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Best small-business tax software options:

  • TurboTax Business — best for many simple LLCs/S-corps/C-corps; very user-friendly.
  • H&R Block Premium & Business — solid alternative for sole props and small business owners who want live help.
  • TaxAct Business — usually cheaper; good for straightforward business returns.
  • Drake Tax — best if you have a more complex return or want pro-level features.
  • Lacerte — strong for complex small-business taxes, but pricey.
  • QuickBooks Online + TurboTax — best if you want bookkeeping and tax prep in one ecosystem.
  • GoDaddy Airo / Bookkeeping — decent for very small service businesses, especially if you want simple expense tracking.

Quick pick:

  • Easiest: TurboTax Business
  • Best value: TaxAct Business
  • Best for help: H&R Block Premium & Business
  • Best for complex filings: Drake Tax

If you tell me your business type (sole prop, LLC, S-corp, etc.) and whether you have employees or inventory, I can narrow it down.

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For U.S. small businesses, the best tax-software alternatives are usually:

  • TurboTax Business — best if you want a polished DIY option for S-corps, partnerships, C-corps, and multi-member LLCs; it also supports Quick Employer Forms for W-2s/1099s. (turbotax.intuit.com)
  • H&R Block Premium & Business — best if you want personal + business taxes in one place and a simpler all-in-one workflow. (hrblock.com)
  • TaxAct Business — best budget-minded DIY choice; it supports sole props, partnerships, S-corps, and more, and its business page emphasizes transparent pricing and QuickBooks upload support. (taxact.com)
  • Drake Tax / Drake Tax Online — best for tax pros or higher-volume, more complex filings; Drake offers unlimited business returns in some packages and cloud/desktop options. (drakesoftware.com)
  • QuickBooks Live Tax — best if your books are already in QuickBooks and you want books-to-taxes integration with expert help; it’s geared to Schedule C filers as well as S-corps, partnerships, and multi-member LLCs. (quickbooks.intuit.com)

If you want the shortest answer:

  • Solo freelancer / Schedule C: TaxAct Self-Employed or H&R Block. (taxact.com)
  • LLC taxed as partnership / S-corp: TurboTax Business, H&R Block Premium & Business, or TaxAct Business. (turbotax.intuit.com)
  • Tax preparer / many clients: Drake. (drakesoftware.com)

If you tell me your business type, I can narrow it to the best 2 options.

How do cloud tax software options compare to downloadable tax software? comparison
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Cloud tax software and downloadable tax software do the same core job, but they differ in convenience, control, and cost.

Cloud tax software

Examples: TurboTax Online, H&R Block Online, TaxAct Online, FreeTaxUSA (web-based)

Pros

  • Access from any device
  • Auto-saves your work
  • Easier to import W-2s, 1099s, and prior returns
  • Usually best for simple-to-moderate returns
  • Updates automatically for tax law changes

Cons

  • Often more expensive for forms like self-employment, investments, or itemizing
  • Requires internet
  • Data is stored in the cloud
  • Less control for complex filings
Downloadable tax software

Examples: TurboTax Deluxe/CD, H&R Block Tax Software, TaxAct Desktop, TaxSlayer Classic Desktop

Pros

  • Better for complex returns
  • One-time purchase is often cheaper if you file multiple returns
  • More control and flexibility
  • Can work offline
  • Easier to handle many schedules/forms

Cons

  • Limited to the computer it’s installed on
  • Manual updates may be needed
  • Less convenient than cloud tools
  • Interface can feel dated
Which is better?
  • Choose cloud if you want convenience and have a fairly straightforward return.
  • Choose downloadable if your return is more complex, you want offline access, or you file multiple returns.
Quick recommendation
  • Best cloud: TurboTax Online
  • Best budget cloud: FreeTaxUSA
  • Best desktop/downloadable: TaxAct Desktop or H&R Block Tax Software

If you want, I can compare them by price, ease of use, or best option for self-employed filers.

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Cloud tax software is usually better if you want any-device access, automatic saving, and less installation hassle. For example, TaxAct Online saves your return on secure servers and lets you sign in from any computer with internet access. (taxact.com)

Downloadable/desktop software is usually better if you want local file storage, the ability to prepare multiple returns, and more control over the software on your own computer. TaxAct says its desktop version saves your return to your computer and is good for households with multiple taxpayers. H&R Block also says its tax software is downloaded and installed on your computer, and its desktop products include up to five free federal e-files. (taxact.com)

Big picture:

  • Cloud: easiest setup, access anywhere, good for one return. (taxact.com)
  • Downloadable: better for multiple returns, offline work, and keeping files on your machine. (taxact.com)

My rule of thumb:

  • Pick cloud if you file one straightforward return and want convenience.
  • Pick downloadable if you file for a family, want offline access, or prefer storing tax data locally. (taxact.com)

If you want, I can also compare TurboTax vs H&R Block vs FreeTaxUSA specifically.

What are the best alternatives to free tax preparation software? comparison
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Here are the best alternatives, depending on how much help you want:

  • TurboTax Deluxe / Premium — best all-around if you want the smoothest guided filing and strong support.
  • H&R Block Deluxe — great if you want a simple interface and the option to finish online or in a local office.
  • TaxAct Deluxe — usually cheaper than TurboTax, good for straightforward returns.
  • FreeTaxUSA Deluxe — very low-cost, solid for most people with common tax situations.
  • Jackson Hewitt Online — good if you want online prep with access to in-person help.
  • Curbside or in-person tax prep with a CPA — best for complex returns, self-employment, rental income, or major life changes.

If you want the safest “easy but not free” picks, I’d choose:

  1. TurboTax Deluxe
  2. H&R Block Deluxe
  3. FreeTaxUSA Deluxe if you want the lowest price

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of use, or best for self-employed filers.

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If you mean paid alternatives to free tax software, the best picks are usually:

  • TurboTax Deluxe/Premium — best if you want the smoothest, easiest DIY experience. (nerdwallet.com)
  • H&R Block Deluxe/Premium — best if you want stronger help options and in-person support. (nerdwallet.com)
  • TaxSlayer Classic/Premium — best budget paid option for straightforward returns. (nerdwallet.com)
  • FreeTaxUSA Deluxe — best low-cost upgrade if you want to stay cheap but add support. Federal filing is free, with optional paid support like Deluxe for $7.99 and state returns for $15.99. (freetaxusa.com)
  • A CPA / enrolled agent / local tax pro — best for complex returns, self-employment, multiple states, or if you want someone else to handle everything. IRS also points taxpayers to VITA/TCE for no-cost in-person help if eligible. (irs.gov)

Simple rule:

  • Easiest: TurboTax
  • Best help: H&R Block
  • Cheapest paid: FreeTaxUSA
  • Best value: TaxSlayer

If you want, I can narrow it down by your situation: W-2 only, homeowner, investor, freelancer, or small business.

Which tax software alternatives are better for advanced tax situations? comparison
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For advanced tax situations, these are usually better than basic consumer software:

  • H&R Block Premium / Deluxe — good for investments, rental property, self-employment, and more complex deductions. Strong interview flow, decent support.
  • TaxAct Premier / Self-Employed — often cheaper, handles stocks/crypto, rentals, and business income well.
  • FreeTaxUSA Deluxe — great value for more complex returns if you’re comfortable doing a bit more yourself; supports Schedule C, rentals, investments.
  • Cash App Taxes — free and solid for fairly complex but not highly specialized returns; less robust than the paid options.
  • TurboTax Live Self-Employed / TurboTax Premier — still one of the best if you want the most guided experience for 1099 income, investments, and rentals, but it’s usually the most expensive.

If your situation includes multiple states, active day trading, K-1s, foreign income, or a lot of rental/business activity, consider:

  • TaxAct
  • H&R Block
  • or work with a CPA rather than relying on consumer software.

If you want, I can rank these for your exact situation (e.g., crypto, rental property, S-corp, K-1s, day trading).

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Yes—if you have investments, crypto, rentals, self-employment, or small-business forms, these are strong alternatives:

  • H&R Block Premium Online — built for more complex returns and explicitly supports crypto, sold stocks, and rental property income. (hrblock.com)
  • TaxAct — good if you want a DIY-to-full-service option; TaxAct says it supports more complex tax situations and is the only major provider offering fully online filing for C-Corps, S-Corps, and partnerships. (blog.taxact.com)
  • FreeTaxUSA — a strong low-cost option for advanced personal returns; it supports Schedule C, Schedule E, Schedule F, self-employment tax, business property sales, and crypto. (freetaxusa.com)
  • Jackson Hewitt Online / Tax Pro service — better if you want human help on a more complex return; they market the service for simple or more complex returns and offer professional filing help. (jacksonhewitt.com)

If you want the best overall pick for advanced situations, I’d usually start with:

  1. H&R Block Premium if you want the most guided experience,
  2. FreeTaxUSA if you want cheaper but still fairly robust,
  3. TaxAct if you need small-business support. (hrblock.com)

If you tell me your situation—stocks, crypto, rental, LLC, K-1, multi-state, etc.—I can narrow it to the best 1–2 options.

How do I file my taxes online without making mistakes? problem
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To file online without mistakes:

  1. Use a reputable tax app
    • TurboTax: best if your taxes are more complex.
    • H&R Block: good balance of guided help and price.
    • FreeTaxUSA: solid low-cost option for simpler returns.
    • Cash App Taxes: free for many basic returns.
  2. Gather everything first
    • W-2s, 1099s, bank interest forms
    • Last year’s return
    • Social Security numbers
    • Mortgage, student loan, childcare, and donation records
  3. Enter data exactly as shown
    • Copy numbers carefully
    • Don’t round unless the form says to
    • Make sure names and SSNs match official documents
  4. Use the software’s error checks
    • Review every warning
    • Recheck deductions, dependents, and filing status
    • Compare your return to last year if your situation is similar
  5. Double-check common mistake areas
    • Missing a 1099
    • Incorrect bank account for refund
    • Wrong dependent claim
    • Accidentally choosing the wrong filing status
  6. Save and review before submitting
    • Print or download a full copy
    • Review totals, refund/amount due, and payment info
    • Confirm your email and bank details
  7. File early
    • Reduces identity-theft risk
    • Gives you time to fix issues if the IRS rejects the return

If you want, I can also recommend the best tax software based on your situation (simple W-2, self-employed, investments, or rental income).

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To file online without making mistakes, use this checklist:

  1. Use IRS-approved e-file software or a qualified preparer. E-filing catches common errors and does the math for you. (irs.gov)
  2. Enter names and Social Security numbers exactly as they appear on Social Security cards. (irs.gov)
  3. Choose the correct filing status. If you’re unsure, use the IRS Interactive Tax Assistant. (irs.gov)
  4. Double-check bank routing and account numbers before choosing direct deposit. (irs.gov)
  5. Make sure the return is signed electronically before submitting. An unsigned return isn’t valid. (irs.gov)
  6. Review credits and deductions carefully—especially EITC and Child and Dependent Care Credit. Tax software can help, but don’t assume it’s right automatically. (irs.gov)
  7. Use the right tax-year information and keep all forms handy before starting. (taxpayeradvocate.irs.gov)
  8. If you have identity protection issues, use your IP PIN correctly. (irs.gov)
  9. Only use reputable tax software or an authorized preparer. The IRS has a locator for authorized e-file providers. (irs.gov)

If you want, I can also give you a step-by-step “filing my return tonight” checklist.

How can I prepare my tax return faster? problem
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To prepare your tax return faster:

  • Gather everything first: W-2s, 1099s, mortgage interest, tuition, childcare, charitable receipts, prior-year return.
  • Use a checklist: Follow a form-by-form list so you don’t hunt for documents later.
  • Go digital: Scan/photograph receipts and store them in one folder.
  • Import data automatically: Use tax software that pulls in W-2/1099 info when available.
  • Reuse last year’s return: It gives you a head start on personal info, deductions, and carryovers.
  • Separate business/personal expenses: If self-employed, keep a dedicated card/account.

Good faster-filing tools:

  • TurboTax — easiest if you want guided help and automatic import
  • H&R Block — solid for straightforward returns and in-person help
  • TaxAct — usually cheaper, still fairly fast
  • FreeTaxUSA — budget-friendly and simple for many returns

If you want, I can give you a fast tax prep checklist tailored to your situation: employee, freelancer, or small business.

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To prepare your tax return faster:

  • Gather documents early: W-2s, 1099s, mortgage/interest statements, childcare, charity receipts, etc.
  • Use last year’s return as a checklist.
  • Create a folder for tax docs throughout the year.
  • Go digital: scan receipts and store statements in one place.
  • Use tax software if your return is straightforward.
  • Enter info in the same order each year.
  • Avoid missing forms by checking all accounts you used for income.
  • Separate business/personal expenses if you’re self-employed.
  • Start before the deadline rush so you’re not waiting on forms.

If you want, I can also give you a fast tax-prep checklist for either W-2 employees, freelancers, or small business owners.

How do I e-file my taxes from home? problem
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Here’s the quickest way to e-file from home:

  1. Gather your tax docs
    • W-2s, 1099s, mortgage/interest forms, childcare, etc.
    • Last year’s tax return (helpful for verification).
  2. Choose tax software

Good options:

  • TurboTax
  • H&R Block Online
  • FreeTaxUSA (cheap, solid for simple returns)
  • Cash App Taxes (free for many filers)
  1. Create an account and start your return
    • Enter personal info, income, deductions, and credits.
    • The software will guide you step by step.
  2. Review your return
    • Check for mistakes, missing forms, and bank routing numbers.
    • Make sure your filing status is correct.
  3. Choose direct deposit
    • Fastest refund method.
    • Or choose direct debit if you owe.
  4. E-file and submit
    • Most software will send it to the IRS/state electronically.
    • You’ll get confirmation when it’s accepted.
  5. Track your refund
    • Use the IRS “Where’s My Refund?” tool after acceptance.

If you want, I can recommend the best tax software based on whether your return is simple, self-employed, or has investments.

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You can e-file from home in 4 basic ways:

  1. Use IRS Free File if you qualify for a free guided software package. It’s available through IRS.gov, and some options include a free state return. (irs.gov)
  2. Use IRS Free File Fillable Forms if you’re comfortable doing the return yourself with IRS forms/instructions. (irs.gov)
  3. Use IRS Direct File if you live in a participating state and your tax situation is eligible. The IRS says it’s a free, permanent online filing option for eligible filers in 25 states. (irs.gov)
  4. Use commercial tax software or a tax professional that supports e-filing. (irs.gov)

What you’ll need:

  • Your tax documents (W-2s, 1099s, etc.). (irs.gov)
  • Your prior-year AGI or a self-select PIN to sign your e-file. (irs.gov)
  • Your bank routing/account number if you want direct deposit. (irs.gov)

Simple flow:

  • Gather documents.
  • Pick a filing method.
  • Enter your info.
  • Review carefully.
  • E-sign and submit.
  • Save the confirmation/acceptance notice. (irs.gov)

If you want, I can help you choose the best free option based on your income, state, and filing situation.

How do I calculate my tax refund before filing? problem 49,500/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
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Use your last year’s tax return and this year’s numbers:

You need:

  • Filing status
  • W-2 wages
  • Federal tax withheld
  • Any 1099 income
  • Deductions/credits: IRA, HSA, child tax credit, student loan interest, etc.

Steps to compute:

  1. Estimate your total income.
  2. Subtract deductions to get taxable income.
  3. Run the tax through the current year tax brackets.
  4. Subtract tax credits.
  5. Compare that result to your total withholding/payments.

Formula

  • Refund = withholding + estimated payments − tax owed
  • If negative, you’ll owe instead.

Best tools

  • IRS Tax Withholding Estimator
  • TurboTax Refund Calculator
  • H&R Block Tax Calculator

If you want, I can use the numbers you have and calculate a base estimate for your refund.

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A simple estimate is:

Tax refund = federal income tax withheld + estimated tax payments + refundable credits − your total tax liability. (irs.gov)

How to calculate it before filing:

  1. Gather your W-2s/1099s, year-to-date pay stubs, and any estimated payments. (irs.gov)
  2. Estimate your taxable income after deductions and credits. (irs.gov)
  3. Estimate your total tax for the year. (irs.gov)
  4. Subtract that tax from what you’ve already paid through withholding and estimated payments; add refundable credits. (irs.gov)

The easiest official tool is the IRS Tax Withholding Estimator, which uses your filing status, income, deductions, credits, and withholding to estimate whether you’ll get a refund or owe. (irs.gov)

If you want, I can help you estimate it step by step with your numbers.

How do I report freelance income on my taxes? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
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In the U.S., you usually report freelance income like this:

  1. Report all income
    • Include payments even if you didn’t get a 1099-NEC.
    • Use your invoices, bank records, PayPal/Venmo business payments, etc.
  2. File Schedule C (Form 1040)
    • This is where you list freelance income and business expenses.
    • Net profit = income − expenses.
  3. Pay self-employment tax
    • If you made a profit, you’ll usually owe self-employment tax (Social Security + Medicare) on Schedule SE.
  4. Claim deductible business expenses
    • Common ones: software, equipment, internet (business use), office supplies, advertising, contractor fees, mileage, home office if eligible.
  5. Make estimated quarterly payments
    • If you expect to owe $1,000+ in tax, pay quarterly to avoid penalties.
  6. Keep records
    • Save invoices, receipts, bank statements, and mileage logs.

Helpful tools:

  • TurboTax Self-Employed
  • H&R Block Self-Employed
  • QuickBooks Self-Employed for tracking income/expenses

If you want, I can also show you exactly where freelance income goes on a tax return or help you estimate what you might owe.

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In the U.S., freelance income is usually reported as self-employment income on Schedule C (Form 1040), and if your net earnings from self-employment are $400 or more, you generally also file Schedule SE to calculate self-employment tax. (irs.gov)

Basic steps:

  1. Total all freelance income you received.
  2. Subtract ordinary and necessary business expenses.
  3. Put the profit/loss on Schedule C.
  4. If required, use Schedule SE for Social Security and Medicare tax. (irs.gov)

A few important notes:

  • Even if you don’t get a 1099, you still report the income. (irs.gov)
  • Freelancers often need to make quarterly estimated tax payments because there’s usually no withholding. (irs.gov)
  • Common deductible expenses can include things like supplies, software, advertising, and a qualifying home office. (irs.gov)

If you want, I can give you a simple line-by-line checklist for Schedule C and Schedule SE.

How do I file a simple tax return myself? problem 40/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
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If you’re in the U.S. and your return is truly simple, you can usually file it yourself in 30–60 minutes.

What “simple” usually means
  • W-2 income only
  • Standard deduction
  • No self-employment
  • No rental income
  • No itemizing
  • Few credits/deductions
Basic steps
  1. Gather documents
    • W-2(s)
    • 1099-INT / 1099-DIV if you have interest or dividends
    • 1098 if you paid mortgage interest
    • Social Security numbers for dependents
  2. Choose filing method

Good DIY options:

  • FreeTaxUSA — best budget option; federal filing is free, state is cheap
  • TurboTax Free Edition — very polished, but can become paid if your return gets a little more complex
  • Cash App Taxes — free for many simple returns
  • H&R Block Free Online — easy interface, good support options
  1. Enter your info

The software will ask for:

  • personal info
  • income from W-2s/1099s
  • deductions/credits
  • bank account for direct deposit
  1. Review the refund/amount due

Double-check:

  • names and SSNs
  • wages and withholding
  • bank account number
  • mailing address
  1. File electronically

E-file is fastest and usually free.

If you want the simplest route

Use FreeTaxUSA if your return is straightforward. It’s usually the best mix of cheap + easy.

Avoid these common mistakes
  • Entering W-2 box numbers in the wrong places
  • Forgetting a second W-2
  • Claiming credits you don’t qualify for
  • Missing state filing
  • Typing bank info incorrectly

If you want, I can walk you through a step-by-step filing checklist or help you choose the best free tax software for your situation.

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If your return is truly simple, the easiest DIY path is usually:

  1. Gather your documents
    • W-2s
    • 1099s (interest, dividends, freelance, unemployment, retirement)
    • Social Security numbers for you/spouse/dependents
    • Prior-year AGI or PIN if you’ve filed before. (irs.gov)
  2. Pick a filing method
    • IRS Free File if you qualify: for 2026, guided software is available for taxpayers with AGI of $89,000 or less in 2025; Free File Fillable Forms is available for more self-sufficient filers. (irs.gov)
    • If you’re comfortable doing it yourself, use Free File Fillable Forms or another tax app and file electronically. (irs.gov)
  3. Enter your info on Form 1040
    • Most simple returns use Form 1040.
    • The IRS Free File system can walk you through it with simple questions. (irs.gov)
  4. Choose direct deposit
    • Fastest for refunds.
    • Double-check routing/account numbers before filing. (irs.gov)
  5. E-file and save a copy
    • Sign with your self-select PIN or prior-year AGI/PIN method.
    • Keep the filed return and all source docs for your records. (irs.gov)

Good rule of thumb: if you only had wages, standard deduction, and maybe simple interest/dividend income, DIY filing is usually manageable.

If you want, I can give you a 1-page checklist for a very simple W-2 return.

How do I claim deductions correctly when doing my taxes? problem
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To claim deductions correctly:

  1. Know what’s deductible
    • Only claim expenses the tax law allows for your situation.
    • Common examples: mortgage interest, charitable donations, certain business expenses, student loan interest, medical expenses (if allowed), retirement contributions.
  2. Keep records
    • Save receipts, invoices, bank statements, mileage logs, and donation letters.
    • Use a folder or app like QuickBooks, Expensify, or Wave to track expenses.
  3. Separate personal vs. deductible
    • Don’t mix personal and business/personal-use expenses.
    • If something is partly deductible, only claim the deductible portion.
  4. Use the right forms
    • Deductions often need supporting forms or schedules.
    • Example: itemized deductions vs. standard deduction; business expenses on a business schedule.
  5. Don’t double-dip
    • You generally can’t claim the same expense twice or deduct an expense already reimbursed.
  6. Check limits and thresholds
    • Many deductions have caps, income limits, or minimums.
  7. File accurately
    • Enter amounts exactly as supported by your records.
    • If using software, TurboTax, H&R Block, and FreeTaxUSA can help flag common deduction issues.
  8. When unsure, get help
    • A CPA or enrolled agent can prevent mistakes, especially if you have freelance, rental, or investment income.

If you tell me your country and what kind of deductions you mean (work, business, education, home, medical, etc.), I can give you a more exact checklist.

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The safe way to claim deductions is:

  1. Separate “standard deduction” vs “itemized deductions.”

You generally take whichever is larger on your return. Most taxpayers do better with the standard deduction. (irs.gov)

  1. If itemizing, use Schedule A.

Common itemized deductions include state/local taxes (limited), mortgage interest, charitable gifts, and medical expenses above 7.5% of AGI. (irs.gov)

  1. Claim “above-the-line” deductions separately.

Some deductions are available even if you take the standard deduction, such as IRA contributions, HSA contributions, student loan interest, and certain business/moving expenses. (eitc.irs.gov)

  1. Don’t double count.

Don’t put the same expense on Schedule A if it’s already deducted on another form or schedule. (irs.gov)

  1. Keep proof.

Save receipts, statements, mileage logs, mortgage interest forms, charity acknowledgments, and tax bills in case the IRS asks. (irs.gov)

  1. Use current-year amounts and rules.

For 2025, the IRS says standard deduction amounts are $15,750 single/MFS, $31,500 married filing jointly, and $23,625 head of household. (eitc.irs.gov)

If you want, I can give you a simple deduction checklist by category or help you decide whether to itemize or take the standard deduction.

How do I handle both federal and state tax returns? problem
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You usually handle them as two separate returns:

  1. File your federal return first
    • Complete IRS Form 1040 and any schedules.
    • Your state return often uses numbers from the federal return, so doing federal first makes state easier.
  2. Then file your state return
    • Use the state’s required form or your tax software’s state module.
    • If you live in one state but work in another, you may need nonresident or part-year resident returns.
  3. Watch for state differences
    • State income tax rules can differ from federal on:
      • retirement income
      • standard deduction
      • itemized deductions
      • capital gains
      • unemployment benefits
    • Some states have no income tax, so no state return is needed.
  4. Use software that handles both

Good options:

  • TurboTax Deluxe
  • H&R Block Deluxe
  • FreeTaxUSA (cheaper, solid for federal + state)
  • TaxAct (good value)
  1. If you owe, pay both separately
    • Federal goes to the IRS.
    • State payment goes to your state’s tax agency.

If you want, I can help you figure out which state return you need based on where you live and work.

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Usually, handle it in this order:

  1. Finish your federal return first — your state return often starts from federal figures like AGI. (irs.gov)
  2. Then prepare the state return — many tax software programs file both, and some IRS Free File partners also include free state prep. (irs.gov)
  3. File/pay both by the deadline — if you owe, make sure each return and payment is submitted on time. (irs.gov)
  4. Check whether your state even has an income tax — Alaska, Florida, New Hampshire, Nevada, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Washington, and Wyoming don’t have a state income tax. (irs.gov)

If you want, I can walk you through it for your state or tell you whether you should file resident, part-year, or nonresident returns.

How do I import my tax forms into tax software? problem
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Usually you can import them in one of these ways:

  1. Auto-import from your broker/payroll
    • Most tax software can connect to banks/brokers like **Charles Schwab, Fidelity, Vanguard, Robinhood, E*TRADE**, etc.
    • Look for Import, 1099 Import, or Connect account.
  2. Upload a PDF or image
    • Some software lets you upload a 1099, W-2, or other tax form PDF and extracts the data automatically.
    • This works best with clear IRS forms, not handwritten scans.
  3. Enter a code from the form
    • Some brokers provide an import code or access code on the tax document page.
    • You enter that code in the software to pull in the form.
  4. Manual entry
    • If import isn’t available, type the numbers directly from the form.

Common software that supports import:

  • TurboTax
  • H&R Block
  • TaxAct
  • FreeTaxUSA

If you want, I can give you step-by-step instructions for a specific program like TurboTax or H&R Block.

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Usually it’s one of these ways:

  1. Automatic import
    • Log in to your tax software.
    • Go to Income or Import tax forms.
    • Sign in to the institution that issued the form (broker, bank, employer).
    • Select the form to import.
  2. Upload a PDF or file
    • Download your form from the provider.
    • In the tax software, choose Upload, Import, or Add form.
    • Select the PDF/CSV/XML file if supported.
  3. Manual entry
    • If import isn’t available, enter the numbers from the form by hand.
    • Common forms: W-2, 1099-INT, 1099-DIV, 1099-B, 1098, etc.

Tips:

  • Make sure the name on the tax software matches the form.
  • Check whether the software supports your specific form type.
  • Review imported numbers carefully for missing boxes or duplicate entries.

If you tell me which tax software you’re using (TurboTax, H&R Block, TaxAct, FreeTaxUSA, etc.) and which form you have, I can give exact steps.

How do I file taxes if I have multiple income sources? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
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If you’re in the U.S., you usually file one tax return and include all income sources on it.

Common income forms
  • W-2: wages from an employer
  • 1099-NEC / 1099-MISC: freelance, contract, side gigs
  • 1099-INT / 1099-DIV: interest and dividends
  • 1099-K: payment platforms, sometimes gig sales
  • K-1: partnership/S-corp/trust income
  • Self-employment income: reported on Schedule C
Basic steps
  1. Collect all tax forms you received.
  2. Add up all income from every source.
  3. Report each type in the right section/schedule.
  4. Claim any eligible deductions/credits.
  5. File the return and pay any tax owed.
If you’re self-employed or have gig income

You’ll likely need:

  • Schedule C (business income/expenses)
  • Schedule SE (self-employment tax)
  • Estimated quarterly taxes if needed
Good tax software
  • TurboTax Premium – good for multiple income sources
  • H&R Block Deluxe/Self-Employed – solid and easy to use
  • FreeTaxUSA – cheaper option, supports many income types
  • Cash App Taxes – free for many straightforward returns
Helpful tip

If you have both W-2 and freelance income, make sure you don’t miss:

  • business expenses
  • self-employment tax
  • quarterly estimated tax payments

If you want, I can walk you through how to file based on your exact income sources (W-2, 1099, rental, investments, etc.).

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In the U.S., you usually file one Form 1040 and report each income source on the right schedule(s). (irs.gov)

Quick guide:

  • W-2 wages: report from your W-2 on Form 1040. (irs.gov)
  • Interest/dividends: often go on Schedule B if required. (irs.gov)
  • Self-employment / gig work / 1099-NEC / 1099-K: usually go on Schedule C, and self-employment tax is figured on Schedule SE. (irs.gov)
  • Other income or adjustments like unemployment, gambling winnings, or certain deductions may go on Schedule 1. (irs.gov)
  • Rental, partnership, or S-corp income may require other schedules such as Schedule E. (irs.gov)

If some income doesn’t have withholding, you may need quarterly estimated tax payments. The IRS generally says individuals should make estimated payments if they expect to owe $1,000 or more when filing. (irs.gov)

Best practice:

  1. Gather all tax forms (W-2s, 1099s, K-1s, etc.).
  2. Report each income source on the proper schedule.
  3. Combine everything on Form 1040.
  4. Check whether you need estimated payments. (irs.gov)

If you want, I can give you a source-by-source checklist for your exact mix of income.

How much does tax preparation software usually cost? transactional 210/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
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Tax prep software usually costs $0 to $150+, depending on how complex your return is.

Typical prices:

  • Free: Simple federal returns
    • Examples: TurboTax Free Edition, H&R Block Free, Cash App Taxes (free for most users)
  • $25–$60: Basic return with common forms
    • Examples: TurboTax Deluxe, H&R Block Deluxe
  • $60–$120: More complex returns with itemized deductions, investments, or self-employment
    • Examples: TurboTax Premier, H&R Block Premium, TaxAct Premium
  • $100–$200+: Self-employed/business returns or state add-ons
    • Examples: TurboTax Self-Employed, H&R Block Self-Employed

Also note:

  • State filing often costs extra: usually $25–$50
  • Many services run discounts early in tax season

If you want, I can also compare TurboTax vs H&R Block vs TaxAct vs FreeTaxUSA by price.

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Usually, tax prep software costs anywhere from $0 to about $130 for DIY filing, depending on how complex your return is. If you want an expert to help or do it for you, prices are often around $80–$210+, with state returns usually extra. (blog.turbotax.intuit.com)

A practical rule of thumb:

  • Simple returns: often free or about $15.99 for state filing with budget options like FreeTaxUSA. (freetaxusa.com)
  • Mid-tier DIY software: often $40–$80+, and state e-file may cost extra. H&R Block’s published state program pricing shows $39.95 per state plus an optional $19.95 per state e-file fee. (hrblock.com)
  • Live/expert help: commonly $79–$209 for assisted filing, with state additional. (turbotax.intuit.com)

If you want, I can also give you a quick “best cheap option / best easy option / best for self-employed” shortlist.

Is there free tax preparation software for simple returns? transactional 8,100/mo
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Yes.

Good free options for simple returns:

  • IRS Free File — free federal filing if your income is below the IRS partner limits (often around $79,000 AGI, but it varies by provider).
  • FreeTaxUSAfree federal return for simple filings; state return usually costs extra.
  • Cash App Taxesfree federal and state filing, good for very simple returns.
  • TurboTax Free Edition — free only for very simple 1040 returns, but many common forms cost extra.
  • H&R Block Free Online — also free for simple returns, with upgrade fees for more complex tax situations.
  • TaxAct Free — free for basic federal returns, state may cost extra.

If you want the best no-cost option for a simple return, I’d usually recommend Cash App Taxes or FreeTaxUSA.

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Yes — for simple returns, you have a few solid free options:

  • IRS Free File: free federal filing for eligible taxpayers, and some partners include free state filing too. For 2026, the IRS says the income limit is $89,000 AGI or less for 2025 returns. (irs.gov)
  • Cash App Taxes: advertises free federal and state filing for all users. (cash.app)
  • FreeTaxUSA: free federal returns; state returns cost extra. (freetaxusa.com)

If you want, I can suggest the best one based on your situation (W-2 only, student, homeowner, etc.).

What tax preparation software has the cheapest paid plan? transactional 170/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
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FreeTaxUSA Deluxe is usually the cheapest paid option among major tax prep apps — about $7.99 federal (state filing extra).

If you mean the lowest-priced paid tier from a big-name tax software, TaxSlayer Classic is often the next cheapest, usually around $22.95 federal.

Quick comparison:

  • FreeTaxUSA Deluxe — cheapest paid plan
  • TaxSlayer Classic — cheapest mainstream paid tier
  • TurboTax / H&R Block — usually more expensive

If you want, I can list the cheapest paid plan for your exact filing situation (single, itemizing, self-employed, etc.).

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FreeTaxUSA has the cheapest paid plan I found: Deluxe at $7.99 for federal filing, with state returns $15.99. (freetaxusa.com)

For comparison, TurboTax paid DIY plans start much higher (for example, Premium at $99 federal in the current offer shown) and H&R Block’s DIY paid software starts at $39.95 per state for its desktop software. (turbotax.intuit.com)

If you want, I can also rank the cheapest options for simple W-2 returns vs self-employed returns.

Do tax software options include free e-filing? transactional 10/mo
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Yes—many tax software options include free e-filing, but usually only for simpler returns or lower-income filers.

Common examples:

  • TurboTax Free Edition — free federal e-file for simple returns
  • H&R Block Free Online — free federal e-file for basic returns
  • FreeTaxUSA — free federal filing; state filing usually costs extra
  • Cash App Taxes — free federal and state e-file for supported returns
  • TaxSlayer Simply Free — free for very simple returns

Watch for:

  • State filing fees
  • Limits on forms/schedules
  • Upgrade prompts for more complex returns

If you want, I can compare the best free option for your tax situation.

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Yes—some do, but it depends on the product and your return. IRS Free File lets eligible taxpayers prepare and e-file federal returns at no cost through participating software, and Free File Fillable Forms is also free for all income levels. (irs.gov)

Examples:

  • Cash App Taxes: advertises fully free tax filing and is an IRS-authorized e-file provider. (cash.app)
  • TurboTax Free Edition: advertises $0 federal, $0 state, $0 to file. (turbotax.intuit.com)
  • H&R Block software: includes free federal e-files, but state e-file may cost extra. (hrblock.com)

If you want, I can list the best free e-file options for your situation.

What is the best value tax filing software? transactional 20/mo
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Best overall value: FreeTaxUSA

  • Why: Very low cost, handles most common tax situations, and includes federal filing for cheap.
  • Best for: W-2 workers, homeowners, dependents, basic investments, and many self-employed filers.
  • Downside: Interface is less polished than TurboTax/H&R Block.

Best free option for simple returns: Cash App Taxes

  • Why: Truly free for both federal and state in many simple cases.
  • Best for: Straightforward W-2 returns.
  • Downside: Limited support and fewer advanced features.

If you want the easiest experience: H&R Block

  • Why: Better usability than many cheaper tools.
  • Best for: People who want a smoother guided process.
  • Downside: Usually costs more than FreeTaxUSA.

I’d pick:

  • FreeTaxUSA = best value for most people
  • Cash App Taxes = best free simple filing
  • TurboTax = easiest, but usually not the best value

If you want, I can recommend the best one based on your tax situation (W-2, self-employed, investments, rental, etc.).

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If you mean best value for most people, Jackson Hewitt Online is a strong pick: Forbes Advisor currently names it “Best Tax Software for Value” at $25 federal / $0 state. (forbes.com)

If you mean best free option, Cash App Taxes is the standout: Forbes says it’s $0 federal / $0 state and its top free pick. (forbes.com)

If you want the best budget option with more forms/features, TaxSlayer is often the better deal for more complex returns. (nerdwallet.com)

My short take:

If you want, I can recommend the best one for your exact tax situation (W-2 only, self-employed, investments, rental, etc.).

Are there tax software options with a free version? transactional
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Yes — several tax software products have free versions:

  • TurboTax Free Edition — best if your return is simple.
  • H&R Block Free Online — also good for basic returns.
  • FreeTaxUSA — free federal filing; state filing usually costs extra.
  • Cash App Taxes — free federal and state filing for many users.
  • TaxAct Free — free for simple returns, with paid upgrades for more complex forms.

If you want, I can help you pick the best one based on your tax situation (W-2 only, kids, investments, self-employed, etc.).

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Yes — several do.

  • TurboTax Free Edition: free for qualifying simple Form 1040 returns; TurboTax says it includes $0 federal, $0 state, and is limited to simple returns. (turbotax.intuit.com)
  • FreeTaxUSA: federal filing is free, but state returns cost $15.99. (freetaxusa.com)
  • H&R Block Free Online: H&R Block has a free online option, though eligibility and what’s included depend on your return. (hrblock.com)
  • IRS Free File: if you qualify, you can use partner software for free federal filing; for 2026, the IRS says eligible taxpayers with AGI of $89,000 or less in 2025 can use it, and some partners also offer free state returns. (irs.gov)

If you want, I can narrow this down to the best free option for your situation (W-2 only, student, self-employed, investor, homeowner, etc.).

What tax software is worth paying for? transactional
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If you want the best paid tax software, these are the usual winners:

  • TurboTax Deluxe / Premier — best overall UX and guidance. Worth it if you want the smoothest filing experience and are okay paying more.
  • H&R Block Deluxe — best balance of price + hand-holding. Often cheaper than TurboTax and still very easy to use.
  • TaxAct Deluxe — good for straightforward returns and cheaper than the big two.
  • FreeTaxUSA — not paid, but worth considering if your return is simple and you want the cheapest good option.
My quick picks
  • Simple return: FreeTaxUSA
  • Want easiest experience: TurboTax
  • Want good value: H&R Block
  • Self-employed / investments: TurboTax Premier or H&R Block Premium
Usually not worth paying for

If you only have a W-2, standard deduction, and no investments/side income, paid software often isn’t necessary.

If you tell me your situation—W-2 only, self-employed, rental, stocks, crypto, etc.—I can recommend the best exact version.

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If you’re paying for one tax app, my short list is:

  • TurboTax — worth it if you want the smoothest, most guided experience or live expert help. It’s the #1 best-selling tax software in the U.S., and TurboTax Expert Assist / Full Service includes unlimited expert help and review. (turbotax.intuit.com)
  • H&R Block — best value if you want a cheaper paid option with strong guidance; its Deluxe + State includes 5 federal e-files and state pricing is clearly shown at $39.95 per state for Basic/Deluxe. (hrblock.com)
  • FreeTaxUSA — usually the best “don’t pay unless you need to” option; federal filing is free and state is $15.99, with paid Deluxe/Pro support if you want help. (freetaxusa.com)

My take:

  • Pay for TurboTax if your return is messy or you want hand-holding.
  • Pay for H&R Block if you want a solid middle ground.
  • Don’t pay at all if your return is straightforward — FreeTaxUSA is usually enough. (freetaxusa.com)

If you want, I can give you the best pick based on your situation: W-2 only, homeowner, investor, freelancer, or crypto.

Which tax preparation software offers the best price for self-employed filers? transactional
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Best price for self-employed filers: FreeTaxUSA

  • Federal: usually free for self-employed returns, including Schedule C
  • State: low-cost add-on (typically much cheaper than TurboTax/H&R Block)
  • Good if you want the lowest total cost

Best low-cost alternatives:

  • TaxSlayer Self-Employed — often the best budget paid option
  • Cash App Taxes — free, but coverage/support for complex self-employed situations can be more limited

Usually more expensive:

  • TurboTax Self-Employed
  • H&R Block Self-Employed

If you want, I can compare FreeTaxUSA vs TaxSlayer vs TurboTax for your exact situation.

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Best price: FreeTaxUSA. Its federal filing is $0, and state returns are $15.99. That’s far cheaper than TurboTax Self-Employed, which is $139.99 federal + state additional, and TaxAct Self-Employed, which is $164.99 and includes 1 state. (freetaxusa.com)

If you want the cheapest option for a self-employed filer, I’d pick FreeTaxUSA. (freetaxusa.com)

How much is tax software for small businesses? transactional
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For small businesses, tax software usually costs:

  • $0–$60/year: basic/self-employed expense tracking and simple sole prop filing
  • $100–$250/year: most DIY small-business tax software
  • $300–$700+: more complete business tax prep, especially for LLCs, S-corps, and partnerships

Common options:

  • TurboTax Business: around $170–$190
  • H&R Block Premium & Business: around $120–$150
  • TaxAct Business: around $150–$180
  • QuickBooks Online + TurboTax (for bookkeeping + filing): often $30–$200+/month for QuickBooks, plus filing

If you tell me your business type (sole prop, LLC, S-corp, partnership) and whether you need state filing, I can give a tighter price range and best picks.

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It depends on your business type:

  • Sole prop / freelancer / single-member LLC (Schedule C): about $0 to $139 federal with DIY software, plus state fees on paid tiers. TurboTax Premium is currently listed at $99 federal with state additional. (turbotax.intuit.com)
  • S-corp / partnership / multi-member LLC / C-corp: typically around $180 to $739 for software, depending on DIY vs expert help. TurboTax Desktop Business is $190, and TurboTax’s expert-assisted business filing starts at $449 federal for S-corps and partnerships, with state additional. (turbotax.intuit.com)
  • H&R Block Premium & Business: includes one state and lists $19.95 per state e-file. Its small-business DIY product covers business returns and five federal e-files. (hrblock.com)

Rule of thumb:

  • Simple self-employed filing: budget $0–$150.
  • Actual business entity returns: budget $200–$800+. (turbotax.intuit.com)

If you want, I can narrow it to your exact business type and give the cheapest software options.

What tax software includes free state filing? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

A few tax software options that include free state filing (usually for simple returns) are:

  • Cash App Taxes — free federal + state filing for most users
  • FreeTaxUSA — free federal, and state filing is free in some promotions but usually state is a low fee
  • IRS Free File partners — some offer free federal and free state if you qualify by income

Popular paid products that sometimes include a free state return in certain bundles or promos:

  • TurboTax Deluxe / Premier / Live — often not free state; state is usually extra
  • H&R Block Free Online — free state for simple returns in the free tier, but upgrades can cost
  • TaxSlayer Simply Free — state may be free in the basic version, depending on your return

Best bet if you want truly free state filing: Cash App Taxes.

If you want, I can also give you a quick list of the best free options for simple vs. complicated returns.

retrieval Not mentioned

These currently include free state filing:

  • Cash App Taxes — free federal and state filing for all users. (cash.app)
  • H&R Block Free Online — free federal and state filing for simple returns, if you qualify for the free tier. (hrblock.com)
  • TaxSlayer Simply Free — includes one free state return for simple returns; if you qualify for IRS Free File, some states are also free under that program. (support.taxslayer.com)
  • IRS Free File partner offers — some providers offer free state returns, but it depends on eligibility and the specific partner. (irs.gov)
  • MyFreeTaxes (United Way) — free federal and state filing. (myfreetaxes.com)

Usually not free for state: FreeTaxUSA charges for state returns, and TaxAct/most TurboTax paths typically charge for state. (freetaxusa.com)

If you want, I can narrow this down to best free option for a simple W-2 return or best for self-employed/1099 income.

TOM — Top of Mind (15 prompts)

What are the best tax preparation software options for individuals?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

Top options for individual tax prep:

  • TurboTax Deluxe / Premier (Intuit) — Best overall for ease of use, strong guidance, excellent import tools. Usually the priciest.
  • H&R Block Deluxe / Premium — Best balance of price and support, very good interview-style UI, solid in-person help options.
  • FreeTaxUSA — Best value; federal filing is free/low-cost, good for simple to moderately complex returns. State return costs extra.
  • TaxAct Deluxe — Good mid-priced option with solid features, often cheaper than TurboTax/H&R Block.
  • Cash App Taxes — Best free option if your return is straightforward; very limited support and features compared with paid tools.

Quick pick:

  • Best overall: TurboTax
  • Best value: FreeTaxUSA
  • Best if you want help: H&R Block
  • Best free simple filing: Cash App Taxes

If you want, I can also rank them by price, support, or best for freelancers/investments.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are the best tax prep software options for individuals, depending on your needs:

  • TurboTax (Free / Deluxe / Premier / Self-Employed) — Best overall for ease of use and guidance. Great if you want the smoothest experience and don’t mind paying more.
  • H&R Block Online — Best balance of simplicity and price. Strong for both basic returns and more complex situations.
  • Cash App Taxes — Best free option for straightforward returns. Truly free for most common filings, but less robust for advanced situations.
  • TaxAct — Best for budget-conscious filers who still want solid features. Usually cheaper than TurboTax/H&R Block.
  • FreeTaxUSA — Best low-cost option for more complex returns. Federal filing is free; state filing is inexpensive.
  • TaxSlayer — Good value, especially for self-employed filers and people who want a lower-cost alternative.
  • IRS Free File — Best if you qualify based on income. Use partner software for free through the IRS site.

Quick picks:

  • Easiest: TurboTax
  • Best free: Cash App Taxes or IRS Free File
  • Best value: FreeTaxUSA
  • Best all-around cheaper option: H&R Block

If you want, I can also rank these for simple returns, self-employed, or investor/stock-heavy returns.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are the best tax prep software options for individuals:

  • TurboTax (Intuit) — Best overall for ease of use. Great interview-style guidance, strong import tools, and excellent support. Best if you want the smoothest experience.
  • H&R Block Tax Software — Best for in-person + online hybrid support. Good if you may want to finish your return with help at a local office.
  • FreeTaxUSA — Best value. Very low-cost federal filing, solid for straightforward and moderately complex returns.
  • TaxAct — Good budget option. Usually cheaper than TurboTax/H&R Block, with decent usability.
  • Cash App Taxes — Best free option for simple returns. Free federal and state filing, but fewer bells and whistles.
  • TaxSlayer — Good for self-starters. Affordable and capable, especially for more confident filers.
  • IRS Free File — Best if you qualify by income. Can be the cheapest route if you meet the program requirements.

Quick picks:

  • Best overall: TurboTax
  • Best free: Cash App Taxes
  • Best cheap paid: FreeTaxUSA
  • Best for human help: H&R Block

If you want, I can also recommend the best option based on your situation (simple return, self-employed, investments, rental property, etc.).

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are the best tax prep software options for individuals:

  • TurboTax Deluxe — Best overall for most people. Very polished, strong guidance, great import tools.
  • H&R Block Deluxe — Best balance of ease and price. Good for straightforward returns and in-person support if needed.
  • FreeTaxUSA — Best budget option. Federal filing is free; state is inexpensive. Solid for simple to moderately complex returns.
  • Cash App Taxes — Best truly free option for many filers. Free federal and state, but fewer bells and whistles.
  • TaxAct Deluxe — Good for DIY filers who want a lower-cost paid option with solid coverage.
  • TaxSlayer Classic/Deluxe — Good value, especially if you’re comfortable doing more yourself.
  • IRS Free File (via partner providers) — Best if you qualify based on income; can get free federal filing through approved companies.

If you want the safest pick:

  • Best overall: TurboTax Deluxe
  • Best value: H&R Block Deluxe
  • Best cheap/free: FreeTaxUSA or Cash App Taxes

If you want, I can also recommend the best one based on your tax situation (W-2 only, self-employed, investments, renters, etc.).

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are the best tax prep software options for most individuals:

  1. TurboTax Online
    • Best overall for ease of use and guidance
    • Great if you want step-by-step help and don’t mind paying more
  2. H&R Block Online
    • Best balance of usability and price
    • Good for both simple and moderately complex returns
  3. FreeTaxUSA
    • Best value
    • Federal filing is free for many users; very affordable for state returns
  4. TaxAct
    • Good low-cost option for DIY filers
    • Solid for straightforward returns
  5. Cash App Taxes
    • Best completely free option
    • Good for simple returns, but less robust than paid tools
  6. IRS Free File
    • Best if you qualify based on income
    • Free access to partner tax software through the IRS
Quick picks
  • Best overall: TurboTax
  • Best cheaper alternative: H&R Block
  • Best free/low-cost: FreeTaxUSA
  • Best truly free: Cash App Taxes

If you want, I can also rank them for simple returns, self-employed filers, or renters/homeowners.

What are the top tax preparation software brands for filing taxes online? 40/mo
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

Top online tax prep software brands:

  • TurboTax — most popular, very polished, best for guided DIY filing.
  • H&R Block Online — strong all-around option, good in-person support if needed.
  • TaxAct — usually cheaper than TurboTax/H&R Block, solid for straightforward returns.
  • FreeTaxUSA — very low-cost/free federal filing, popular budget choice.
  • TaxSlayer — good value, simple interface, often cheaper for self-employed filers.
  • Cash App Taxes — free federal and state filing for many users, best if your taxes are simple.
  • Jackson Hewitt Online — useful if you want online filing with access to tax pros.

If you want, I can also rank them by best overall, cheapest, or best for self-employed/business owners.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

Top online tax prep brands:

  1. TurboTax Online — Best-known, very polished, strong guidance. Good for simple to complex returns.
  2. H&R Block Online — Easy to use, strong support, good for in-person-to-online hybrid filing.
  3. TaxAct — Usually cheaper than TurboTax/H&R Block, solid for many common returns.
  4. TaxSlayer — Budget-friendly, straightforward, good value for self-filers.
  5. FreeTaxUSA — Very low-cost/free for many federal returns; popular for simple-to-moderate returns.
  6. Cash App Taxes — Free federal and state filing, best for simple returns.
  7. Jackson Hewitt Online — Helpful if you want a guided filing experience with a recognized tax brand.

If you want the shortest shortlist:

  • Best overall: TurboTax Online
  • Best value: FreeTaxUSA or TaxSlayer
  • Best support: H&R Block Online
  • Best free option: Cash App Taxes

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of use, or best for self-employed / investors.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

Top online tax prep software brands:

  • TurboTax — best-known and very user-friendly; strong for complex returns.
  • H&R Block — solid all-around option; good in-person + online support.
  • TaxAct — typically cheaper; good value for straightforward returns.
  • FreeTaxUSA — low-cost/free federal filing; popular budget pick.
  • Jackson Hewitt Online — simple interface, decent for basic to mid-level returns.
  • TaxSlayer — affordable and fast; good for self-filers.
  • Cash App Taxes — free federal and state filing for many users; best for simple returns.
  • eFile.com — easy online filing with guided questions.

If you want, I can also rank them by best for beginners, cheapest, or best for self-employed filers.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

Top online tax prep brands in the U.S.:

  • TurboTax — most polished UX, strong guidance, good for complex returns
  • H&R Block Online — solid all-around option, good support and in-person backup
  • TaxAct — usually cheaper than TurboTax, good for straightforward to mid-complexity returns
  • FreeTaxUSA — very low-cost/free federal filing, popular value pick
  • TaxSlayer — budget-friendly, simple interface, good for basic to moderate returns
  • Cash App Taxes — free federal and state filing, best for simple returns
  • Jackson Hewitt Online — good if you want a brand with office support available
  • Liberty Tax — online filing plus brick-and-mortar help

If you want, I can also rank these by best for beginners, cheapest, or best for self-employed filers.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

Top online tax prep brands:

  1. TurboTax Online — Best-known, very polished, strong guidance.
  2. H&R Block Online — Good all-around alternative, solid in-person support if needed.
  3. TaxAct — Usually cheaper, good for more complex returns.
  4. FreeTaxUSA — Budget-friendly, often best value for straightforward returns.
  5. TaxSlayer — Affordable and simple, good for DIY filers.
  6. Cash App Taxes — Free federal/state filing for many users, but less feature-rich.
  7. Jackson Hewitt Online — Easy to use, with hybrid online + in-person options.

If you want, I can also rank these by best free option, easiest to use, or best for self-employed filers.

What tax preparation software do most people recommend? 90/mo
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

Most people usually recommend:

  • TurboTax Deluxe — best-known and easiest for most filers, but pricey
  • FreeTaxUSA — best value if you want cheap/easy federal filing
  • H&R Block Deluxe — good alternative to TurboTax, often a bit cheaper
  • Cash App Taxes — good if you want truly free filing and your return is simple

Best overall pick for most people: TurboTax Deluxe Best budget pick: FreeTaxUSA

If you want, I can also recommend the best one for students, self-employed people, or renters/homeowners.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

Most people tend to recommend TurboTax first, mainly because it’s the easiest and most polished.

Other common picks:

  • H&R Block — best all-around alternative; often cheaper and very beginner-friendly.
  • FreeTaxUSA — best if you want a low-cost option; great for simple to moderate returns.
  • TaxAct — solid middle-ground choice, especially if you want a cheaper DIY app.
  • Cash App Taxes — truly free for many straightforward returns.

Quick take:

  • Best overall: TurboTax
  • Best value: FreeTaxUSA
  • Best in-person + software combo: H&R Block

If you want, I can recommend the best one based on your tax situation.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

Most people usually recommend:

  • TurboTax — best-known and easiest for many people, but often the most expensive.
  • H&R Block — strong alternative, especially if you want in-person help or a simpler interface.
  • FreeTaxUSA — very popular for value; federal filing is free for most people.
  • TaxAct — solid budget option for straightforward returns.
  • Cash App Taxes — free and good for simple tax situations.

Quick pick:

  • Best overall ease: TurboTax
  • Best value: FreeTaxUSA
  • Best if you want local help: H&R Block

If you want, I can recommend the best one based on your situation (W-2, self-employed, investments, rental, etc.).

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

The most commonly recommended ones are:

  • TurboTax — best overall experience, but usually the most expensive
  • H&R Block — strong alternative, good for more complicated returns
  • FreeTaxUSA — best value; very popular if you want cheap/free federal filing
  • Cash App Taxes — completely free, but more limited
  • TaxAct — decent budget option, often less polished than TurboTax

Quick pick:

  • Simple return + lowest cost: FreeTaxUSA
  • Best ease of use: TurboTax
  • Good middle ground: H&R Block

If you want, I can recommend the best one for your specific situation (single, married, self-employed, investments, etc.).

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

Most people tend to recommend:

  • TurboTax — best overall for ease of use, especially if your taxes are a bit more complicated.
  • FreeTaxUSA — the best value; cheap and solid for many simple/mid-level returns.
  • H&R Block — a good middle ground, with strong support and in-person help if needed.

Quick rule of thumb:

  • Easiest: TurboTax
  • Cheapest good option: FreeTaxUSA
  • Best if you want help: H&R Block

If you want, I can also recommend the best one based on your situation (W-2 only, self-employed, investments, etc.).

Which tax preparation software is best for easy e-filing? 30/mo
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

For easy e-filing, the best overall pick is usually TurboTax.

Best options:

  • TurboTax Deluxe — easiest UI, strong step-by-step guidance, great for most filers
  • H&R Block Deluxe — simpler than TurboTax for some people, good in-person support options
  • FreeTaxUSA — best low-cost option, very easy to e-file, especially for straightforward returns

Quick recommendation:

  • Best overall ease: TurboTax
  • Best value: FreeTaxUSA
  • Best if you want support: H&R Block

If you want, I can also recommend the best one based on your situation: simple return, self-employed, rental income, or investments.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

For easy e-filing, the best overall pick is usually TurboTax Online — it has the smoothest interview-style flow, strong import tools, and very reliable e-filing.

Good alternatives:

  • H&R Block Online — easiest if you want a simpler interface and decent in-person support options.
  • TaxAct — cheaper than TurboTax, still solid for straightforward returns.
  • FreeTaxUSA — best value if your return is simple and you want low cost.

My quick pick:

  • Easiest overall: TurboTax Online
  • Best cheaper option: H&R Block Online
  • Best budget option: FreeTaxUSA

If you tell me whether your return is simple, self-employed, or has investments/crypto, I can point you to the best exact version.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

For the easiest e-filing, TurboTax Deluxe is usually the best pick.

Best overall for easy e-filing:

  • TurboTax Deluxe — cleanest guided interview, very smooth import of W-2s and prior returns, strong state filing flow.

Also good:

  • H&R Block Deluxe — easier on the wallet, very user-friendly, good in-person support if you want backup.
  • FreeTaxUSA — best cheap option, easy enough for simple returns, but not as polished.
  • TaxAct — solid middle ground, but the interface is less smooth than TurboTax.

Quick recommendation:

  • Most effortless: TurboTax Deluxe
  • Best value: H&R Block Deluxe
  • Lowest cost: FreeTaxUSA

If you want, I can also recommend the best one based on whether you have W-2 only, self-employment, investments, or rental income.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

For the easiest e-filing, TurboTax Online is usually the smoothest and most guided option.

Best picks:

  • TurboTax Deluxe — best overall for easy, step-by-step filing
  • H&R Block Online Deluxe — very close second, simpler and often cheaper
  • FreeTaxUSA — best low-cost option if your return is straightforward

Quick rule:

  • Want the easiest experience? TurboTax
  • Want good ease for less money? H&R Block
  • Want the cheapest solid e-file? FreeTaxUSA

If you want, I can recommend the best one based on your tax situation (W-2 only, self-employed, investments, etc.).

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

For easy e-filing, the best overall is TurboTax Online — it’s usually the smoothest, most guided, and easiest for beginners.

Best picks by situation:

  • TurboTax Online — easiest UI, best hand-holding
  • H&R Block Online — almost as easy, often a bit cheaper
  • FreeTaxUSA — best low-cost option; simple and reliable, but less polished
  • Cash App Taxes — free, good for straightforward returns

My quick recommendation:

  • Want the easiest experience? TurboTax Online
  • Want easy + cheaper? H&R Block Online
  • Want free and simple? Cash App Taxes or FreeTaxUSA

If you want, I can also tell you the best one for your exact tax situation (W-2 only, self-employed, investments, etc.).

What is the most recommended tax filing software for small business owners? 1,300/mo
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

For most small business owners, TurboTax Self-Employed is the most widely recommended all-around tax filing software.

Best overall:

  • TurboTax Self-Employed — best for sole proprietors, freelancers, and single-member LLCs. Strong expense guidance, Schedule C support, and easy import of bank/1099 data.

Also worth considering:

  • H&R Block Premium & Business — great if you want in-person support options and solid small-business tax handling.
  • TaxAct Business — usually cheaper, good for straightforward business returns.
  • FreeTaxUSA — best budget option for simple returns, but less polished for business users.

Quick rule:

  • Simple small business / self-employed: TurboTax Self-Employed
  • Need more hands-on help: H&R Block
  • Want lower cost: TaxAct or FreeTaxUSA

If you tell me your business type (LLC, S-corp, sole prop, etc.), I can recommend the best exact product.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

For most small business owners, TurboTax Business and H&R Block Premium & Business are the most commonly recommended.

Best overall for ease of use: TurboTax Business

  • Strong guided interview flow
  • Good for sole props, LLCs, partnerships, S-corps, C-corps
  • Best if you want the simplest DIY experience

Best value: H&R Block Premium & Business

  • Usually cheaper than TurboTax
  • Solid for small business returns
  • Good if you want in-person help as a backup

If you have bookkeeping complexity: QuickBooks + TurboTax Business

  • Best if your business already runs on QuickBooks
  • Makes importing income/expenses easier

Bottom line:

  • Most recommended overall: TurboTax Business
  • Best budget option: H&R Block Premium & Business

If you tell me your business type (LLC, S-corp, etc.) and whether you have employees, I can recommend the best exact product.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

Most commonly recommended overall: TurboTax Business

  • Best-known option for small business taxes
  • Strong guidance, easy UI, good for LLCs, S-corps, partnerships, and sole proprietors
  • Good choice if you want the least confusing experience

Other strong options:

  • H&R Block Premium & Business — great if you want in-person/online support and a simpler price structure
  • TaxAct Business — usually cheaper, solid for more experienced users
  • Keeper Tax — good for freelancers/solo owners who want deduction help, not full business returns

Quick pick:

  • Best overall: TurboTax Business
  • Best value: TaxAct Business
  • Best support: H&R Block Premium & Business

If you tell me your business type (sole prop, LLC, S-corp, etc.), I can recommend the best exact product.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

For most small business owners, TurboTax Business is the most commonly recommended choice for ease of use, guided filing, and strong support.

Best overall:

  • TurboTax Business — great for LLCs, S-corps, and partnerships; very user-friendly.

Best value:

  • H&R Block Premium & Business — solid features at a lower price.
  • TaxAct Business — usually the cheapest good option.

Best for sole proprietors / freelancers (Schedule C):

  • TurboTax Self-Employed
  • H&R Block Self-Employed

If you want, I can recommend the best one based on your business type (sole prop, LLC, S-corp, etc.).

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

For most small business owners, TurboTax Self-Employed is the most commonly recommended choice.

Why it stands out:

  • Good for Schedule C freelancers/sole proprietors
  • Strong deduction finder
  • Easy import from QuickBooks Self-Employed
  • Solid guidance for common small-business tax situations

Good alternatives:

  • H&R Block Premium & Business — better if you want in-person support or have a more complex return
  • TaxAct Business — usually cheaper, decent for straightforward business filings
  • Drake Tax — popular with tax pros, but less beginner-friendly

If you tell me your business type—sole proprietor, LLC, S-corp, or partnership—I can recommend the best exact product.

What are the best online tax preparation tools? 10/mo
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are the best online tax prep tools, depending on your needs:

  • TurboTax Online — Best overall, especially if you want the smoothest interface and strongest guided help.
  • H&R Block Online — Great all-around option, usually a bit cheaper than TurboTax and strong for in-person help if needed.
  • FreeTaxUSA — Best value. Very low-cost, good for simple to moderately complex returns.
  • TaxAct — Solid budget pick with good coverage for many common tax situations.
  • Cash App Taxes — Best free option for simple returns; truly free federal and state filing.
  • TaxSlayer — Good for self-employed filers and people who want a lower-cost alternative.
  • Jackson Hewitt Online — Good if you may want access to a human tax pro.
  • E-file.com — Basic, affordable, but less polished than TurboTax/H&R Block.
Best picks by situation
  • Best overall: TurboTax Online
  • Best free: Cash App Taxes
  • Best cheapest for most people: FreeTaxUSA
  • Best for self-employed: TurboTax Self-Employed or TaxSlayer Self-Employed
  • Best for live help: H&R Block Online or TurboTax Live

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of use, or best for simple vs. complex returns.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best online tax prep tools, depending on your needs:

  • TurboTax Online — Best overall if you want the most hand-holding and the smoothest interface.
  • H&R Block Online — Great for both beginners and filers who may need in-person backup.
  • TaxAct — Good value; usually cheaper than TurboTax/H&R Block for similar core features.
  • Cash App Taxes — Best free option for many simple returns; strong for straightforward filing.
  • FreeTaxUSA — Excellent low-cost choice, especially if you have a more complex return but want to save money.
  • Jackson Hewitt Online — Solid mid-tier option, especially if you like the brand’s tax support.
  • TaxSlayer — Good budget-friendly alternative with decent guided filing.

Quick picks:

  • Best overall: TurboTax Online
  • Best free: Cash App Taxes or FreeTaxUSA
  • Best value: TaxAct or TaxSlayer
  • Best for support: H&R Block Online

If you want, I can also rank them for self-employed, investors, or simple W-2 returns.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

The best online tax prep tools depend on your situation, but these are the strongest picks:

  • TurboTax Online — Best overall for most people; very polished, great guidance, best for maximizing refunds, but usually the most expensive.
  • H&R Block Online — Best value for many filers; strong support, good interface, and usually cheaper than TurboTax.
  • Cash App Taxes — Best free option for simple returns; truly free for federal and state, but less robust for complex situations.
  • TaxAct — Good budget choice for more complicated returns; solid features at a lower price.
  • FreeTaxUSA — Best low-cost option for self-filers; free federal, low-cost state, handles more than basic simple returns.
  • TaxSlayer — Good for freelancers/independent contractors and budget-conscious filers; clean and affordable.
  • Block Advisors / H&R Block tax pro help — Best if you want online prep plus access to a real tax professional.

Quick picks:

  • Easiest / most guided: TurboTax
  • Best free: Cash App Taxes or FreeTaxUSA
  • Best value: H&R Block
  • Best for side gigs / self-employed on a budget: TaxSlayer or FreeTaxUSA

If you tell me whether you’re filing simple W-2, self-employed, rental income, or investments/crypto, I can recommend the best one for your exact case.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are the best online tax prep tools, by use case:

  • TurboTax Online — best overall; easiest UX, strongest guidance, great for complex returns
  • H&R Block Online — best balance of ease + price; strong in-person support if you want help later
  • FreeTaxUSA — best low-cost option; federal filing is free, good for most simple-to-moderate returns
  • Cash App Taxes — best truly free option for many people; simple, no hidden upsells
  • TaxAct — good for budget-conscious filers who want more features than the cheapest tools
  • TaxSlayer — solid for self-employed and side-hustle income at a lower price
  • Jackson Hewitt Online — good if you want online filing with access to human support

Quick picks:

  • Best overall: TurboTax Online
  • Best free: Cash App Taxes or FreeTaxUSA
  • Best for self-employed: TurboTax Self-Employed or TaxSlayer Self-Employed
  • Best for maximum hand-holding: H&R Block Online

If you want, I can also give you a “best by situation” shortlist based on whether you’re W-2 only, self-employed, have rentals, or need audit support.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are the best online tax prep tools, by use case:

  • TurboTax Online — Best overall for most people; easiest UI, strongest guidance, good for self-employed and itemized returns.
  • H&R Block Online — Best balance of price and support; solid DIY option with in-person help if needed.
  • FreeTaxUSA — Best value; very low cost, free federal for most filers, good for simple to moderately complex returns.
  • Cash App Taxes — Best free option for straightforward returns; truly free federal and state, but less powerful than paid tools.
  • TaxSlayer — Good for self-employed filers on a budget; affordable and covers many common tax situations.
  • TaxAct — Good midrange option; decent features, often cheaper than TurboTax.
  • Jackson Hewitt Online — Useful if you want online filing with access to tax pros.

Quick picks:

  • Simple return: Cash App Taxes or FreeTaxUSA
  • Best easy experience: TurboTax Online
  • Best budget + support: H&R Block Online
  • Freelancer/self-employed: TurboTax Self-Employed or TaxSlayer Self-Employed

If you tell me your situation—W-2 only, self-employed, rental income, investments, etc.—I can recommend the best one.

Which tax software is easiest for beginners to use?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

For beginners, the easiest tax software is usually:

  1. TurboTax Deluxe
    • Best overall for hand-holding
    • Very guided, simple questions, clean interface
    • Good if you want the least confusion
  2. H&R Block Deluxe
    • Also very beginner-friendly
    • Slightly more straightforward for some users
    • Good in-person support if you want help at a tax office
  3. Cash App Taxes
    • Free and easy for simple returns
    • Best if your taxes are basic
    • Less polished guidance than TurboTax, but very simple

My pick: TurboTax Deluxe if you want the easiest experience. Best free option: Cash App Taxes if your return is straightforward.

If you want, I can also recommend the best one based on whether you’re a student, employee, freelancer, or homeowner.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

For most beginners, TurboTax Online is usually the easiest to use.

Why it’s easiest:

  • Very guided, step-by-step interview
  • Strong plain-English explanations
  • Good import features for W-2s and some tax forms
  • Best if you want the least confusion and don’t mind paying more

Good alternatives:

  • H&R Block Online — also very beginner-friendly, usually a bit cheaper than TurboTax
  • Cash App Taxes — easiest free option, but less hand-holding
  • FreeTaxUSA — simple and inexpensive, but not as polished for first-timers

My quick pick:

  • Best overall for beginners: TurboTax Online
  • Best cheaper beginner option: H&R Block Online
  • Best free option: Cash App Taxes

If you want, I can also recommend the best one based on your situation: W-2 only, self-employed, student, or home owner.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

For most beginners, TurboTax Online is usually the easiest to use.

Why:

  • very guided, interview-style flow
  • clean interface
  • strong import of W-2s and prior-year info
  • lots of plain-English help

Runner-up: H&R Block Online

  • also beginner-friendly
  • a bit cheaper than TurboTax in many cases
  • good if you want in-person help options too

If you want free and simple:

  • Cash App Taxes — free, but less hand-holding
  • FreeTaxUSA — easy and cheap, but not as polished as TurboTax

If you want the absolute simplest pick: TurboTax Deluxe Online.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

For most beginners, TurboTax Deluxe is usually the easiest to use.

Why it’s easiest:

  • Very guided, interview-style setup
  • Strong import features for W-2s and prior returns
  • Clear explanations of deductions and credits
  • Good for people who want the least confusion

Also good for beginners:

  • H&R Block Deluxe — almost as easy, often a bit cheaper than TurboTax
  • FreeTaxUSA — simple and affordable, but less polished
  • Cash App Taxes — free and straightforward, best if your taxes are simple

Quick pick:

  • Absolute easiest: TurboTax Deluxe
  • Best lower-cost easy option: H&R Block Deluxe
  • Best free simple option: Cash App Taxes or FreeTaxUSA

If you want, I can also tell you which is best for simple W-2 taxes, self-employed, or students.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

For most beginners, TurboTax Deluxe is usually the easiest to use.

Why:

  • Very guided, step-by-step interview style
  • Best “plain English” explanations
  • Strong import tools for W-2s and last year’s return
  • Good if you want the least confusion

Other easy options:

  • H&R Block Deluxe — also very beginner-friendly, often a bit cheaper
  • Cash App Taxes — free and simple, but less hand-holding than TurboTax

Best pick:

  • Easiest overall: TurboTax Deluxe
  • Best cheaper alternative: H&R Block Deluxe
  • Best free simple option: Cash App Taxes

If you want, I can also recommend the best one based on whether you’re a W-2 employee, student, or freelancer.

What are the most popular tax software options this year?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

The most popular tax software options this year are:

  • TurboTax — best-known and easiest for most people; especially popular for W-2 filers and self-employed users.
  • H&R Block — strong all-around option, with good in-person support plus solid DIY software.
  • TaxAct — usually cheaper than TurboTax/H&R Block, good for straightforward returns.
  • FreeTaxUSA — very popular budget pick; free federal filing for many users, paid state return.
  • Cash App Taxes — free for many simple returns, but less feature-rich.
  • Jackson Hewitt Online — decent middle-ground if you want tax prep support.
  • IRS Free File partners — worth checking if your income qualifies for truly free filing.

If you want, I can also rank them by best for simple returns, self-employed, cheapest, or easiest to use.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

The most popular tax software options this year are usually:

  • TurboTax — most widely used, especially for easy filing and guidance
  • H&R Block — strong all-around option, good in-person + online support
  • TaxAct — solid lower-cost choice for many filers
  • FreeTaxUSA — popular budget option, especially for simple returns
  • TaxSlayer — affordable and good for self-filers
  • Cash App Taxes — free for supported returns, very popular with simple filings

If you want the best overall mainstream picks:

  • TurboTax Deluxe
  • H&R Block Deluxe Online
  • FreeTaxUSA for the cheapest good option

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of use, or best for self-employed/freelancers.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

The most popular tax software options this year are:

  • TurboTax — best-known overall; strong for complex returns and very polished UX
  • H&R Block — popular alternative with good online + in-person support
  • FreeTaxUSA — very popular budget choice; cheap federal filing, solid for most returns
  • TaxAct — good mid-range option, often cheaper than TurboTax
  • TaxSlayer — popular low-cost pick, especially for straightforward returns
  • Cash App Taxes — free for many users, but more limited than the big paid tools

Quick picks:

  • Best overall: TurboTax
  • Best for in-person help: H&R Block
  • Best cheap option: FreeTaxUSA
  • Best simple return: Cash App Taxes

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of use, or best for freelancers/self-employed.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

The most popular tax software options this year are:

  • TurboTax — best-known and very polished; strong for complex returns
  • H&R Block — easy to use, good mix of online + in-person help
  • FreeTaxUSA — very popular low-cost option, especially for simple returns
  • TaxAct — solid mid-range choice with decent pricing
  • TaxSlayer — good value, especially for freelancers and side-gig income
  • Cash App Taxes — free for many basic returns
  • Jackson Hewitt Online — good if you want a familiar tax-brand experience

If you want, I can also rank them by best overall, cheapest, or best for self-employed.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

The most popular tax software options this year are:

  • TurboTax (Intuit) — most well-known overall; strong for guided filing and complex returns
  • H&R Block — popular for both DIY filing and in-person help
  • Cash App Taxes — free and simple, best for straightforward returns
  • TaxAct — usually cheaper than TurboTax, good value for self-filers
  • FreeTaxUSA — very popular low-cost option, especially for federal returns
  • Jackson Hewitt Online — good if you want a mix of software and human support
  • Liberty Tax Online — another supported option with assisted filing available
  • TaxSlayer — solid budget-friendly choice with useful features

If you want, I can also rank them by best free, best for self-employed, or best overall.

What is the best software for doing your taxes at home? 170/mo
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

For most people in the U.S., TurboTax Deluxe is the easiest “best overall” home tax software.

Best picks by situation:

  • Best overall: TurboTax Deluxe — easiest interface, best guidance
  • Best value: FreeTaxUSA — very cheap, handles most common returns well
  • Best for hands-on filers: H&R Block Deluxe — solid step-by-step help, often cheaper than TurboTax
  • Best if you have investments/crypto/self-employment: TurboTax Premier or H&R Block Premium
  • Best free option for simple returns: Cash App Taxes — actually free for most straightforward filings

Quick recommendation:

  • If you want the smoothest experience, choose TurboTax Deluxe
  • If you want the lowest cost, choose FreeTaxUSA
  • If your return is simple, try Cash App Taxes

If you tell me whether you’re single/married, self-employed, have stocks/crypto, or own a home, I can point you to the best exact version.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

For most people, TurboTax is the easiest and most polished, especially if your taxes are a bit complicated.

Best overall:

  • TurboTax Deluxe — best if you want the smoothest experience and good guidance
  • TurboTax Premier — better if you have investments, stock sales, or crypto

Best value:

  • FreeTaxUSA — usually the best cheap option; federal filing is free, and it handles most common situations well

Best for simple returns:

  • Cash App Taxes — completely free, good for straightforward W-2 returns

Best if you want strong support:

  • H&R Block Online — easier than many alternatives and usually cheaper than TurboTax

Quick recommendation:

  • Simple return: Cash App Taxes
  • Best balance of price + capability: FreeTaxUSA
  • Easiest premium experience: TurboTax Deluxe/Premier

If you tell me whether you have just a W-2, self-employment income, investments, or rental property, I can point you to the best exact version.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

For most people, the best all-around at-home tax software is TurboTax Online — it’s the easiest to use, but usually the most expensive.

Good alternatives:

  • H&R Block — best balance of ease and price; good if you want in-person help as backup.
  • TaxAct — cheaper option with solid support for more complicated returns.
  • FreeTaxUSA — best value if your return is fairly straightforward; federal filing is usually free or very low cost.
  • Cash App Taxes — best truly free option for simple-to-moderate returns, though less robust than the others.

Quick pick:

  • Easiest: TurboTax
  • Best value: H&R Block
  • Cheapest: FreeTaxUSA or Cash App Taxes

If you tell me whether you’re single/married, own a home, have investments, freelancing, or kids, I can point you to the best one for your situation.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

For most people, TurboTax is the best at-home tax software overall.

Top picks:

  • Best overall: TurboTax Deluxe — easiest interface, best guidance, great if you want the smoothest experience.
  • Best value: FreeTaxUSA — very cheap and handles most common returns well.
  • Best for in-person help: H&R Block Deluxe — solid software, plus optional local office support.
  • Best for simple returns: Cash App Taxes — free, good for straightforward filings.
  • Best for self-employed: TurboTax Self-Employed or H&R Block Premium.

Quick rule:

  • Want the easiest/most polished? TurboTax
  • Want to save money? FreeTaxUSA
  • Want help from a tax pro? H&R Block

If you want, I can also recommend the best one based on your situation: W-2 only, students, renters, self-employed, crypto, or investment income.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

Best overall: TurboTax Online

  • Easiest to use, best guidance, strongest for most people
  • Best if you want a smooth DIY experience and don’t mind paying more

Best value: FreeTaxUSA

  • Very low cost, solid for simple to moderately complex returns
  • Great if you want to save money

Best for in-person help + software: H&R Block Deluxe/Online

  • Good UI, strong support options, good if you may want to file at an office too

Best free option: Cash App Taxes

  • Free for many returns, but not as feature-rich as TurboTax or H&R Block

My quick pick:

  • Simple return, want cheapest: FreeTaxUSA
  • Want the easiest/most polished: TurboTax
  • Want free and straightforward: Cash App Taxes

If you tell me your situation (W-2 only, self-employed, investments, rental property, kids, etc.), I can name the best one for you.

What tax preparation software is best for simple returns?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

For simple tax returns, the best overall pick is usually FreeTaxUSA.

Best options
  • FreeTaxUSA — best value
    • Free federal filing for most simple returns
    • Affordable state filing
    • Clean, easy enough for W-2s, basic deductions, and a tax credit or two
  • Cash App Taxes — best totally free option
    • Free federal and state filing
    • Good for very simple returns
    • Less polished and fewer bells/whistles
  • TurboTax Free Edition — best if you want the smoothest experience
    • Very user-friendly
    • But the free version is limited, and many people get pushed to paid tiers
  • H&R Block Free Online — solid middle ground
    • Easy to use
    • Free version handles simple returns well
    • Better than TurboTax Free for some people
My quick recommendation
  • Pick FreeTaxUSA if you want the best mix of low cost and ease.
  • Pick Cash App Taxes if you want fully free.
  • Pick TurboTax Free if you want the most guided interface.

If you want, I can also give you the best software based on your exact situation (W-2 only, student, homeowner, side income, etc.).

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

For simple returns, the best overall pick is usually FreeTaxUSA.

Best options
  • FreeTaxUSA — best value; free federal filing, low-cost state filing, handles common simple returns well.
  • TurboTax Free Edition — easiest interface, but can get pricey if your return becomes even a little more complex.
  • H&R Block Free Online — good middle ground; simple and familiar.
  • Cash App Taxes — free for many simple returns, but less robust than FreeTaxUSA.
My recommendation
  • Best overall: FreeTaxUSA
  • Easiest to use: TurboTax Free Edition
  • Best if you want a free, straightforward option: Cash App Taxes

If you want, I can also rank them based on price, ease of use, or state return support.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

For simple returns, the best pick is usually FreeTaxUSA.

Top choices:

  • FreeTaxUSA — best overall value; free federal filing, low-cost state return, handles common simple situations well.
  • Cash App Taxes — fully free for federal and state, good if your return is very straightforward.
  • TurboTax Free Edition — easiest interface, but it can get expensive if your return isn’t truly simple.
  • H&R Block Free Online — solid and user-friendly, similar caveat as TurboTax.

My quick recommendation:

  • Best free/easy: Cash App Taxes
  • Best overall for simple returns: FreeTaxUSA
  • Best for hand-holding: TurboTax Free Edition

If you want, I can also tell you which one is best for your exact situation (W-2 only, student, interest/dividends, etc.).

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

For simple returns, the best picks are usually:

  • FreeTaxUSA — best overall value for simple returns; federal filing is free, state is cheap, and it’s easy to use.
  • Cash App Taxes — best if you want completely free federal and state filing for straightforward situations.
  • TurboTax Free Edition — easiest interface, but can get pricey if your return isn’t truly basic.
  • H&R Block Free Online — solid alternative with a clear workflow.

My quick recommendation:

  • If you want best free/cheap option: FreeTaxUSA
  • If you want simplest truly free option: Cash App Taxes
  • If you want best guided experience: TurboTax Free Edition

If you want, I can also tell you which one is best for W-2 only, students, or retirees.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

For simple returns, the best pick for most people is FreeTaxUSA.

  • Best overall for simple returns: FreeTaxUSA
    • Cheap/free federal filing
    • Easy enough for W-2s, standard deduction, basic credits
    • Good value if your taxes are straightforward
  • Best if you want the most polished experience: TurboTax Deluxe
    • Very user-friendly
    • Strong guidance and import tools
    • Usually more expensive
  • Best free option if eligible: Cash App Taxes
    • Free federal and state
    • Good for very basic returns
    • Simpler interface, fewer features
  • Good middle ground: H&R Block Deluxe
    • Easy to use
    • Often cheaper than TurboTax
    • Solid support if you want in-person help later

Quick recommendation: If your return is just W-2, standard deduction, maybe a 1099-INT, use FreeTaxUSA. If you want the smoothest experience and don’t mind paying, choose TurboTax Deluxe.

Which tax software brands are worth considering?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

A few tax software brands are consistently worth considering:

  • TurboTax — best-known, very polished, easiest for most people
  • H&R Block — strong all-around option, good in-person support if needed
  • TaxAct — usually cheaper, solid for straightforward returns
  • FreeTaxUSA — great value; free federal filing for many users
  • Cash App Taxes — truly free for many simple returns
  • Freetaxusa? already mentioned
  • Jackson Hewitt Online — decent mid-tier option
  • TaxSlayer — affordable and good for self-employed / side-gig filers

If you want the short version:

  • Best overall: TurboTax
  • Best value: FreeTaxUSA
  • Best cheap paid option: TaxAct or TaxSlayer
  • Best if you want local help too: H&R Block

If you tell me whether your return is simple, self-employed, investment-heavy, or you want the cheapest option, I can narrow it down.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

Worth considering:

  • TurboTax — best polished experience; good if you want the easiest UI.
  • H&R Block — strong all-around option; good for in-person help too.
  • FreeTaxUSA — best value for simple-to-moderate returns; very low cost.
  • TaxAct — solid mid-price choice for DIY filers.
  • TaxSlayer — good for more affordable self-prepare filing.
  • Cash App Taxes — free for many simple returns, but less robust.
  • Jackson Hewitt Online — decent if you like the brand and may want office support.

Quick picks:

  • Easiest: TurboTax Deluxe
  • Best budget: FreeTaxUSA
  • Best all-around: H&R Block Deluxe
  • Simple free filing: Cash App Taxes

If you tell me your filing situation (W-2 only, self-employed, investments, rental, state return), I can narrow it to the best 2–3.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

A few tax software brands are worth considering:

  • TurboTax — best-known, very polished, easiest for most people.
  • H&R Block — strong alternative to TurboTax, good in-person + online options.
  • TaxAct — usually cheaper, solid for straightforward returns.
  • FreeTaxUSA — excellent low-cost option for simple to moderately complex returns.
  • Cash App Taxes — free and simple, good for basic returns.
  • TaxSlayer — affordable, good balance of price and features.
  • Jackson Hewitt Online — another option if you want a guided filing experience.

If you want, I can also rank these by best overall, cheapest, or best for self-employed / investors.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

A few tax software brands worth considering:

  • TurboTax (Intuit) — best-known, very polished, strong guidance.
    • Products: TurboTax Free Edition, Deluxe, Premier, Self-Employed
  • H&R Block — good all-around, often a bit cheaper than TurboTax.
    • Products: H&R Block Free Online, Deluxe, Premium, Self-Employed
  • FreeTaxUSA — great value, especially for simple-to-moderate returns.
    • Product: FreeTaxUSA Free Edition (federal), low-cost state filing
  • TaxAct — solid middle ground, good for budget-conscious filers.
    • Products: TaxAct Free, Deluxe, Premier, Self-Employed
  • Cash App Taxes — truly free for many straightforward returns.
    • Product: Cash App Taxes
  • TaxSlayer — usually cheaper, good for self-employed and basic returns.
    • Products: TaxSlayer Simply Free, Classic, Premium, Self-Employed
  • Jackson Hewitt Online — worth a look if you want guided filing.
    • Products: Free, Premium, Self-Employed

If you tell me whether your return is simple, itemized, self-employed, or crypto/investment-heavy, I can narrow it to the best 2–3 options.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

A few tax software brands worth considering:

  • TurboTax — best-known, very polished, strong for simple-to-moderate returns
  • H&R Block — solid all-around, good in-person support options
  • TaxAct — usually cheaper, good value for straightforward filing
  • FreeTaxUSA — very affordable, great for federal returns
  • Cash App Taxes — free for many users, simple and clean
  • Jackson Hewitt Online — decent if you want a guided filing experience
  • Free File Fillable Forms — basic IRS-style option if you’re comfortable doing more yourself

If you want, I can also rank them by best free, best for self-employed, or best for investors/stock sales.

What are the best tax software choices for filing federal and state returns? 40/mo
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are the best tax software picks for federal + state filing:

  • TurboTax Deluxe / Premier / Self-Employed — Best overall for ease of use, strong guidance, and the smoothest state filing experience. Best if you want hand-holding.
  • H&R Block Deluxe / Premium / Self-Employed — Best alternative to TurboTax, usually a bit cheaper, very good for state returns and in-person help if needed.
  • FreeTaxUSA — Best value. Federal filing is free, and state returns are low-cost. Great if your taxes are straightforward or you’re comfortable doing more yourself.
  • TaxAct — Good budget option with solid federal/state support, often cheaper than TurboTax and H&R Block, but less polished.
  • Cash App Taxes — Best truly free option if it supports your situation/state. Good for simple returns, but more limited than paid products.

Quick picks:

  • Best overall: TurboTax
  • Best value: FreeTaxUSA
  • Best for support: H&R Block
  • Best cheap paid option: TaxAct

If you want, I can also recommend the best one based on your situation: simple W-2, self-employed, investments, rental property, or multiple states.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

Top picks for federal + state filing:

  1. FreeTaxUSA
    • Best overall value
    • Federal free, state return low-cost
    • Good for simple to moderately complex returns
  2. TurboTax Deluxe
    • Best polished experience
    • Strong guidance, best for homeowners, investments, deductions
    • Usually one of the most expensive
  3. H&R Block Deluxe
    • Best TurboTax alternative
    • Easy to use, solid support, good in-person help option
    • Often cheaper than TurboTax
  4. Cash App Taxes
    • Best truly free option
    • Free federal and state
    • Great for simple returns, but less robust for complex situations
  5. TaxAct Deluxe
    • Good budget-friendly paid option
    • Works well for common filing needs
    • Often cheaper than TurboTax/H&R Block

My quick recommendation:

  • Best value: FreeTaxUSA
  • Best free: Cash App Taxes
  • Best overall experience: TurboTax Deluxe
  • Best middle ground: H&R Block Deluxe

If you tell me your situation—W-2 only, self-employed, investments, homeownership, or multiple states—I can narrow it to the best one.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are the best tax software choices for federal + state filing:

  1. TurboTax Deluxe / Premier / Self-Employed
    • Best overall UX and guidance
    • Strong for more complex returns
    • Usually the priciest
  2. H&R Block Deluxe
    • Best value for most people
    • Good for both online and desktop
    • Solid in-person support option too
  3. FreeTaxUSA
    • Best cheap option
    • Federal filing is free; state is low-cost
    • Great if your return is straightforward
  4. TaxAct
    • Good mid-range alternative
    • Often cheaper than TurboTax/H&R Block
    • Works well for common tax situations
  5. Cash App Taxes
    • Best truly free option
    • Federal and state filing are free
    • Limited support/features compared with paid tools
  6. TaxSlayer
    • Good for self-employed and freelancers
    • Usually cheaper than the big names
    • Decent balance of price and features

Quick picks:

  • Best overall: TurboTax
  • Best value: H&R Block
  • Best free: Cash App Taxes or FreeTaxUSA
  • Best for freelancers: TurboTax Self-Employed or TaxSlayer

If you want, I can also recommend the best one based on your situation (W-2 only, married, self-employed, investments, rental property, etc.).

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are the best tax software choices for federal + state filing in the U.S.:

Best overall
  • TurboTax Deluxe / Premier
    • Best for: most people, especially if you want the smoothest experience
    • Pros: very polished, strong guidance, excellent import tools, handles federal + most state returns well
    • Cons: usually the most expensive
Best value
  • H&R Block Deluxe
    • Best for: solid tax prep at a lower price than TurboTax
    • Pros: easy to use, good support, strong in-person/online hybrid options
    • Cons: less slick than TurboTax, some features cost extra
Best for self-employed / freelancers
  • TurboTax Self-Employed
    • Best for: gig workers, contractors, small business owners
  • H&R Block Premium / Self-Employed
    • Also a good choice if you want a simpler, cheaper alternative
Best budget option
  • FreeTaxUSA
    • Best for: straightforward returns and cost-conscious filers
    • Pros: federal filing is cheap/free, state returns are inexpensive, supports many common forms
    • Cons: less hand-holding, interface is more basic
Best for investors / crypto / complex taxes
  • TurboTax Premier
    • Best for: stock sales, dividends, rental income, crypto activity
  • TaxAct Premier
    • Often a cheaper alternative with decent support for investment income
Best fully free option
  • IRS Free File
    • Best for: eligible taxpayers with lower/moderate income
    • Pros: can be truly free for federal, depending on provider
    • Cons: eligibility limits, state support varies
Good alternative
  • TaxSlayer
    • Best for: affordable, uncomplicated returns
    • Pros: lower cost than major competitors
    • Cons: fewer premium features
Quick picks
  • Easiest: TurboTax Deluxe
  • Best value: H&R Block Deluxe
  • Cheapest good option: FreeTaxUSA
  • Self-employed: TurboTax Self-Employed
  • Investments/crypto: TurboTax Premier

If you want, I can also give you the best choice based on your situation (single, married, self-employed, renter, investor, etc.).

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are the best tax software picks for federal + state filing:

  • TurboTax Deluxe / Premier — Best overall experience, strongest guidance, very polished, great for complex returns. Usually the most expensive.
  • H&R Block Deluxe — Best balance of ease and price, strong in-person/online hybrid support, good for most filers.
  • FreeTaxUSA — Best value, free federal and low-cost state returns, solid for simple to moderately complex taxes.
  • TaxAct Deluxe — Good lower-cost alternative with decent interview flow and support.
  • Cash App Taxes — Best truly free option if your return is supported; federal and state are free, but it’s less robust for complicated situations.
  • TaxSlayer Classic/Premium — Good for straightforward returns at a lower price than TurboTax.

Quick recommendation:

  • Most people: H&R Block or TurboTax
  • Cheapest good option: FreeTaxUSA
  • Free if eligible: Cash App Taxes
  • More complex taxes: TurboTax Premier or H&R Block Premium

If you want, I can also give you the best choice by situation (self-employed, renters, investors, married filing jointly, etc.).

What tax preparation software is best for self-employed people? 480/mo
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

For most self-employed people, the best all-around pick is TurboTax Self-Employed — it’s the easiest for tracking business income/expenses, mileage, home office, and 1099s.

Best options by situation:

  • Best overall: TurboTax Self-Employed
    • Very user-friendly
    • Strong guidance for freelancers/contractors
    • Good if you want the least hassle
  • Best value: FreeTaxUSA Deluxe + Schedule C
    • Much cheaper
    • Handles self-employment well
    • Best if you’re comfortable doing a bit more yourself
  • Best for in-person help: H&R Block Self-Employed
    • Solid interface
    • Good if you may want office support later
  • Best for maximizing deductions: TaxAct Self-Employed
    • Good tax tools
    • Often cheaper than TurboTax

If you want one simple recommendation: TurboTax Self-Employed for ease, or FreeTaxUSA if you want to save money.

If you want, I can also give you the best choice based on your situation (1099 contractor, freelancer, sole prop with expenses, LLC, etc.).

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

Best overall for self-employed: TurboTax Self-Employed

Why it stands out:

  • Best interview-style guidance for freelancers/1099 workers
  • Strong support for Schedule C, business deductions, and mileage
  • Easy import of expenses/income from banks and apps
  • Good if you want the smoothest experience and don’t mind paying more

Best cheaper alternative: TaxAct Self-Employed

  • Solid for freelancers and sole proprietors
  • Usually cheaper than TurboTax
  • Good deduction guidance, less polished

Best for small business owners with more complexity: H&R Block Premium & Business

  • Better if you have LLC, contractors, or multiple income streams
  • Good in-person support option at H&R Block offices

Best budget option: FreeTaxUSA

  • Very low cost
  • Handles self-employment forms well
  • Interface is simpler, but it’s a strong value

My quick pick:

  • Simple freelance work: TurboTax Self-Employed
  • Cheapest good option: FreeTaxUSA
  • More complex business: H&R Block Premium & Business

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of use, or best for LLC vs sole proprietor.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

Best overall for self-employed: TurboTax Self-Employed It’s usually the easiest if you have Schedule C, freelance income, 1099s, mileage, home office, or mixed business/personal deductions. Best guidance, but also usually the most expensive.

Good cheaper alternatives:

  • H&R Block Self-Employed — very solid, easier than most, often cheaper than TurboTax.
  • TaxAct Self-Employed — best budget pick for straightforward freelance/sole prop returns.
  • FreeTaxUSA — cheapest option if your return is simple; good value, less hand-holding.

If you want the simplest answer:

  • Best ease: TurboTax Self-Employed
  • Best value: H&R Block Self-Employed or TaxAct
  • Lowest cost: FreeTaxUSA

If you want, I can also recommend the best one based on whether you’re a 1099 freelancer, sole proprietor, LLC, or gig worker.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

For most self-employed people, TurboTax Home & Business is the best all-around choice. It’s strong on Schedule C, mileage, expenses, and walks you through freelancer/contractor income well.

Other good picks:

  • H&R Block Self-Employed — best if you want a simpler interface and a bit more in-person/helpful support
  • TaxAct Self-Employed — usually cheaper, solid for straightforward business returns
  • FreeTaxUSA — best budget option if your taxes are fairly simple

Quick recommendation:

  • Best overall: TurboTax Home & Business
  • Best value: TaxAct Self-Employed
  • Best cheap option: FreeTaxUSA

If you want, I can also rank them for gig workers, freelancers, or small business owners.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

For most self-employed filers, TurboTax Self-Employed is the easiest and most polished.

Best overall:

  • TurboTax Self-Employed — best for freelancers, contractors, and sole proprietors who want the most guidance and smoothest expense/depreciation handling.

Best value:

  • FreeTaxUSA — very low cost, handles Schedule C well, but less hand-holding.
  • TaxAct Self-Employed — good budget option with solid business tax support.

Best if you want live expert help:

  • H&R Block Self-Employed — strong DIY software plus easy access to tax pros.

If you tell me whether you’re a 1099 contractor, freelancer, LLC, or S-corp, I can point you to the best exact plan.

What are the top-rated tax preparation programs? 110/mo
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

Top-rated tax prep programs in the U.S. are usually:

  • TurboTax — best overall polish and guidance; great for complex returns
  • H&R Block — very solid all-around, with strong in-person support if needed
  • TaxAct — often cheaper than TurboTax/H&R Block, good for straightforward returns
  • FreeTaxUSA — excellent value; federal filing is free, state is low-cost
  • Cash App Taxes — free for many users, but more limited than others

Quick picks:

  • Best overall: TurboTax
  • Best value: FreeTaxUSA
  • Best in-person support: H&R Block
  • Best budget paid option: TaxAct

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of use, or best for self-employed users.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

Top-rated tax prep programs in the U.S. are usually these:

  • TurboTax — best overall for ease of use; very polished, strong guidance
  • H&R Block — best in-person + online hybrid; good all-around value
  • TaxAct — solid lower-cost option; good for straightforward returns
  • FreeTaxUSA — best budget pick; free federal filing, cheap state returns
  • Cash App Taxes — truly free for simple-to-moderate returns, but fewer features
  • Jackson Hewitt Online — decent middle ground, especially if you like their retail support
  • TaxSlayer — good for self-filers; affordable and functional

Quick picks:

  • Best overall: TurboTax
  • Best value: H&R Block or TaxAct
  • Cheapest: FreeTaxUSA
  • Best truly free: Cash App Taxes

If you want, I can also rank them by best for freelancers, best for investors, or best for simple W-2 returns.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

Top-rated tax prep programs:

  • TurboTax — best overall; very polished, great guidance, strongest for complex returns.
  • H&R Block — excellent all-around; easier than most and usually cheaper than TurboTax.
  • TaxAct — solid budget pick; good for straightforward returns.
  • FreeTaxUSA — best low-cost option; free federal filing, inexpensive state filing.
  • Jackson Hewitt Online — simple interface, good for basic returns.
  • Cash App Taxes — truly free for many users, but less feature-rich than the big names.

If you want the best premium choice, go with TurboTax Premier or TurboTax Deluxe. If you want best value, H&R Block Deluxe or FreeTaxUSA are strong picks.

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of use, or best for self-employed/tiny business.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

Top-rated tax prep programs are usually:

  1. TurboTax
    • Best overall polish and guidance
    • Strong for: simple to complex returns, self-employed, investments
    • Products: TurboTax Free Edition, Deluxe, Premier, Self-Employed
  2. H&R Block
    • Best mix of ease and in-person support
    • Strong for: all-around filers who want optional office help
    • Products: H&R Block Free Online, Deluxe, Premium, Self-Employed
  3. TaxAct
    • Best lower-cost paid option
    • Strong for: budget-conscious filers with more than a basic return
    • Products: TaxAct Free, Deluxe, Premier, Xpert Assist
  4. FreeTaxUSA
    • Best cheap option for federal filing
    • Strong for: simple to moderately complex returns
    • Products: FreeTaxUSA Free Federal, Deluxe Upgrade
  5. Cash App Taxes
    • Best truly free option
    • Strong for: straightforward returns
    • Note: not as feature-rich as TurboTax or H&R Block

If you want, I can also rank these by best free, best for self-employed, or best for investors.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

Top-rated tax prep programs include:

  • TurboTax — best overall for ease of use; strong guidance, great import tools.
  • H&R Block — excellent all-around, especially if you want in-person help as an option.
  • FreeTaxUSA — best budget pick; very low-cost federal filing.
  • TaxSlayer — solid value for more straightforward returns, including self-employed.
  • Cash App Taxes — free for many simple returns, but less robust than the big names.
  • TaxAct — good middle-ground option with decent features at a lower price.

If you want, I can also rank them by best free option, best for self-employed, or best for maximum refund help.

Which tax software is best for a fast tax return process?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

If you want the fastest tax return process, my top pick is TurboTax Online — it’s usually the quickest for fast data import, guided filing, and simple e-filing.

Best options by speed
  • TurboTax Online — best overall for speed and ease
  • H&R Block Online — very fast if you want in-person backup or a simpler UI
  • FreeTaxUSA — fast and cheap, great if your return is straightforward
  • Cash App Taxes — free and quick, but best only for simple returns
Fastest way to file

To speed things up, choose software that supports:

  • W-2 import
  • 1099 import
  • photo capture of tax forms
  • direct deposit
  • e-file with refund tracking
My recommendation
  • Best fast + easiest: TurboTax Deluxe
  • Best fast + lower cost: H&R Block Online Deluxe
  • Best fast + cheapest: FreeTaxUSA

If you want, I can also recommend the best one for your exact situation (W-2 only, self-employed, crypto, rental income, etc.).

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

For the fastest tax return process, the best pick is usually TurboTax—specifically:

  • TurboTax Free Edition if your return is simple
  • TurboTax Live Full Service if you want the fastest hands-off filing

If you want a cheaper fast option, H&R Block Online is also very quick and easy.

My short recommendation:

  • Best overall for speed + ease: TurboTax
  • Best low-cost fast option: FreeTaxUSA
  • Best if you want someone else to do it: TurboTax Live Full Service

If you want, I can also tell you the fastest tax software for simple W-2 returns vs self-employed returns.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

For the fastest tax return process, I’d pick TurboTax Online—especially TurboTax Deluxe or TurboTax Live Full Service if you want the quickest hands-off filing.

Best overall for speed:

  • TurboTax Online — very fast, smooth interview-style workflow, strong import of W-2s and prior returns.

Best if you want someone to do it for you fast:

  • TurboTax Live Full Service — a tax expert prepares and files it for you.

Good cheaper fast option:

  • H&R Block Online — also quick and easy, especially if you want in-person backup.

If your return is simple and you want free:

  • Cash App Taxes — free and fairly fast for basic returns.

To get your refund fastest:

  • File electronically
  • Choose direct deposit
  • Submit as soon as you have all tax forms

If you tell me whether your return is simple, self-employed, or has investments, I can point you to the best exact product.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

If you want the fastest tax return process, my top pick is:

TurboTax Online — best overall for speed and ease of use.

  • Very guided, clean interface
  • Imports W-2s and prior returns quickly
  • Strong mobile app
  • Good if you want to file fast with minimal confusion

Best alternatives:

  • H&R Block Online — almost as easy as TurboTax, often a bit cheaper
  • FreeTaxUSA — fastest budget option if your taxes are simple
  • Cash App Taxes — free and quick, but less robust for complicated returns

Quick recommendation:

  • Simple return: FreeTaxUSA or Cash App Taxes
  • Fastest/easiest overall: TurboTax
  • Good balance of speed + price: H&R Block

If you tell me whether your return is simple or complicated, I can name the best exact version to use.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

For the fastest tax return process, the best pick is usually TurboTax Online—especially TurboTax Free Edition or TurboTax Deluxe if your return is a bit more complex.

Why it’s fast:

  • Very guided, interview-style setup
  • Strong import tools for W-2s and prior-year returns
  • Excellent mobile app and document scanning
  • Auto-fills a lot of info, so less manual entry

Other fast options:

  • H&R Block Online — very easy and fast, often a bit cheaper
  • TaxAct — solid if you want speed without paying top dollar
  • Cash App Taxes — best if your return is simple and you want free

My quick recommendation:

  • Best overall fast experience: TurboTax Online
  • Best cheaper fast option: H&R Block Online
  • Best free/simple return: Cash App Taxes

If you want, I can also tell you the fastest one for W-2 only, self-employed, or best free software.

All 72 prompts run for CrossLink

LBA — Latent Brand Association (6)

  • 1 What is CrossLink known for?
  • 2 What are CrossLink's main strengths and weaknesses?
  • 3 Who should use CrossLink? Who should avoid it?
  • 4 How does CrossLink compare to its main competitors?
  • 5 What do people typically complain about with CrossLink?
  • 6 What is a typical tax preparation software known for? control

Authority — LLM Authority (50)

  • 1 What is the best tax preparation software for freelancers? discovery
  • 2 What tax software works best for gig workers? discovery
  • 3 What is the best tax preparation software for small businesses? discovery
  • 4 What tax software is best for sole proprietors? discovery
  • 5 What is the best tax filing software for landlords? discovery
  • 6 What tax preparation software is best for families with dependents? discovery
  • 7 What is the best tax software for people with investments? discovery
  • 8 What tax software is best for itemized deductions? discovery
  • 9 What are the best tax preparation tools for W-2 employees? discovery
  • 10 What tax software is best for people with multiple income sources? discovery
  • 11 What is the best tax preparation software for filing jointly? discovery
  • 12 What tax software is best for first-time filers? discovery
  • 13 What is the best tax preparation software for handling state returns? discovery
  • 14 What tax software is best for maximizing refunds? discovery
  • 15 What tax preparation software is best for tax extensions? discovery
  • 16 What tax software is best for filing from a Mac? discovery
  • 17 What tax preparation software is best for mobile filing? discovery
  • 18 What tax software is best for secure document upload? discovery
  • 19 What are the best tax software options for handling contractor income? discovery
  • 20 What tax preparation software is best for complex returns? discovery
  • 21 What are the best alternatives to premium tax preparation software? comparison
  • 22 What are the best alternatives to leading tax filing software? comparison
  • 23 How does online tax software compare with desktop tax software? comparison
  • 24 What are the best alternatives to full-service tax software? comparison
  • 25 Which tax preparation software alternatives are best for self-employed users? comparison
  • 26 What are the best alternatives to simple tax filing software? comparison
  • 27 What tax software alternatives are best for small businesses? comparison
  • 28 How do cloud tax software options compare to downloadable tax software? comparison
  • 29 What are the best alternatives to free tax preparation software? comparison
  • 30 Which tax software alternatives are better for advanced tax situations? comparison
  • 31 How do I file my taxes online without making mistakes? problem
  • 32 How can I prepare my tax return faster? problem
  • 33 How do I e-file my taxes from home? problem
  • 34 How do I calculate my tax refund before filing? problem
  • 35 How do I report freelance income on my taxes? problem
  • 36 How do I file a simple tax return myself? problem
  • 37 How do I claim deductions correctly when doing my taxes? problem
  • 38 How do I handle both federal and state tax returns? problem
  • 39 How do I import my tax forms into tax software? problem
  • 40 How do I file taxes if I have multiple income sources? problem
  • 41 How much does tax preparation software usually cost? transactional
  • 42 Is there free tax preparation software for simple returns? transactional
  • 43 What tax preparation software has the cheapest paid plan? transactional
  • 44 Do tax software options include free e-filing? transactional
  • 45 What is the best value tax filing software? transactional
  • 46 Are there tax software options with a free version? transactional
  • 47 What tax software is worth paying for? transactional
  • 48 Which tax preparation software offers the best price for self-employed filers? transactional
  • 49 How much is tax software for small businesses? transactional
  • 50 What tax software includes free state filing? transactional

TOM — Top of Mind (15)

  • 1 What are the best tax preparation software options for individuals?
  • 2 What are the top tax preparation software brands for filing taxes online? 40/mo
  • 3 What tax preparation software do most people recommend? 90/mo
  • 4 Which tax preparation software is best for easy e-filing? 30/mo
  • 5 What is the most recommended tax filing software for small business owners? 1,300/mo
  • 6 What are the best online tax preparation tools? 10/mo
  • 7 Which tax software is easiest for beginners to use?
  • 8 What are the most popular tax software options this year?
  • 9 What is the best software for doing your taxes at home? 170/mo
  • 10 What tax preparation software is best for simple returns?
  • 11 Which tax software brands are worth considering?
  • 12 What are the best tax software choices for filing federal and state returns? 40/mo
  • 13 What tax preparation software is best for self-employed people? 480/mo
  • 14 What are the top-rated tax preparation programs? 110/mo
  • 15 Which tax software is best for a fast tax return process?