On my way home from work today, I saw that H&R Block will fill out your 1040EZ for "just" $39. My first reaction was a sort of confused disbelief: I was able to use a 1040EZ a few times and it was really, really easy. It's basically one side of one page, just thirteen lines. You add some things, then you add some other things, then you look up a number in a table, then you subtract once.
So what's that $39 for? You'd need to look up and write down most of the same numbers on some sort of form to give to the folks at H&R Block so they'd know what to fill out for you. Is the going rate for addition and subtraction really that high? It's entirely possible that yes, it is, and I'm just way too far removed from average people to understand how intimidating math can be to them. But this math is so basic that this would really disturb me: this feels like the mathematical equivalent of paying somebody $39 to read the Denny's menu out loud for you. If that's not it, maybr people treat it as insurance, to have help in case of an audit... but what fraction of 1040EZs get audited?
I know there are some accounting folks out there, and presumably lots of people who've had more experience using accountants than I have. Do you have a sense of what the real answer is?
[Possible subtext for all of this: Kim and I have just changed jobs, moved across the country, and bought a house. We've always done our own taxes, and Kim's very thorough about checking the details and actually seems to enjoy the process at least a little. Is there any compelling reason to pay a professional help out this time?]
So what's that $39 for? You'd need to look up and write down most of the same numbers on some sort of form to give to the folks at H&R Block so they'd know what to fill out for you. Is the going rate for addition and subtraction really that high? It's entirely possible that yes, it is, and I'm just way too far removed from average people to understand how intimidating math can be to them. But this math is so basic that this would really disturb me: this feels like the mathematical equivalent of paying somebody $39 to read the Denny's menu out loud for you. If that's not it, maybr people treat it as insurance, to have help in case of an audit... but what fraction of 1040EZs get audited?
I know there are some accounting folks out there, and presumably lots of people who've had more experience using accountants than I have. Do you have a sense of what the real answer is?
[Possible subtext for all of this: Kim and I have just changed jobs, moved across the country, and bought a house. We've always done our own taxes, and Kim's very thorough about checking the details and actually seems to enjoy the process at least a little. Is there any compelling reason to pay a professional help out this time?]
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I think people are also just intimidated by taxes in a way that has nothing to do with math. (That, or thinking about paying them is stressful/upsetting, and they'll pay someone else to think about it for them.) I was also raised in a household where we did our own taxes, and I have done our taxes all but one year, but I gather this is very much Not Normal to a lot of people.
(The one year I paid a professional was the year I had a 3-month-old at tax time, which was also the set of taxes covering liquidating various assets and buying a house, so it involved unusually large numbers and I was unusually stupid and paying someone seemed like the better part of valor. That said, I have done my own taxes in years that involved income in multiple states; mortgage interest; investment assets; and royalty checks (not all at once, and btw the taxes on royalty checks are incomprehensible). So I see no particular reason not to do it yourself. The sleep dep weighed heavier than the house-buying in my decision to have a professional do it.)
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My opinion of H&R Block is not high. I think that they market themselves by convincing people (particularly those in low income groups) that taxes are more complicated than they really are, and that they then prey on those groups by offering refund-anticipation loans and ridiculous interest rates. If your return was done by H&R Block and you are audited, you are probably up exactly the same creek as you would be if you did your taxes yourself, because H&R's turnover is high, and god alone knows where the guy who did your taxes that year is now. (In fact, your taxes may have been done by some guy in India.)
You might benefit from professional help this year in dealing with your moving expenses (some of which are I-forget-which-kind of tax deductible), and in helping you figure out various things about your house (I believe there's a first-time homebuyer's tax credit that you may qualify for). You may also have to sort out income tax in two states, it might be nice to have help on that. If you sold stocks or bonds in order to buy the house or do anything else at all, there's probably a schedule D you have to deal with and schedule D (for reasons passing my understanding) tends to strike fear into the hearts of many but is actually not so bad. If you're feeling brave and like this would be fun, there's no reason you couldn't tackle it on your own. If you're worried, you could find a local CPA and pay to have your return looked over. Don't go to H&R Block. They suck.
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I always did my taxes myself, but this year we have a mortgage plus Ronit is self-employed, working as a contractor, so we have a lot of weird deductions - and we decided it would be worth a couple hundred dollars to have someone help us make sure we're taking maximum advantage of deductions available to us.
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As for the $39 for H&R block, I think
--Beth
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I thought it would be perfect for a response on Steuard's journal.
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And responding to you and more generally to everyone who's replied, thanks! I'm guessing that we're going to keep doing our taxes ourselves, since the challenges involved probably aren't any worse than they have been at times in the past. (I'm sure it won't rise to the level of the hell that was computing estimated tax payments with scholarship income distributed very unevenly over the course of the year, including a large and unexpected check in October. That was pretty nuts.)
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This year will be a cakewalk compared to years like that :-)
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