Turbotax 2009?

I have no accounts with them, but I own a couple of their funds. Might that qualify me to get Deluxe free? If so, can you suggest what I should do to get (or inquire about getting) it?

Reply to
Ken Blake
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Thanks. When we had to pay extra for Its Deductible as a separate program I never used it, although a friend eventually told me he thought it was well worth the money. I've used it since it was integrated into TTAX and for us, with lots of donations to lots of organizations, as well as mileage for volunteering, it is useful. You've helped me figure out what to do.

Reply to
B

Ken Blake wrote in news: snipped-for-privacy@4ax.com:

Owning funds = having accounts. You have to go to the web site and logon to your account to see if they offer it. I think there is a dollar level to qualify though.

scott s. .

Reply to
scott s.

I used "It's Deductible" when it was a standalone program, because I don't use TaxAct instead of TurboTax. Now Intuit has integrated it, so to get final numbers for form 8283, you have to buy TurboTax Deluxe. I'm bummed about that....

Regards,

Margaret

Reply to
Margaret

Or just use

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from the Salvation Army's online website.

At any rate, I am VERY suspicious of these guides. They seem too high to me. I was taught that what one needed to do is to find the LOCAL prices for donated goods in similar condition. If I go into my Goodwill Store (which I do when I bring in the bags of donated articles in GOOD condition or better), I usually jot down the prices on the stacks for the similar items. That's the deduction amount I use.

Reply to
Andrew

Unless I am misunderstanding you, or you are misunderstanding me, I don't think so. I own two T Rowe Price funds, but I didn't buy them through T Rowe Price itself. They funds were bought through, and held for me, by Schwab. They are on my Schwab account, not the T Rowe Price account that I don't have.

I went to their web site to look around, but I can't log on to my account, since I don't have an account with them.

I don't know what the minimum dollar amount might be, but my guess is that I would probably qualify.

If I've misinterpreted what you've said, please correct me and explain what's wrong.

Thanks.

Reply to
Ken Blake

Reply to
Sam Spade

No, I didn't switch. With the exception of this past year, I've beta-tested TT, so I was able to see how It's Deductible's TT integration worked. I wasn't impressed enough to switch back to TT.

TaxAct now has a limited donation tracker, and the prices it does have seem more in line with reality. I wish they'd break it out as a separate program, however. Then I could use it during the year to track my donations and simply import it to TaxAct when the new software comes out at year end.

As it is now, I simply use a spreadsheet for non-cash donations. Cash donations I track in Quicken.

Regards,

Margaret

Reply to
Margaret

Am curious about how you get your current year Quicken data into TaxAct since the TaxAct people say the data cannot be imported?

Lee

Reply to
NCFUBAR

I have a customized tax schedule report along with a couple other reports. I use these to manually enter my Quicken data into TaxAct. Frankly I spent more time visually scanning and fixing errors in Quicken's TT imported data, that it's simply faster to manually enter it in TaxAct.

Granted, if I had many taxable investment trades manually entering data could get onerous. But ... this way I know everything's correct.

Regards,

Margaret

Reply to
Margaret

snipped

Thanks for the input. Think I'll try that also. Was thoroughly disgusted with TT last year.

Lee

Reply to
ncfubar.spam

Ditto here. I used Tax Act last year because I was ticked off at Intuit for the dabacle on charging for multiple returns, etc. Actually, TaxAct turned out to be a pretty nice product and the price was excellent.

However, I found that ID was a much better implemented product than what TA uses.. and this year I plan to move back to TT for ID. We also need state returns too.

I really wish TA had an equivalent to ID. If so, I'd be very tempted to stay with them.

B wrote in news:hfv7j4$hdl$ snipped-for-privacy@news.eternal-september.org:

mentioned that

be very

Reply to
speedlever

This year's edition of TaxAct Deluxe (desktop version) allows users to download:

  • basic data from 2008 TaxAct tax return
  • basic data from a PDF copy of 2008 tax return
  • GainsKeeper data
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    and* W-2 data from TALX W-2 eXpress I only import the basic data from my previous year's TaxAct return. I haven't tried the PDF import, as it's really only useful if you don't have a TaxAct file from the previous year. That is, if you used another tax prep program last year and are switching to TaxAct.

You can try TaxAct here for free:

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Regards,

Margaret

Reply to
Margaret

That's why I preferred It's Deductible when it was a standalone product. It's not worth it to me to buy TT Deluxe for It's Deductible and TaxAct for the actual tax prep. ... And I don't like TT (or its price) enough to switch back. Hopefully over time, TaxAct will improve in the charitable deduction tracking area.

Regards,

Margaret

Reply to
Margaret

Ken Blake wrote in news: snipped-for-privacy@4ax.com:

OK. I suppose in the case that you use a discount broker to buy / hold NL mutual funds, the fund shares probably stay in Schwab's name and you don't have an actual account number for your holding, so can't get a logon via the TRP web site. I don't think there is any way to access TTax via the general TRP site. I imagine TRP prefers you buy direct from them rather than through a third party, so they aren't going to give you any freebees.

scott s. .

Reply to
scott s.

OK, thanks; that's what I had assumed all along. I was just hoping that you knew of some way I could get it for free anyway.

Reply to
Ken Blake

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