Open Source Federal Income Tax Software
niiler writes "There is finally a usable US federal income tax program for Linux users who don't wish to file online. TaxGeek is a Mozilla-based US income tax program that includes Form 1040, Schedules A, B, C, C-EZ, D, E, K-1 (1065), SE (Short and Long), W2, Forms 8880, 8853, 8863, 8812, 5695, 4952,3903, 2106, 2106ez, 2441 with access to most other files as PDFs. It is intended to be extensible so that developers can easily add other forms that are needed without affecting the existing file formats and stored data. TaxGeek will also create PDFs of all the supported forms so that you can print them and send them in to the IRS. (PDF creation support requires the installation of Perl PDF::Reuse.) At this point, e-filing is not supported."
Yes you are.
ABSOLUTELY NO GUARANTEES ARE OFFERED. If you have a ton of money riding on finding all the right loopholes and getting everything 100% perfect, buy a tax program or use an accountant.
I'm all for open-source software, but not against closed-source. We need more open source programs to compete with closed source programs. Perhaps even government endorsement of this.
--Thomas J. Owens
He's just a little moron.
There is nothing so silly as other peoples traditions, and nothing so sacred as our own.
Please every one use this software this year so all the bugs get found and I can use it next year! 03/08 is a bit close to 4/15 for me to be worrying about bugs!
Some drink at the fountain of knowledge. Others just gargle.
but why don't the US use Pay As You Earn, like the UK do? Surely it's easier for everyone, including the taxman?
So then download TurboTax and use that.. No problem here, move along.
So far this has been a great year for open source and taxes in general it seems.
This company also released there entire Payroll, Time and Attendance suite as open source. So employers like myself can pay their employees and easily take care of all their payroll related taxes such as W2/W3's, 940/941's, 1099's and state taxes for free.
On open source, we talk on how we can defer judgment and help from one corporation to anybody we wish. Using MS products means we're at the mercy of MS for proper fixes.
Using an open source kit gives us the ability to find whomever we need to fix it, and not the ordained "fixer". This isnt a slam at MS, but instead is towards the whole proprietary software community.
However, when it comes to taxes and associated penalties, having a company to blame is one of the best recourses one can have. Of course, the IRS can do whatever the hell they want for taxes, but suing the preparer for incompetence is of the utmost importance. Lesser yet, are companies who offer guarantees on their fitness of returns.
I wouldnt trade the ability to point fingers for "free software".
Here is the full film.
http://uncyclopedia.org/wiki/User:Steve_Ballmer
This is great. I've been doing my taxes on computer since MacInTax on a Mac Plus, nice to see something becoming available for Linux. (And while I'm usually very biased toward FLOSS software, I'd even have paid for a copy of TaxCut if it were available for Linux.)
I don't need the silly "interview style" interface anyway, it's not like even the paper forms are that hard to figure out if you're willing to RTFI (instructions). (And my taxes are complicated enough that I have to include a couple of schedules and a few forms, it's not like a 1040-EZ).
The lack of e-file is no big deal to me, since I never e-file anyway.
-- Alastair
Well, lot's of folks here are making a fuss, saying these folks offer
no Warranty, and don't check the accuracy.
Well, guess what NEITHER DOES CLOSED SOURCE.
Your $49.99 QuickTax/EasyTax, whatever doesn't come with a warranty either, besides one on the MEDIA.
If it screws up, guess what, it's YOU who owes the IRS money. The developers are held harmless, because they are simple developers. They are not tax law experts.
Same thing happens when you take your taxes to H&R block. The best 'guarentee' they offer is your money back.
Now if you went to an accountant, or a CA, CCA, etc, They can be held partially accountable.
If you ask me, we need real engineers designing complex software like tax programs, not simple programmers or developers. Stand behind the work, and put your professional licence behind it.
Other wise, might as well use quicktax, and cross your fingers.
The free, web-based packages depend greatly upon a few things. If your income is over or under a certain threshold, you may not qualify. Some states don't qualify. Some only cater to joint filings. Some only fill out the 1040EZ equivalent. A lot of them will file your federal taxes for free, but not file state unless you pay.
I used the free ones for a few years, and now I get close to 100-150 messages per week from Turbo Tax, H&R Block, etc. I think by next year they will outpace Viagra ads, at least for January through April.
So I take it you two are suckers?
Because of the lack of cooperation of the IRS and the API. When I wrote to the IRS regarding this, I received the following reply:
Thank you for your inquiry.
The government believes that private industry, given its established expertise and experience in the field of electronic tax preparation, has a proven track record in providing the best technology and services available. In addition, the government believes a partnership with private industry will: provide taxpayers with higher quality services by using the existing expertise of the private sector; maximize consumer choice; promote competition within the marketplace; and meet objectives in the least costly manner to taxpayers.
We hope the above information will prove helpful to you.
Sincerely,
The IRS Website Support Team
I suspect that there will either need to be an outcry, or we will need to present this project as a corporation of sorts for cooperation from the IRS. For more info, see the previous FAQ entry. How
I think there is a world market for maybe five personal web logs.
If you contribute code to an open source project that is a registered non-profit organisation, can you offset the value of the code against income, for tax purposes? If so, then a lot of open source developers might have a negative income, for tax purposes at least.
I am TheRaven on Soylent News
Some of you might find it interesting to compare the US situation with other countries (comparisons are always nice for parameters).../ RecnetJava.htm
Brazil's equivalent of the IRS (Receita Federal) offers its version for federal income tax software for download for Windows, Linux, Macintosh and jar files for any other OS Yes, they use Java. It makes sense.
http://www.receita.gov.br/PessoaFisica/ReceitaNet
Main difference between the BSD license and the GPL license: one is from California and the other is from Massachusetts
Its because people working at the IRS are getting kickbacks to them privately from the companies using e-file.
too bad there is no law stating that americans have to pay an income tax. the 16th amendment was not properly ratified and the supreme court has consistently ruled in the past that a citizen's (NOT corporation's) labor is his own property and can not be taxed by the government. its thanks to the stupid lower courts that ignore their responsibility to follow the supreme court's findings/precedents that confusion arose and sidelined the movement against 16th amendment/personal income tax.... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/America:_Freedom_to_F ascism
http://www.ronpaul2008.com/ Ron Paul for President 2008 http://www.infowars.com/
they give you money back (a 'tax return')
It's called a refund as in refunding the excess money paid. The 'tax return' is the piece of paper you send in (or e-file).
I'm an octopus.
This year I actually used an online tax program. I was directed there by the irs.gov site. I decided on the H&R Block site as it stated it would do both my Federal and State taxes. I completed the Federal portion and submitted it (it matched what I had figured up manually). When I went to file my State, I was informed that I would have to pay $29. My State refund was listed as $24 by the tax program.
I decided it would be easier to just fill out the forms and mail it in. I went to my states (IL) website to download forms. On that website I discovered that I could file online for free with them. I went through the process and it ends up I was due $52 as my refund. They figured up an additional deduction that H&R Block did not. I verified that I qualified for it and finalized my return. I saved money and even got more money back by going through my state website. I had never known that my state did this. It was a pleasant surprise.
I filed both returns using Firefox2 on a Windows 2k machine. I did not attempt anything on my Linux machines, I did not even think of there possibly being problems, although I should have. I have already received my refunds. My state was received within 7 days, usually they take two months or more. My Federal was listed as being two weeks, with a "check my refund" date of Feb 24th or so. It was not available yet. I rechecked the site and it was March 7th. It was deposited on March 3rd. So within a month, I received both of my refunds, and I had a decent experience of doing my taxes online. It was a straight 1040 (not A or EZ) form, no schedules or anything extra.
Until I have more adjustments that need to be done and that will require me to expand beyond a 1040 form, I think I will stick with the online model, as long as they do not break it in Firefox. And so far, a month later, I have not noticed any spam messages in my inbox related to tax programs. We will see what happens next year when tax time rolls around.
I agree that the response is lacking, but am not so eager to blame the query for eliciting it. It reads to me like a form letter.
Sign me up for whatever free postage system you have. Especially if it comes with delivery confirmation, etc. that the conscientious will purchase.70% of taxpayers qualify for free file, which allows them to e-file after using free (as in beer) online tax software. Yes, this percentage should be higher. Yes, anyone should be permitted to create tax preparation software, including open source software, which could e-file. But, it is hardly extortion.I actually agree with the IRS--tax software should be in the private sector, not the public sector (government monopolies suck). But there's no reason not to open this up for ALL entrants, rather than granting an oligopoly.
I tried it. It's not ready for primetime and in fact does not appear to work.
Maybe next year.
The W2 information does not update 1040.
Your nutiness will enjoy a more favorable treatment from your fellow pseudo-Libertarian nuts over there.
I would like to see a link to a statute please for the real IRS deduction value. Otherwise you would see World of Warcraft Guild's forming Not For Profits for example.
members are seeing something, your seeing an ad
Is the tax system out of control?
That's a lot of bureaucrats...
Deleted
My post contained a question, not a statement. However, many Free Software projects have 501(c)(3) non-profit organisations associated with them, such at the FreeBSD Foundation or The Apache Software Foundation. Code contributed to them may or may not count as tax deductible. If it doesn't, then it might be possible to count the time spent working on code donated to the foundation as a tax-deductible expense. I am not a US citizen or an accountant though, so I am just thinking out loud at this point.
I am TheRaven on Soylent News
Is to use the royal we.
Deleted
Don't see any claimable value, donating your time shoveling snow or working in a soup kitchen for a not-for profit isn't going to get you any value either. Donating a vehicle or similar asset such as a stock that has a actual value, yes there are many provisions for that. If your thinking that you bill yourself out at $180.00 an hour and should be able to claim that value writing figlet fonts, its not going going to happen for sure.
members are seeing something, your seeing an ad
I have real estate, stocks, make a good income.
It takes me a grand total of 2 hours to do mine by hand.
Something *FREE* like this would be a nice extra safety check.
Unless you have a huge amount of money (top 5% of the country) you probably don't need advanced software or tax accounting methods.
She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
I had taxes done at HRBlock last year. I normally do them myself, but between multiple employers, multiple home sales, multiple streams of income (consulting, wife's business), and having lived in 3 states, I wanted someone with more experience to take care of things. They offered a 'peace of mind' program for an extra $39 to cover mistakes up to $5000. I took it, and actually had chance to use it. I missed this, but so did they - no schedule D was filed at all. Just an oversight, but it was an extra $400+ in taxes I owed. HRBlock redid all the amended paperwork in a week, I paid the taxes, and they cut me a check to reimburse me a week later. If/when I get an interest/penalties letter, HRBlock will cut a check for that as well. While I don't normally use a service like that, they *do* offer some degree of protection. True it's at an extra cost, but when you're talking about potentially thousands in taxes/penalties, being able to get any sort of insurance is probably worth it.
creation science book
Ye Gods! I admire a lot about US culture, and you're a nice bunch in my experience, but I am SO glad I don't have to deal with your tax system!
"Form 1040, Schedules A, B, C, C-EZ, D, E, K-1 (1065), SE (Short and Long), W2, Forms 8880, 8853, 8863, 8812, 5695, 4952,3903, 2106, 2106ez, 2441"
Aren't you getting to the stage where this is actually more effort than your job?
Not everyone is online all the time.
A web-filing program requires this.
A native Linux program does not.
I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
[smugness level="high"]Really ridiculous, the situations you Americans are in. We Dutchies have it much better :-) We get IRS-developed software for Windows, Linux and Mac OS, built with wxWidgets.[/smugness]
8 of 13 people found this answer helpful. Did you?
A tax filer who has debt might see his tax refund garnished -- for certain kinds of debt, at least. One of the examples most likely to be combined with bitterness would be non-payment of child support.
Only the dead have seen the end of war.
Most accountants and commercial software offer some form of audit protection. Assuming you pay for that protection, if your tax return flags an IRS audit, your accountant(s) or the company making the commercial software will work with the IRS on your behalf.
The biggest question of assurance that I have with this is, who is going to keep up with the ever changing tax rules required for this software to be practical?
I love open-source software and all, but this project just strikes me as very pointless and risky.
Don't get me wrong, I don't mean spam from outside companies. I use a unique address for every online system (well, most) and I have yet to receive outside spam from them. But, for instance, I used H&R block rouhgly 3 years ago, and just a precursory search of my Gmail inbox shows 45 e-mails from H&R Block inviting me to come back and do my taxes for free. I used TurboTax this year, and have not finalized my return (waiting on a few things to get clarified yet), and I get an e-mail almost every other day pleading with me to come back and finish.
Not quite open source. But free as in beer.
I've been using this guy's spread sheet for the past three years. Labled as 'Excel' but I've actually used it in Open Office. Prints nice.
http://home.mchsi.com/~taxcalculator/
This year I should donate a few dollars to his paypal account. If I get a refund of course.
I was going to say that, but he beat me to it.
-Clio
Karma: Bad (mostly from not giving a fuck)
Blog: http://clintjcl.wordpress.com
I shouldn't do this. But please give the guy some cash. It is extremely useful, and works with OpenOffice. My taxes were fairly complex and they came out perfectly. Maybe you can help out and make an even better version.
an ill wind that blows no good
I pointed konqueror 3.5.5 at www.hrblock.com, the first page took a little while to load, but clicking on the online filing page seemed to get it in a loop. The page was always blank and the status line said how many images had downloaded and after 15 minutes and the count of images going over 1000 I decided I wasn't even going to see what the web page looked like.
http://turbotax.intuit.com/tax_products/turbotax_a dvantages/guaranteed_accurate_online_tax_prep.jhtm l
But, you could input false info and get in trouble for tax fraud, although TurboTax says it will flag anything that will get you a audit.
Hollow words will burn and hollow men will burn.
I have used this program for 3 years for state & federal returns with no problems:
http://opentaxsolver.sourceforge.net/
I use the windows version, but there is a linux one as well.
OpenTaxSolver (OTS) is a free program for calculating Tax Form entries and tax-owed or refund-due, such as Federal or State personal income taxes. Two optional graphical front-ends exist, OTS_GUI and OTS_tclgui-0.0. TaxSolver has been updated for the most recent 2006 tax-year for: US 1040 and Schedules A, B, C, & D, and State-Taxes for California, North Carolina, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Virginia, Ohio, and New York. Similar coverage was attained for 2006 as in previous years, except the Canadian and Ontario forms have not yet been updated.
If you just want free as in beer tax software TaxACT Standard is truly free for federal returns--even the e-filing is free. I've used it for the last two years and been pleased with it. It's a crippleware business model--the Standard version gives you lots of "encouragement" to pay money for the Deluxe version. However the Standard version is quite functional and worked great for me. And some limitations of the Standard version can be worked around: only the Deluxe version allows you to save your tax return as a PDF file, but just install PDFCreator and print to it from the Standard version and you get the same result.
I like the direct form entry mode of TaxACT. It does have an interview mode too, but I never cared much for tax software interviews--they ask you a bunch of weird questions in some arbitrary sequence that is not the same order I have my papers in. I start by entering all the tax forms I received (W-2, 1099) and the tax return is 90% done. Then I just go through the 1040 line by line and fill in the rest. TaxACT links to supporting worksheets as needed.
But I am glad to see that someone is now working on free as in speech tax software.
FWIW, I had no problem installing TaxCut on my linux (Kubuntu) box using WINE. Granted, I won't actually be *using* it on my computer for our actual tax filing, since my wife does our taxes on her computer, which runs WinXP. But it was one of the smoothest .exe installs I've done under Wine, and it seemed to start up and run just fine.
A post a day keeps productivity at bay.
Looks nice.
I wonder in what way they can justify preventing a newcomer in the field under the guise "maximize consumer choice". Wouldn't "maximize" imply that the more the better?
And also saying: "We promote competition therefore you are not allowed to be competitive". wtf.
- Disclaimer: Information in this post deemed reliable but not guaranteed.
Maybe it can be extended so that you can rewrite the jurat above the signature to make a reservation of rights. Why are you agreeing to penalties of perjury and not penalty? Did you do it more than once? Were you located on Federal Territory when you signed it? No? Change it to reflect the same.
Organization: alphabetical, sometimes numerical or messy
I guess I wasn't clear also. I figured you did not mean from outside companies. I, also, use a unique address for each system online. We seem to be on the same page.
income tax. The system is actually 100% voluntary. Ask the IRS for the specific law that requires it.
All you will get is double talk and mis/dis-information. But, if you do you sign a contract the all information provided is true. Kinda like Martha Stewart/Scooter Libby. It's lying that can get you in trouble. Don't believe me? Check this out
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TljEe0Dzemc
Perhaps all the better. I can give it a test this year for next year.
FWIW: on the site of the Belastingdienst (the Dutch equivalent of the American IRS), you can download official Linux versions of their software to file (some of) your Dutch tax returns.
The Windows version already worked under Linux with Wine, but since 2006 there's a native Linux version. Macintosh is supported as well (since 2004, or so).
Stachel
Don't get me wrong, I love linux and have used it solely for over 4 years now, but why? Most big names offer online versions of their software. With an application that can easily be developed for the net, why create it for the Linux Desktop?
"Initial success, or total failure!"
remin8.com
It is having some experts backing it up. One of the major reasons to use tax software rather than just doing it by hand is that they help guide you. The companies that write them are staffed with a bunch of tax accountants, as well as programmers. They are current on tax law, they know the kind of things people will have trouble with and they help deal with that, and they check for errors. That's why I buy one, I'm not 100% sure I understand everything I need to file (my taxes are massively complex, but they are several forms). The tax software guides me.
This, well it sounds like they've just collected together the forms and added some automation. Great, but not really that helpful. That's not a whole lot better than a spreadsheet.
Often the programming isn't really the major part of a package, it's the specialized expertise behind it. Tax software is certainly the case.
The majors all offer some kind of audit defense. Sometimes it's extra, some times it's built in. Basically if you get audited they help and in most cases if the money you owe was a result of an error they or their software made, they pay it. http://www.hrblock.com/popups/pop_wfa_features.htm l if the spiel on H&R Block's audit protection for their software.
Also there's the simple matter of trust. H&R Block makes their living doing shit like this. If they don't do a good job, they'll go out of business. The guy that wrote this, he's a physics professor.