Anonymous wrote:We paid $3700. We have no wage income but a business, lots of investment income/capital gains, K-1s and a couple of kids that owe kiddie taxes. Still, it seems high after reading through the other responses.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are afraid of audit, you can get audit protection from Turbotax. I did that for the first time last year, and it was a pleasure to have their people dealing with the IRS rather than me. The hardest part is getting to someone knowledgeable on the phone in less than ten hours--enrolled agents who do audit protection have much faster access.
Did your audit involve something more complicated than the "correspondence audit" described above?
Anonymous wrote:Our preparer has increased their rates for the second year in a row and I would be interested in knowing what is the going rate in the DMV and if you would refer your tax preparer.
Anonymous wrote:We’re retired. We paid $1200 last year for a fairly simple return that includes two rental properties, income from our brokerage accounts, and the occasional withdrawal from retirement account. We use a Maryland based firm although we live in DC. They just notified us that they are raising our fee to an estimated $2200 and when I asked why they said they have been undercharging us. I’m surprised by the increase, but what can you do?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We pay $1700 for a married filing jointly return, for federal and VA. Forvis (used to be Dixon Hughes Goodman) on Spring Hill Road in Tysons.
$1700!Is it a complicated return or just a couple with salary income?
The latter. That's McLean for ya.
Anonymous wrote:If you are afraid of audit, you can get audit protection from Turbotax. I did that for the first time last year, and it was a pleasure to have their people dealing with the IRS rather than me. The hardest part is getting to someone knowledgeable on the phone in less than ten hours--enrolled agents who do audit protection have much faster access.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:$150-200 to TurboTax? We have 2 salaries, a standard mortgage, I have stock awards some years, we sell stock some years, we have a brokerage investment account and a handful of interest bearing accounts. We itemize for charitable contributions. It takes my husband 3-5 hours total.
Why is anyone paying $1000+ unless you own your own business? Even nanny / household employees can be handled by a service for a low monthly fee.
+1. It seems insane to me to pay more than a nominal amount for the privilege of paying taxes.
Anonymous wrote:$150-200 to TurboTax? We have 2 salaries, a standard mortgage, I have stock awards some years, we sell stock some years, we have a brokerage investment account and a handful of interest bearing accounts. We itemize for charitable contributions. It takes my husband 3-5 hours total.
Why is anyone paying $1000+ unless you own your own business? Even nanny / household employees can be handled by a service for a low monthly fee.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We’re retired. We paid $1200 last year for a fairly simple return that includes two rental properties, income from our brokerage accounts, and the occasional withdrawal from retirement account. We use a Maryland based firm although we live in DC. They just notified us that they are raising our fee to an estimated $2200 and when I asked why they said they have been undercharging us. I’m surprised by the increase, but what can you do?
Wow $2200??? Your return hardly sounds complicated. There must be less expensive options that aren’t TurboTax/H&R Block.
Yeah, you would think. Probably after this year I am going to look around. I thought $1200 a year was reasonable but I don’t think double that is. The main issue is I’m just lazy and knowing that my accountant has probably a dozen years of my tax related stuff at their fingertips if I ever get audited or whatever keeps me tethered to them.