From Americans for Tax Fairness (https://americansfortaxfairness.org/):
Last week, millions of people filed their annual tax returns, spending an average of 11 hours and $200 on paid filing services.[1]
But did you know you could be filing your taxes for free? Yep, for free. We just need a fully funded IRS to do it. Let’s break it down:
Every year, when your W2s and 1099s come in the mail, your employer has already sent a copy to the government. So it’s no secret: They already know how much you make before you file your taxes.
So instead of all the scrambling, calculating, and late nights, the IRS could simply send you a pre-filled tax form based on information they already have. You’d confirm the information, and send it back. A free filing system would take the headache—and the expense—out of doing your taxes.
A new bill will make it a whole lot easier for people to file their taxes, save taxpayers some serious time and money, and increase access to critical benefits like the Child Tax Credit and Earned Income Tax Credit. But Washington needs to hear that the American people are demanding action.
Add your name today at https://actionnetwork.org/forms/become-a-grassroots-co-sponsor-of-sen-elizabeth-warrens-new-bill-the-tax-filing-simplification-act as a grassroots co-sponsor of the Tax Filing Simplification Act to make tax filing free and easy.
So why hasn’t it already been done? Well, for years, tax prep companies like Intuit and H&R Block spent millions lobbying the government to stop the IRS from providing an easy-to-use Free File option. Republicans buddied up with them too, demanding that the agency stop “competing” with private companies. Oh brother.
So these corporations brokered a deal—a deal that was good for them, and lousy for us. They promised to offer low-income Americans free tax prep software, and in exchange, the IRS wouldn’t make a free filing program of their own, for everyone.
Since then, H&R Block and Intuit have undermined their own free filing options—hiding them from search engine results and using slick design to trick clients into paying more. Because let’s be clear: These flimsy, free options were never meant to be easy or useful.
The consequence? Tax filing is now a billion-dollar industry in the United States. And—I hope you’re sitting down for this—free filing has been implemented in just about every other country in the world. We are WAY behind.
But there’s hope to turn the tide. The Biden administration is pushing for an $80 billion funding boost to the IRS over the next 10 years. With proper funding, the agency could join the rest of the world in offering a free, easy-to-use service for all Americans to file their taxes.
In fact, the Tax Filing Simplification Act lays out all the steps for this. But the administration already has the authority to do it, and we’ll keep working on getting the funding in future legislation.
We have the tools to do this now, and the benefits would be huge. We just need to fight for it, side by side.
Together—by growing our grassroots movement and raising our voices—we can unrig our tax code, put Washington on the side of working people, and stop billionaires and giant corporations from freeloading off everybody else.
[1] “1040 (and 1040-SR) Instructions, Tax Year 2021,” Internal Revenue Service
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