It's basically a long list of factual statements all with the same weight, very little opinion expressed about the experience. I don't actually mind an infodump from a human, you usually can still work out some of what they care about, and you also can be reasonably sure they didn't fill in the gaps. Most likely I would have enjoyed whatever the author fed into the LLM.
That being said, this is not free - you are paying for Claude to do this in both tokens and data. I personally think it is insane to hand over your private financial data to an AI company, but I also recognize not everyone has the same concerns.
They’re also purpose built to do tax/accounting work, and can’t go “off script” with filling in your tax return.
They had sent me a detailed quote for their service. Upon cancellation they sent me a "final" bill with some bogus final fees inflating the quote by about 50%. Their claim, correct, was that the fee was present in T&C, buried somewhere in para 70. But under UK law, there are various protections against it - not to mention, if you send someone a quote, you don't then say "surprise"!
I fed Claude all the materials, their T&C's, the emails etc. It gave me a legal basis for suing them in small claims court. One of the 4 was hallucinated, but easy to validé, and the remaining 3 were solid. It then wrote me the sharp refusal to pay with a threat to sue for fraudulent business practice.
I'm sure any real lawyer would look at this and laugh, but it did the trick. No way would I ever do all this on my own.
There is nothing complicated about these, a 1099-R is one of the more straightforward info forms and any tax software can handle the input numbers and distribution code. Whether the IRA is inherited or not does not add complexity to the 1099-R, so not sure why this attribute gets multiple mentions.
The only other thing that might be considered complicated is the Form 1116 foreign tax credit. MFJ filers don't need it if total is $600 or less, so this might have added needless complexity.
Interesting that there is no Schedule A here, because that is one form (of many) that gives the lie to those who claim "oh the government already knows everything about your tax filing and could generate your return for you".
In short, this exercise didn't really involve any "intelligence" beyond what every tax software already does.
>E-filing isn’t available for trust returns
False.
https://www.irs.gov/e-file-providers/free-file-fillable-form...
Even so, you should never trust their calculations. Don't have it file your taxes, have it explain to you how to file your taxes. Use it to dig through all the bureaucratic forms and let it help you find your way. Don't let it do it for you, because you have no idea where it might end up, and filing your taxes incorrectly can have severe consequences.
It might not have been faster this year... but I expect it will be next year.
i also probably wouldn't use it for anything i don't know how to verify myself.
How does Anthropic pricing work exactly? Were the 150k tokens really free or would you need to pay a subscription and/or overage for that?
I'm pretty sure grok already has them after DOGE scraped all the data the IRS and the treasury department’s bureau of fiscal service had on the American public.
This is crony capitalism and both the political parties are fine with it
Imho, the fact that you can probably guess which party is which is some evidence that the cliche that both parties are the same isn't really true anymore.
I understand the risks with it but I don't care. I cannot fucking wait for the SaaSpocalypse to hit these companies.
If you have simple taxes, you can probably figure out how to file yourself, as it’s mostly just copying from a box on one form into another. If you have complex taxes, you should have a CPA prepare them.