Thank you all for sympathy, encouragement, and hopes for easy success on my taxes. It helped. And I successfully e-filed my Federal Taxes yesterday afternoon. After attempting to complete my taxes before April 15th, in June (after having filed for an extention in April) and in August, I was at my wit's end.
Some explanation...
In April, my H&R Block software said I had no network connection. So I assumed that meant it was a problem on my computer and filed for the 6 month extension. I figured I had to solve the "no network connection" on my own. But 6 months seemed like lots of time and I wasn't having a network problem with anything else.
So I tackled it again in June. No luck! Tried again in August. That time, I decided to call H&R Block and demand to know what "no network connection" meant to them. I reached a very helpful techie who helped me check my network. After about 20 minutes of no success, she suggested I just reload the software. I was worried that I would lose the existing "almost" completed Federal return, but she assured me I wouldn't (as it was a separate file).
So I did and the "no network connection" problem went away and my file remained. Yay! So in September, I went back at the taxes.
OMG, the software was different and I discovered there were documents I was missing. Apparently, the whole problem was some failure during the initial software download in April! But I had a month to find the missing documents before the Oct 15 deadline.
My, how time flies...
So last week, I realized I had to sit down and get everything together. First thing was to sort out 6" of unfiled general billing/receipt stuff and file them while looking for the missing documents. That was long overdue and worth doing, but I didn't find the documents I was missing.
Not to reveal details, but I had 2 major missing documents. The first was a summary of my mutual fund investments. Downloading that one from the mutual fund website was easier than I expected. There was an obvious button for "downloading tax forms". Yay.
The second was the one for a Government Savings Program. It requires that you start withdrawing 10% per year after age 73 and I turned 73 last year, so this year was the first time I had to report about that. Worse, if you don't withdraw it voluntarily, they send you a check anyway (minus earned interest).
So I wasn't familiar with it and didn't recognize when the software was asking about it. The term "Minimum Required Distribution" didn't mean anything to me. So I went to the H&R Help Desk (a FAQ, not a person) and figured it out. But entering it in the tax software raised an alarm. Which, of course, I did not understand. Turned out they sent 2 checks and I had forgotten about the 2nd one.
Anyway, I finally got that straightened out... But it seems that I managed to delete my previous Federal Form entry, so I had to start all over again. I felt like Ahab fighting the whale!
At least I went through the process a bit more smoothly yesterday. There are still some entries I'm not certain about. There are terms and phrases the Government uses that are not exactly plain English, and they explain terms as best they can.
At the end of the Federal form, they (H&R) do a review for completeness and risk analysis. I did have to go back and fill in a couple of entries I had accidentally skipped (minor stuff like an address confirmation). But they said after that, that they found no errors.
So I e-filed the Federal return yesterday (free, and I already have a confirmation the IRS has accepted it.). Later today, I'll do the State return. That will be easy because most of it is automatically entered from the Federal return. I'll snail-mail it Monday because H&R charges $20 for e-filing the State return. Why the Federal e-filing is free and the State is $20 escapes me.
I just had to stop after hours with the Federal return (and it was time for dinner).
Next year, I'll just dump everything on a live H&R Block office and avoid all this. I'm not the dimmest bulb in the room, but this tax stuff is just getting too ridiculous.
I once read a joke about a simplified tax form. As follows...
"A. How much did you earn last year?
B. How much do you have left?
C. Send B."
3 comments:
Does your state allow you to file your taxes online without using a commercial tax program? Kansas and Illinois have that option. I use both and they work fairly well.
TBT: I don't think Maryland has been added to the new free IRS online filing. But my real problem is the more detailed filing forced by investments and required withdrawals.
What a relief to get the dang taxes subdued at last!! Bet you'll sleep a lot better tonight. So glad you got it all figured out.
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