They are part of the FreeFile Alliance via the IRS website. That is not an official guarantee but it might give you some comfort.
I have used them for three years and have never had an issue with them. I think they do a very good job. They also are more intuitive than Turbotax.
2007-01-10 01:10:55
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answer #1
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answered by skip 6
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I teach tax preparation and have tried most of the consumer available software. I found that TaxACT would not allow you to do some of the things that you should be able to do. They appear overly cautious. My students that did their homework on TaxACT frequently were wrong but that could have been the student. I would think that the program could do simple returns fine. I had students that had been using it for a couple of years and never had a problem.
2007-01-10 02:14:53
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answer #2
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answered by ? 6
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TaxACT is fine. There are some limitations (i.e. joint ownership of Schedule C businesses), but it's free and you get free e-filing as well. They only charge you for e-filing your state return.
2007-01-10 04:50:40
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answer #3
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answered by jseah114 6
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They have the eTrust Seal of approval, and are a member of the Better Business Bureau Online Reliability, as well as many other seals of approval. Their site is a locked site meaning the little padlock appears when you log into their online site. I'd say you can trust them.
2007-01-10 00:32:34
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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