This year, because of the pandemic, the IRS bumped the tax filing deadline from the traditional April 15 to May 17. But that extra month doesn’t change the fact that even the simplest version of federal tax forms can feel overwhelming to people trying to go it alone.
It’s no wonder that a 2013 Pew Research survey found that over half of the country really dislikes — or outright hates — doing their taxes. And one of the biggest reasons the shared annual hell that is Tax Day persists in its current form comes down to two giant companies that profit off our misery.
That number would probably change if the U.S. followed the lead of several European countries and moved to a “return-free filing” system. In these countries, there’s no need to prepare your taxes from scratch, surrounded by W-2s and 1099s and receipts and other various slips of paper you aren’t sure are important but might save you a few dollars.
In countries like Denmark and Spain, the government uses basic information to calculate what you owe, sends you a form and leaves it up to you to make any corrections before the deadline. In others, like the U.K. and Germany, the government uses its knowledge of how much it has withheld to either withhold the exact amount owed for the rest of the year or to siphon off more — or less — of your paycheck at the end of the year to adjust your taxes.
So why can’t that system work in the U.S.? Given how complicated the tax code is after years of its having been used to provide social benefits, it certainly would be difficult to implement — but not impossible. But the main reason we’re still fantasizing about this system after politicians as far apart as Ronald Reagan and Barack Obama endorsed it is the software you may have used to prepare your taxes this year.
It has been almost a decade since ProPublica reported that Intuit — the company that produces TurboTax — spent millions on lobbying the government to keep the IRS from preparing your taxes for you. That money had gone toward efforts to kill two bills that would have “allowed many taxpayers to file pre-filled returns for free.”
In 2019, ProPublica revealed that the lobbying effort was even broader than originally thought. For two decades, Intuit has waged “a sophisticated, sometimes covert war to prevent the government” from simplifying the tax preparation process — and it has been very proud of the results:








