Others say...

"Your life for sale"
When I registered, I declined to receive offers from H&R Block "partners." However, they sold me out and I'm now getting e-mails I don't want. Just keep that in mind when you decide to register the product.

Who knows what other information they "passed on."

"Bad tax software"
I bought Taxcut Platinum this year, because I had a large amount of stock transactions to import from Money 2002, and I gathered that Taxcut would work best with Money.

I have generally used Turbotax until this year and wish I had continued to do so. Taxcut would not even get my W2's imported! It claimed that my employer was not on their list. Well, Turbotax On The Web easily found both my W-2's and imported them . How about them apples?

Next, the stock transaction import from Money was OK. But it seemed to have got the dates wrong. SO now, I had to go through 890 transactions line by line to make sure the dates were right. And that Gainskeeper offer on the cover of Taxcut - well, you get access to Gainskeeper for 10 transactions, before you have to shell out some real dough. Talk about promising something without qualifying it. I wish the packaging had told me about the 10 transaction limit and I didnt have to find out after I opened the box.

Anyway, no more taxcut for me from this year on. I'll stick to Turbotax.

"Do NOT BUY TAXCUT!"
I have been wasting my time with downloads that don't download, updates that aren't updated and "help desk" representatives who aren't helpful for nearly 2 months now. In fact, I'm writing this while on hold with tech support, which is NOT a toll-free number. They can't even walk me through an uninstall. This has been a nightmare. I'm going to try to get my money back and do this the old fashioned way. So much for getting my taxes done early...thanks to this worthless product, I'm going to be cramming at the last minute.

"Taxcut failed"
Taxcut failed to help me with my taxes. I expected three basic qualities from the program.
1. To work.
2. To import tax information.
3. To be helpful.
Well, Taxcut did none of these things.
1. It would not install the update on my imac with system 10.2.4. And without the install, you can not file.
2. I could not import information from my online financial institutions.
3. The help button linked me to a web-page whose only help was to tell me "This WebHelp system has no topics."
The only two uses of this program are for the forms, which you can also get of the IRS web site and to add or subtract.
You're better off buying a calculator.

"TaxCut is window-ware"
I have used TurboTax for Mac since it was MacInTax, but I tried TaxCut this year because of Intuit's spy-ware policy. This was a mistake!
Here is what TaxCut can't do:
- Only a single form can be viewed at a time.
- It requires a convoluted process to view associated documents - not like the quick zoom feature on TurboTax.
- The interface is not Mac-like and not intuitive; it is like a windows program
- The Help center does not work. Clicking on hyperlinked text to get answers to specific listed questions invariably yields the message "No help topics available."
- The only way to print a state form is through the interview. Using the cmd-P gets the print menu but even selecting all forms gets only the federal ones.

Overall, this is poorly designed software.

 

Buy Cheap Software Now!
  Taxcut 2002 Platinum (Mac)

List Price : $39.99
Our Price : too low to display




What our customer's say!

"Great Product", They got it right with TC Platinum. Quick, easy to use and everything is there.

"Who knew that lying on your taxes was ok with TaxCut?", First of all, even with the help of the tech support people I could not get the help system to install or function. My job is computer consulting and systems builds and it just didn't happen. On top of that I (on the recommendation of the TaxCut support team) had to put down that I had $1 in land ownership, even though I have none. The reason is that one field had to be greater than another, they couldn't both be 0. So I had to lie and say I had $1 in land so the software would submit my taxes.

I was frustrated with TurboTax, but now it seems like the best software in the world, I will never, ever, try TaxCut again even if it is given to me for free.

"Taxes are 90% Easier without TaxCut!", It would have been easier to prepare taxes by hand. The program created duplicate, triplicate and in some cases sextuplicate form entries.

The results of using the "delete form" option are not visible until you close all the screens and reopen them. After that, the Review Last Year option is useless because the forms appear to be cross-linked.

It was impossible to be certain that the program was correctly calculating our 1099 forms--it came up with a wide variety of reported income figures. The amount of refund/tax owed fluctuated by 300%. The final total, after going through an error-check process that is like something from a medieval torture chamber, was FIVE TIMES the amount of tax that we paid last year--even though our income was roughly the same and our deductible expenses higher.

The last thing I did before giving up was to re-examine the checklist (not an intuitive task by any means) only to find that TaxCut had duplicated one of the Schedule C forms THREE TIMES.

Don't even get me started on the problems with downloading the update...

"Back to TurboTax Mac next year", The Good: TaxCut is less expensive than TurboTax and was first to OS X last year. Now it imports last year's TurboTax data!

The Bad: Now I know why it's cheaper. TaxCut is a mere advertisement for H&R Block. The program does its best to confuse the user into giving up and driving to the local office for human filing help. TaxCut's web-based "Help" system will run you around in aimless circles. The so-called automatic update asks for permission to connect to the Internet, even though that's how the Help works the entire time. If it finds an update, the program claims that it will handle everything. Not true, it simply dumps you on their web site where it doesn't even show you which files you should download and manually install. Skipped an interview question accidentally? Don't try the Back button, because half the time it will skip back an entire section instead of that last page. You get to start over! What about that one year head-start in OS X? I guess it wasn't long enough to pop the lid on Cocoa so we could use a mouse with a scroll wheel.

The Ugly (as of April 13): Pop-up menus in the interview questions look empty until you pop them open. After you make a selection, it doesn't show anymore, as the size goes back to zero. After you complete a section (i.e. 1099-MISC worksheet) and come back to its directory, sometimes the item you just created will display and sometimes it won't. And I hope you didn't change your mind about that single item you decided to add in an Itemize list yesterday. When you open your file today, the entire list you created will now be titled "untitled" and contain one item called "value."

The Fugly: TurboTax import? All seemed well until I got to the final error check. "You have 270 errors and 4 warnings." Why? Because I suddenly had 69 depreciation lists, only three of which were legit. All 270 errors stem from a logical error taught in programming 101: Anywhere I'd entered a "No" or zero in TurboTax was now a blank in TaxCut, and it thinks I haven't answered questions about whether I've sold an item or not, or to which copy of the Schedule C this should be applied. There wasn't even a way to mass-delete all the extra forms. I had to visit each form to delete it. When I got to the vehicle expense section, my vehicle from the previous years didn't show up. I guess it didn't import. Wait! Yes it did, because now I'm getting errors for each one, also because of one or two "missing" choices. Waste more time repairing, and.. No errors, no warnings, proceed to state.. Three warnings. Visit the first warning. An incomplete description, circular Help, and a suggestion to modify the "form below." There is no form below. That's enough.

The numerous and pathetic bugs in TaxCut would be acceptable in other types of software. But this is a program with a deadline, written by people who are supposed to be good at details (if nothing else). I'm left feeling unsure about my personal taxes for the first time in several years of MacInTax aka TurboTax Mac. As much as I don't like Intuit's attitude towards customers or their decision this year to charge extra for Schedule C help, I'll be looking at TurboTax next year.

"Must use Explorer as your default browser!", Well, today is April 13, and this probably won't appear in time to help anyone, but I noticed that a couple of reviews below noted problems with the web-based help system, so here's the cure: YOU MUST USE MICROSOFT'S INTERNET EXPLORER AS YOUR DEFAULT BROWSER. (Or, at least not Apple's Safari. I didn't try Netscape, Chimera, Opera, etc.)

And since I'm here, I may as well chime in with the other folks who found this software buggy and unreliable. I did my taxes by hand until last year, when I bought TaxCut because MacWorld magazine gave it the nod over TurboTax. It worked fine, and I was happy: I have a rather simple return. So, I went with TaxCut again this year, but have had a number of problems. I've had to re-enter my non-cash charitable dedections at least four times, becasue TaxCut keeps losing them, even though I routinely save often. It's crashed several times for no apparent reason (on an iMac G4, 256 MB, OSX 10.2.4).

Well, next year's another year.



 
Read this reviews before You buy...

"TOO TAXING FOR ME", I'll admit it, I have an old PowerMac 7600 with OS 9.1. Spent 6+ hours doing my taxes. The download update feature was anightmare, the instructions didn't make sense at all and it took forever to download 17.1 MB. I don't know if it had to do with IE 5.0 or what. Some of my downloads took 45 minutes and then I got an error. However, I did get it to work I see some other users had download issues as well. Once I got into entering my data it wasn't so bad and I was able to print my return on an HP inkjet. Between this and TurboTax, pick your poison I guess. I didn't want to e-file, God forbid. I think next year, I'll spend the extra 100 bucks and have a tax professional/accountant do them. At least I know it will be done right.

"Taxcut: Not this Year", If you haven't yet bought your tax software this year, or if you've never used tax software before, do NOT buy Taxcut for TY 2002. It'll slay the inexperienced, for sure. I bought it this year, having used MacIntax (Softview, then Chipsoft)/Turbotax (Intuit) since 1986, for a reason common to some of the other reviewers: Intuit's arrogance, which has grown immensely over the last few years. Bottom line, before I go further: swallow your pride and open your wallet a little wider and get Intuit's Turbotax for the Mac this year. The way-friendlier interface alone, for this mature product, will make facing tax-time less of a burden.

I'll only mention a couple of things, since so much has been written about the same problems. One thing with which I did not have a problem is downloading the update, although 3 hours and a 25-MB update is inexcuseable for a disc purchased in mid-February! Particularly with all of the bugs and/or extremely poor-quality software writing and logic. (And they're not even done updating!)

I experienced the same flashing-screen/no-data-entry problem mentioned elsewhere, particularly in the data-backup screens that flow to a line.

Form 8582 (which I don't require) is generated by JUST OPENING Schedule K-1. This is important, because you must wait for Block to update that form before you can e-file. Overriding any Taxcut-calculated form or line precludes one from e-filing. So I won't be able to take advantage of the e-filing rebate. Although most users probably don't get involved in K-1's, I mention this because it is similar to the kinds of problems others are having with Taxcut.

The printer interface is erratic, at best. You will not always print the forms/pages you directed the program to print.

The entire "Help" system is a joke. I used to think that the MacIntax/Turbotax user-interface was overkill. No longer. At least there IS an interface. Taxcut's "Help" system is not even close to being as complete as #1's. And it is confusing as can be.

Next year, hopefully at least one of two things will happen: 1) Intuit will stop price-discriminating against Mac users (and also not incorporate Intuit's "spyware" in the Mac version); or, 2) Block will get serious and take on the task of giving us a first-class alternative to Intuit.

"Taxcut: Not this Year", If you haven't yet bought your tax software this year, or if you've never used tax software before, do NOT buy Taxcut for TY 2002. It'll slay the inexperienced, for sure. I bought it this year, having used MacIntax (Softview, then Chipsoft)/Turbotax (Intuit) since 1986, for a reason common to some of the other reviewers: Intuit's arrogance, which has grown immensely over the last few years. Bottom line, before I go further: swallow your pride and open your wallet a little wider and get Intuit's Turbotax for the Mac this year. The way-friendlier interface alone, for this mature product, will make facing tax-time less of a burden.

I'll only mention a couple of things, since so much has been written about the same problems. One thing with which I did not have a problem is downloading the update, although 3 hours and a 25-MB update is inexcuseable for a disc purchased in mid-February! Particularly with all of the bugs and/or extremely poor-quality software writing and logic. (And they're not even done updating!)

I experienced the same flashing-screen/no-data-entry problem mentioned elsewhere, particularly in the data-backup screens that flow to a line.

Form 8582 (which I don't require) is generated by JUST OPENING Schedule K-1. This is important, because you must wait for Block to update that form before you can e-file. Overriding any Taxcut-calculated form or line precludes one from e-filing. So I won't be able to take advantage of the e-filing rebate. Although most users probably don't get involved in K-1's, I mention this because it is similar to the kinds of problems others are having with Taxcut.

The printer interface is erratic, at best. You will not always print the forms/pages you directed the program to print.

The entire "Help" system is a joke. I used to think that the MacIntax/Turbotax user-interface was overkill. No longer. At least there IS an interface. Taxcut's "Help" system is not even close to being as complete as #1's. And it is confusing as can be.

Next year, hopefully at least one of two things will happen: 1) Intuit will stop price-discriminating against Mac users (and also not incorporate Intuit's "spyware" in the Mac version); or, 2) Block will get serious and take on the task of giving us a first-class alternative to Intuit.

"Worst Software I Have Ever Bought", I've been a Mac user since 1989 and this is the single worst piece of software I've ever purchased. It's so bad I'm going to spend 30 minutes of my life telling you why, so you don't make the mistake of buying it.

1) After installing off the CD, I started it up. The very first thing it told me was to go download an update. This sounded great, I was psyched they were so on top of things, so I clicked on the link, went to their page and downloaded the update. After downloading the update I was a little bit leery, because the instructions on the page didn't match what was actually downloaded (there was no "Update B" option), but I went ahead and followed the rest of the directions for updating. Restarted, etc, and discovered that now the program simply crashed on startup ("Unknown Error Type 3"). Happened every time, tried reinstalling off CD, redownloading update, same result. I finally decided to simply proceed with the version off the CD and hope the update wasn't critical to my needs.

2) Starting afresh, I got to work. For while, things were pretty straightforward and OK. Then I got to the "Capital Gains & Losses" section, where I engaged the Capital Gains Assistant. The first question deals with "Average Basis Method". Since I don't know what that means, I figured I'd click on the link that would presumably explain it to me. Program crashed instantly. Restarted, tried again, same result. Restarted, thought maybe that one link is bad, clicked on "Help" in the yellow sidebar. Program crashed. Restarted, clicked on "Ask A Tax Advisor". Program crashed. Restarted, clicked on Search and was prompted for topic. However, (A) there's apparently no entry for "average basis method" and (B), no matter what else I enter, the second I click on "Go There" to see what it has to say... program crashes! So basically, the main reason I bought the software-it's alleged ability to explain unfamiliar terms and procedures-absolutely does not work!

At this point, I sent an email to their tech support outlining all of this. Got an automated reply saying I'd get help within 48 hours. More on that farce later.

3) In the meantime, after lots of gnashing of teeth. I did some research on the IRS site, figured out what I needed to know and forged ahead. At the same time, I figured I'd download the state add-on I needed (California). Since they claimed the state stuff would be available for download by Jan 31, I naively assumed that since it was Feb. 7, that I would be able to do so. Ha! No way, not until a few days after that was the Mac version available. Paid for it, downloaded it, and guess what? The installer doesn't work! The download went fine, but when I try to run the installer I get the message: "An error occurred while reading the installation data. This installer appears to be damaged." I tried shutting everything down, restarting, and running the installer and got the same error message. I tried redownloading the installer and got the same message. Go to their site to report this (now that I know where the form is!), fill out the form, and now the submit button to send the tech support form doesn't work!!! Been trying it off and on for three hours. All while doing all kinds of other web surfing, emailing, etc. Unreal.

4) Meanwhile, the 48 hours since my tech support request went out has come and gone. I reread their auto response email and see that "If you do not receive a response in the allotted time, please contact our TaxCut Technical Support Team at http://..." So, what they're saying is, if we don't respond in the time we say we will, you need to go to this page, and fill out a long form restating your question! Oh, and the grandest irony of that foolishness is that the link they give you to "Submit Your Question" doesn't work!!! You get dumped onto their homepage and have to go hunt for the page they meant to send you to! Welcome to HTML for seven-year-olds... Finally, 72 hours (almost to the minute!) after I sent my initial email, I get an email from their tech support. It's a stock response, totally ignoring my specific problems, which outlines the "Macintosh minimum system requirements" to run the program and simply signs off by saying, "If you have any further questions or concerns, please reply to this e-mail." Well, I actually did read the system requirements before I bought the program, but thanks for sharing them again.... So, I replied and suppose it'll be another 72 hours before I hear back.

In the meantime, I'm going to box up this piece of junk and get all my money back.

"Does not import online financial information", For me, one of the main advantages to using an electronic tax program is the ability to download my tax information directly from my financial institutions' websites. Being able to directly import w-2s, 1099s, etc. saves an incredible amount of work and helps ensure accuracy. TaxCut is unable to perform this function. You are able to import financial information from other financial programs you may have already installed on your computer, but, barring this, you must enter all information by hand.

I would not recommend TaxCut if you invest with a financial institution that allows you to download your tax forms, especially if you have a lot of transactions that need to be recorded on your taxes. TurboTax has a list of finanical institutions that allow electronic transfer of information.

Do not be fooled by TaxCut's packaging or website. Though there are implications that TaxCut does everything that TurboTax does, and that electronic transfer of tax information is possible, it is not. I spent a good bit of time searching around TaxCut's help section, to no avail. Eventually I called customer support. I thought it was a pretty straight-forward question that I asked ("Am I able to download directly into TaxCut the tax information from my financial institution's website?"). Initially, the customer service rep read verbatim the help page I had already reached. This page dealt with importing tax info from other programs on your computer. Eventually the customer service rep had to go get help, and finally explained to me that TaxCut does not, in fact, allow you to download tax info directly into the program.

What a frustrating situation. TurboTax is reputedly installing spyware on people's computers (though, apparently, not the Mac Version), and, thus, is acting unethically and should not be supported. TaxCut, though, is simply not as useful or good a product for those of us who want to actually use this new-fangled 'internet' thing. Anybody out there know of any third options?

 
 
 

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