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TurboTax vs FreeTaxUSA vs CPA: When to Switch Up

By Be A Bitch Or Get Rich Editorial · Published 2026-05-09 · // guide

Tax software has converged in functionality. TurboTax, FreeTaxUSA, H&R Block, and TaxAct all handle the standard returns. The real differentiation is in pricing, complexity-handling, and the upsell discipline. For most filers, the right answer isn't TurboTax — it's FreeTaxUSA, which does 95% of what TurboTax does for $0 federal + $15 state.

Here's the breakdown by filing complexity, including when to skip software entirely and hire a CPA.

The Software Tier

TurboTaxFreeTaxUSAH&R BlockTaxAct
Federal (simple W-2 only)$0$0$0$0
Federal (with deductions/freelance)$60-$180$0$30-$80$30-$80
State return$50-$70$15$40-$50$40-$50
1099/freelance income$120 ('Self-Employed' tier)$0$80 ('Premium' tier)$60-$80
Itemized deductions$60+ ('Deluxe' tier)$0$30+$30+
Investment income$80+ ('Premier' tier)$0$50+$50+
Live CPA review$220+$8 ('Pro Support')$80+ ('Tax Pro Review')$50+
Audit support$45-$60 add-on$8$50$45

The headline: TurboTax is 5-10x more expensive than FreeTaxUSA for the exact same return. The product quality is similar. The features are similar. The price difference is marketing budget.

FreeTaxUSA — The Default Right Answer

FreeTaxUSA does:

What it doesn't do as well as TurboTax:

For 90% of filers, those drawbacks are worth $100-$200 in savings. The IRS doesn't care which software you use — the return is the return.

TurboTax — The Premium-Priced Default

TurboTax wins on:

TurboTax loses on:

The IRS Direct File Option (2026)

The IRS launched its own direct-file system in 2024. As of 2026, it covers W-2 income, common deductions, and is fully free. Currently available in ~25 states.

If you have a simple W-2 return in a participating state, IRS Direct File is the right choice. Free, official, no upsells. The catch: it doesn't handle freelance/Schedule C complexity yet — that's still software territory.

The Complexity Threshold

When does software stop being enough? When you should hire a CPA?

SituationSoftware OK?CPA Worth It?
W-2 only, standard deductionYes (FreeTaxUSA or IRS Direct File)No
W-2 + itemized deductionsYes (FreeTaxUSA)No
1099 freelancer, simple deductionsYes (FreeTaxUSA)Maybe at $100K+ net income
Freelancer + S-Corp electionSoftware handles it but...Yes — CPA usually pays for itself
Multiple businesses, real estate, complex investmentsRisky — software miss probability increasesYes
Stock options (RSU + ISOs + ESPP)Software OK but error-proneMaybe — depends on volume
Cryptocurrency trading (active)Use Koinly or CoinTracker for basis, then fileMaybe
State residency questionsSoftware strugglesYes
Foreign income / FBARDon't risk itYes — definitely

When a CPA Pays for Itself

CPA fees: $300-$1,500 for typical returns, $1,500-$5,000+ for complex returns.

The CPA pays for themselves when:

The CPA does NOT pay for themselves when:

The Hybrid Approach

What most sophisticated filers actually do:

  1. Year 1-2 of a new tax situation: hire a CPA. Learn the moves. Understand the strategy.
  2. Year 3+: do it yourself in software, using the CPA's prior return as the template.
  3. Engage CPA only for major changes — new business, new entity, sale of property, etc.

This captures the strategic value of CPA without paying every year for the same return. Bench offers bookkeeping-as-a-service with optional tax prep — useful for freelancers who want bookkeeping done year-round and tax filing handled at year-end.

For broader self-employment tax structure, see LLC vs S-Corp: when to switch. For deductions across the self-employment landscape, see self-employment tax deductions. For quarterly tax mechanics that complicate filing, see quarterly estimated taxes.

Bottom line FreeTaxUSA for 90% of filers — same return as TurboTax for 5-10x less money. TurboTax for the UX-comfort premium. CPA when you have entity decisions, multi-stream income, or specific situations where strategy matters. Don't pay TurboTax $200 for a return you could file with FreeTaxUSA for $15.

FAQ

Is FreeTaxUSA actually as good as TurboTax?

For the actual return preparation, yes — they support all the same forms and produce the same return. The differences are UX (TurboTax better) and price (FreeTaxUSA better by $100-$200). The IRS doesn't care which one you use.

What about Cash App Tax (formerly Credit Karma Tax)?

Free for federal AND state. Reasonable UX. Limitations: no support for some less-common forms, no live help, no audit support upgrade. Good for simple-to-moderately-complex W-2 + investment returns. Skip if you have freelance income — FreeTaxUSA handles complexity better.

Do I need a CPA if I have rental property?

Not always. One rental property with a property manager isn't complex enough to require a CPA — software handles Schedule E. Multiple properties, BRRRR transactions, or 1031 exchanges are CPA territory.

Can a CPA reduce my tax bill from previous years?

Yes — amended returns can be filed up to 3 years from original filing date. If a CPA reviews your prior return and finds missed deductions, they can file Form 1040-X. Worth doing if you suspect you missed significant deductions.