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Washington's income tax is only on capital gains. When I try to prepare a Washington return (without cap gains) it is asking me to buy the REP. This needs to be fixed as VERY VERY few Washington residents will be above the threshold (250K) for filing returns.
It would be helpful if in Lacerte one would be able to generate local estimates for each quarter for the year for the various local entities in Pennsylvania. I know that other tax software companies do provide this feature.
I would love to have the option to set up automatic payments for Massachusetts quarterly estimated taxes for my clients. Similar to the feature Lacerte already has for Federal estimated payments.Please VOTE yes for this idea!!! Thank you! 🙂
Many (over a dozen) clients have received letters from CO. The issue is that the 4th quarter estimates, paid in January 2026 are being applied to 2026 estimates instead. Can this be corrected?
Hello,California and a few other states support e-filing superseded returns. California specifically added support for Individual/Fiduciary in 2022, joining the business entities which they had supported previously.Unfortunately, Lacerte has not added support to supersede state returns yet. Many other competing tax software programs have this feature and have for some time.While it is great to supersede a Federal return, having to amend the California return makes the process convoluted and we believe it is time Lacerte catches up and adds support to supersede the state as well.Thanks for listening.
Hello Pro Series,I have an idea on how to help many Michigan tax preparers file returns with the new computer program that the state of Michigan has implemented on reviewing returns this year. Michigan is focusing on tax returns that have a retirement plan distribution with a 4 code to see if it is from a deceased spouse.The state of Michigan allows you to deduct retirement plan distributions from your taxable income. The only retirement distributions that are not deductible are ones with a code 4 on them that are not from a deceased spouse. An example of a non deductible retirement plan death distribution that is not deductible is one from a parent or from a friend. There should be an error message that takes you to a screen where you can put in the deceased spouses information if it applies. If the deduction is not allowable then you would put another code in that tells the system that your death distribution is a non deductible retirement plan distribution.What do the rest of you Michigan tax preparers think of this idea.Thanks,John Skouberdis
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