Seconded. The most common U.S. tax forms don't change that much or that often, and they're available as PDFs. The North Carolina tax forms are available as PDF as well. Once upon a time, not having easy access to a typewriter, I filled out some North Carolina forms by hand editing the Postscript version of them to fill in the blanks with my information.
Posted Jan 15, 2009 2:23 UTC (Thu) by smoogen (subscriber, #97)
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Its the vastness of the forms that makes the issue a hard one compared to Klingon ports of OpenOffice.
1) Country Level Forms (US, Canada, UK, etc).
2) State Forms
3) County/City Forms
While the forms do not change a lot, there are constant changes in what new forms and parts must be counted or may not be counted per area. And then you get into cross filing. A person works for you in a state. You may need to collect sales tax from every sale in that state because you have a point of presense in that state (while in another state you might not).
Or the fact that if you provide a cell-phone to an employee that is considered a taxable benefit which requires you to add that to certain forms and not others.