I don’t know the organization so can’t speak to the source or their methodology but they do note:
The top ways people plan to use AI is to help answer filing questions, find deductions or credits, and review returns for mistakes.
All of which seem pretty reasonable. If you don’t have the money for a professional, at least checking with something that is right more often than not with some basic questions seems perfectly reasonable.
From the reactions above, it seems people are assuming they’re just asking chatgpt to do all their taxes, which doesn’t appear to be the case.
Both Turbotax and Taxact have sections for questions on every section while filing, you can even talk to an advisor while filing. Using AI to review or figure out deductions is just being lazy.
I mean, a lot of tax stuff is automated. Mine are pretty straightforward so turboTax handles a huge chunk of the work…
Purpose-built tax software is not the same as the random word generator.
Neither the article, nor source make a distinction as to whether it’s a general purpose LLM or purpose built software.
So it really depends on the question that the poll asked, which as far as I can tell, is not shared.
Judging by the source, they likely asked “do you plan to use AI”.
But given that we’re talking about the general public, I guarantee most people using AI for their taxes are just asking chatgpt.
I don’t know the organization so can’t speak to the source or their methodology but they do note:
All of which seem pretty reasonable. If you don’t have the money for a professional, at least checking with something that is right more often than not with some basic questions seems perfectly reasonable.
From the reactions above, it seems people are assuming they’re just asking chatgpt to do all their taxes, which doesn’t appear to be the case.
Both Turbotax and Taxact have sections for questions on every section while filing, you can even talk to an advisor while filing. Using AI to review or figure out deductions is just being lazy.