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Ernst and Young Tax Guide 2010 (For Preparing Your 2009 Taxes)

Ernst and Young Tax Guide 2010 (For Preparing Your 2009 Taxes)

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Author: The Tax Partners and Professionals of Ernst and Young LLP
Creators: Peter W. Bernstein, Gary N. Cohen
Publisher: Publishnow
Category: Book

List Price: $19.95
Buy New: $13.39
as of 3/16/2010 05:06 WIT details
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New (12) Used (9) from $9.99

Seller: lavellemedia
Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 5 reviews

Media: Paperback
Edition: 25th
Pages: 886
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.9
Dimensions (in): 10.5 x 8.3 x 1.6

ISBN: 0979985595
Dewey Decimal Number: 332
EAN: 9780979985591

Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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Product Description
Now in its 25th edition, the Ernst and Young Tax Guide 2010 is completely updated and also includes access to a web site for purchasers, to find the latest tax alerts and tips.

Ernst and Young also includes the use of a web site that will contain updated changes and important information for purchasers of the E & Y Guide.

What the IRS doesn't tell us, Ernst & Young does.Year after year, The Ernst & Young Tax Guide hits national best-seller lists and garners rave reviews. The most user-friendly, most current guide available to preparing your own tax return, this essential resource contains all the information readers need to save on their taxes. The accessible format walks you step-by-step through the daunting filing process, with sample tax forms and schedules demonstrating how to fill out a tax return line by line. As the only guide that provides complete coverage of the new tax law provisions, it's no wonder The New York Times praises it as the top choice among popular tax books. The Ernst & Young Tax Guide is really two books in one. The first is the official IRS tax guide, Your Federal Income Tax, updated by the IRS for 2009 tax preparation. The second book is the Ernst & Young guide offering comments, explanations, and tax-saving tips on what the IRS tells us-and doesn't tell us. These two books have been combined in one easy-to-read volume to provide taxpayers with the most well-rounded and comprehensive tax guide on the market.

The Latest 2009 Tax Law Changes

Tips To Slash Your Taxes This Year and Next

Reminders That Keep Track of Important Tax Records

How to Avoid Some of the Most Common Filing Errors

New Tax Laws and Regulations and How They Affect You

Continuously Updated Web Site!

OVER 1,000 MONEY SAVING TIPS

50 Overlooked Deductions

How to Avoid 25 Common Errors

Chapter 1-Filing Information

Chapter 2-Filing Status

Chapter 3-Personal Exemptions & Dependents

Chapter 4-Tax Withholding and Estimated Tax

Chapter 5-Wages, Salaries and Other Earnings

Chapter 6-Tip Income

Chapter 7-Interest Income

Chapter 8-Dividends and Other Corporate Distributions

Chapter 9-Rental Income and Expenses

Chapter 10-Retirement Plans, Pensions, and Annuities

Chapter 11-Social Security and Equivalent Railroad Retirement Benefits

Chapter 12-Other Income

Chapter 13-Basis of Property

Chapter 14-Sale of Property

Chapter 15-Selling Your Home

Chapter 16-Reporting Gains and Losses

Chapter 17-Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs)

Chapter 18-Alimony

Chapter 19-Education-Related Adjustments

Chapter 20-Moving Expenses

Chapter 21-Standard Deduction

Chapter 22-Medical and Dental Expenses

Chapter 23-Taxes You May Deducts

Chapter 24-Interest Expense

Chapter 25-Contributions

Chapter 26-Casualty and Theft Losses

Chapter 27-Car Expenses and Employee Business Expenses

Chapter 28-Tax Benefits for Work-Related Education

Chapter 29-Miscellaneous Deductions

Chapter 30-Limit on Itemized Deductions

Chapter 31-How to Figure Your Tax

Chapter 32-Tax on Investment Income of Certain Children

Chapter 33-Child and Dependent Care Credit

Chapter 34-Credit for the Elderly or the Disabled

Chapter 35-Child Tax Credit

Chapter 36-Education Credits and Other Education Tax Benefits

Chapter 37-Other Credits Including the Earned Income Credit

Chapter 38-Self-Employment Income:How to File Schedule C

Chapter 39-Mutual Funds

Chapter 40-What to Do If You Employ Domestic Help

Chapter 41-U.S. Citizens Working Abroad: Tax Treatment of Foreign Earned Income

Plus 10 more chapters, and 100s of charts, tables & forms!


Customer Reviews:
5 out of 5 stars Simply the best!   March 4, 2010
Rhonda (Detroit, MI)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

The EY tax guide is my go to guide for many, many years. It provides details not found in the other tax guides that I find very helpful and essential when preparing returns. The book is easy to use and is broken up in a way that makes sense of the complicated tax code. I especially like the Tax Planner, Tax Alert and Tax Saver features. It saves me the time of searching through mountains of text to find the most important bits of information. I do own other tax guides, but this book is my favorite and most used.




5 out of 5 stars Best Tax Guide   February 10, 2010
Larry L. McCall (Tulsa)
1 out of 2 found this review helpful

I have used the E&Y Tax Guide for many years. It is the most comprehensive Guide that I have found for an individual who prepares their personal return.


5 out of 5 stars tax guide   January 30, 2010
J. Smith (Little Rock)
2 out of 4 found this review helpful

This one is the best. Written by the pros. More info in this guide than I'll ever need, but nice to know it's there if something unusual comes up. Easy to understand. I purchase this tax guide and H&R Block Tax Cut Deluxe every year. They have never failed me.


5 out of 5 stars The Only Tax Guide I Use   January 31, 2010
Clay S (Las Vegas, NV)
2 out of 4 found this review helpful

This will be my 25th year of using the Ernst & Young Tax Guide. It is simply the best.


1 out of 5 stars Ernst & Young Tax Guide Dissatisfaction   February 24, 2010
Fish Guy (Vancouver, WA)
0 out of 1 found this review helpful

Having used the JK Lasser Tax Guide for the past two years, I thought I would try the very highly rated Ernst and Young 2010 Tax Guide. I was extremely disappointed. My eyes were immediately drawn to the large black boxes on each page that repeatedly state: "Tax Planner, Tax Alert or Tax Saver," sometimes multiple times on a page. I found those heavy, black boxes to be a substantial distraction (as were the repeated and untitled "Example" boxes). What I want instead is useful information, quickly. Instead of black boxes on Tax Planner, why not just state a bulleted conclusion, like: "You Cannot Deduct X, Y, Z" and immediately give me an informative result that I can instantly use, with follow-up details should I want to read more? Am sure these folks are terrific tax pros, but in my opinion their media layout and presentation skills are in need of some serious help. I quickly tired of seeing those annoying black boxes. Am going back to JK Lasser but hope that E&Y will use and benefit from what I have intended to be constructive criticism for improvement. Put the result to work for you, not a meaningless, repetitive title box!



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