Attorney General Kathy Jennings today secured over $400,000 for low-income Delawareans from the owner of TurboTax, Intuit Inc. (Intuit), for deceiving Delaware consumers into paying for tax services that should have been free. As a result of a multistate agreement, Intuit will pay $141 million in restitution to millions of consumers across the nation who were unfairly charged. In addition, Intuit must suspend TurboTaxâs âfree, free, freeâ ad campaign that lured customers with promises of free tax preparation services, only to deceive them into paying for services. All 50 states and the District of Columbia have signed onto the agreement.
âIntuit benefited from a special agreement with the U.S. government to provide free tax services to low-income consumers nationwide, all while preventing Delawarean consumers from taking advantage of those free services,â Attorney General Jennings said. âIntuit engaged in deceptive and unfair tactics to hide access to free services and to instead promote its own profit-generating tax filing products instead. Delawareans who struggle to put food on the table shouldnât be tricked into paying for tax preparation services they donât need. My office will continue to protect consumers statewide and be on the lookout for businesses who seek to take advantage of them.â
An investigation into Intuit began after ProPublica reported that the company was using deceptive digital tactics to steer low-income consumers toward its commercial products and away from federally-supported free tax services.
Intuit has offered two free versions of TurboTax. One was through its participation in the IRS Free File Program, a public-private partnership with the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), which allows taxpayers earning roughly $34,000 and members of the military to file their taxes for free. In exchange for participating in the program, the IRS agreed not to compete with Intuit and other tax-prep companies by providing its own electronic tax preparation and filing services to American taxpayers.
In addition, Intuit offers a commercial product called âTurboTax Free Edition,â which is only free for taxpayers with âsimple returnsâ as defined by Intuit. In recent years, TurboTax has marketed this âfreemiumâ product aggressively, including through ad campaigns where âfreeâ is the most prominent or sometimes the only selling point. In some ads, the company repeated the word âfreeâ dozens of times in as short as 30 seconds. However, the TurboTax âfreemiumâ product is only free for approximately one-third of US taxpayers. In contrast, the IRS Free File product was free for 70 percent of taxpayers.
The multistate investigation found that Intuit engaged in several deceptive and unfair trade practices that limited consumersâ participation in the IRS Free File Program. The company used confusingly similar names for both its IRS Free File product and its commercial âfreemiumâ product. Intuit bid on paid search advertisements to direct consumers who were looking for the IRS Free File product to the TurboTax âfreemiumâ product instead. Intuit also purposefully blocked its IRS Free File landing page from search engine results during the 2019 tax filing season, effectively shutting out eligible taxpayers from filing their taxes for free. Moreover, TurboTaxâs website included a âProducts and Pricingâ page that stated it would ârecommend the right tax solution,â but never displayed or recommended the IRS Free File program, even when consumers were ineligible for the âfreemiumâ product.
Under the agreement, Intuit will provide restitution to millions of consumers who started using TurboTaxâs Free Edition for tax years 2016 through 2018 and were told that they had to pay to file even though they were eligible to file for free using the version of TurboTax offered as part of the IRS Free File program. Consumers are expected to receive a direct payment of approximately $30 for each year that they were deceived into paying for filing services. Impacted consumers will automatically receive notices and a check by mail.
Intuit has also agreed to reform its business practices, including:
- Refraining from making misrepresentations in connection with promoting or offering any online tax preparation products;
- Enhancing disclosures in its advertising and marketing of free products;
- Designing its products to better inform users whether they will be eligible to file their taxes for free; and
- Refraining from requiring consumers to start their tax filing over if they exit one of Intuitâs paid products to use a free product instead.
Intuit withdrew from the IRS Free File program in July 2021.
This matter was handled for the Delaware Department of Justice by its Consumer Protection Unit.