Personal Tax Preparation in Austin, TX
Personal tax preparation done accurately the first time. We handle Form 1040 returns of every shape — W-2 employees, the self-employed, investors, multi-state residents, and U.S. citizens abroad — with one preparer on every file from intake through e-file.
Austin, Texas filers — W-2 employees, Schedule C contractors, investors, and part-year residents — turn to CS Precision Tax for federal Form 1040 and TX returns prepared in one coordinated workflow. Located in Travis County, Austin (population 974,447) draws a broad mix of individual tax situations: remote workers whose wages cross state lines, rental property owners, equity-compensated professionals, and families navigating mid-year moves. Local economy context: Technology, government, music; fastest-growing major U.S. metro. That context matters because it shapes the income types, deduction patterns, and multi-state filing obligations we see most often from Travis County residents. Texas has no state income tax. If you split working days between TX and another state, we allocate wages correctly, compute the credit for tax paid to the other jurisdiction, and ensure no dollar of income is taxed twice. For residents with RSUs, NSOs, or ISOs, we reconcile the Texas component of each vest or exercise against federal Schedule D and Form 6251. Every return is handled by a single Certified Tax Preparer who answers your questions, prepares your forms, and signs the filing.
What to know if you file from here
Filers in Austin, Travis County should confirm how Texas treats any income from sources specific to their situation. Texas has no state income tax. Part-year residents who relocated to or from Austin during the year need a TX part-year return plus the corresponding return for the prior or subsequent state — we prepare both and reconcile the credits so each jurisdiction taxes only the income earned within its borders. Any IRS or TX notice on a return we prepared is handled at no additional charge.
Who this service is for
- W-2 employees with standard or itemized deductions
- Self-employed professionals, freelancers, and gig workers (Schedule C)
- Investors with brokerage, dividend, or capital-gain activity
- Landlords with rental property (Schedule E)
- Multi-state residents and remote workers
- Equity-compensated employees (RSU, NSO, ISO, ESPP)
- U.S. citizens and green-card holders living abroad
- Anyone with an open IRS or state notice
Typical documents we'll ask for
- Prior-year federal and state returns
- All W-2s, 1099s (NEC, MISC, INT, DIV, B, R, K) and SSA-1099
- K-1s from partnerships, S-corps, or trusts
- Brokerage 1099-Composite or year-end summary
- Mortgage interest (1098) and property-tax records
- Rental property income, expenses, and mileage
- Self-employment income, expenses, and home-office details
- Education (1098-T) and student-loan interest (1098-E)
- HSA and IRA contribution records
- Form 1095 (health-coverage)
- Any IRS or state notices received during the year
Frequently asked questions for Austin, TX
Do I need to file a Texas return if I live in Austin?
I work remotely from Austin for an employer headquartered in another state. Where do I owe tax?
Other cities in Texas
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