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TaxTech Weekly: DATEV shuts down DIY tax app KLARTAX

TaxTech Weekly: DATEV shuts down DIY tax app KLARTAX 🎄

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DATEV shuts down DIY tax app KLARTAX

We're sure that every faithful reader of this much-loved newsletter has felt the rumblings of the German DIY tax market over the past few days. If not, we're here to bring you up to speed:

The leading German accounting and tax software solution for tax advisors, DATEV eG (Opens in a new window), has announced that it will end its KLARTAX (Opens in a new window) B2C efforts in the German private tax return market at the end of 2025.

Launched in 2020, KLARTAX was DATEV's ambitious first attempt to enter the consumer market in Germany. Specifically, KLARTAX was a (web) application for consumers to do their own personal tax returns in Germany, similar to well-known DIY solutions such as smartsteuer GmbH (Opens in a new window), Taxfix (Opens in a new window) and WISO Steuer (Opens in a new window).

What DATEV thinks

According to DATEV magazine (Opens in a new window), one of the initial reasons for this effort was to prevent other platforms from interfering between consumers and – DATEV's core market – tax advisors. Another reason was not to lose the market for simple private tax returns.

For these reasons, KLARTAX was part of DATEV's general "tax platform strategy". Other projects in this strategy include DATEV SmartExperts, a search for tax advisors, and DATEV Meine Steuern, a service for clients to provide their tax advisors with tax-relevant information and documents in digital form.

But DATEV is rethinking this initial approach. The reasons have changed. Knowledge from KLARTAX has found its way into SmartExperts / Meine Steuern, so DATEV no longer sees any value in maintaining KLARTAX and is shutting it down.

In concrete terms, this means that new registrations will no longer be accepted. New tax years, such as the upcoming tax year 2024, will no longer be supported – at least if you actually want to file a tax return. All data will be deleted at the end of next year.

A look at the market

DATEV's withdrawal from the German DIY tax filing market sends mixed signals to competitors. It shows that establishing such a product is not only about the core tax functionality and the sense of security it provides – both of which DATEV arguably excels in. While these are important fundamentals, there are other relevant issues such as ease of use and reaching customers through modern marketing efforts.

In such a crowded market, with the aforementioned big players and newcomers such as CHECK24 Vergleichsportal (Opens in a new window)'s SteuerCHECK and Taxefy® (Opens in a new window), it is clearly not easy to gain an edge over the competition – even with the heft that DATEV brings to the table.

It also raises the question of how many players are really needed and how many can actually survive, given that Taxfix acquired Steuerbot (Opens in a new window) last year, CHECK24 is offering its DIY tax tool for free and the German government is constantly stepping up its efforts to simplify the tax system (Opens in a new window) – making the problems these modern solutions are trying to solve smaller.

What to make of it

In the end, it may have been the right decision for DATEV to abandon its ambitious KLARTAX project, learn the lessons, focus on what it has and build on that. But having tried to conquer the DIY market with KLARTAX, DATEV should be careful not to let the DIY competition encroach too much on its own B2B market by letting them move unhindered from easy-to-use applications for individuals to easy-to-use tax software for tax advisors. It's a move that won't happen overnight, but it's well underway with Taxfix's expert service (Opens in a new window) or Kontist by Ageras (Opens in a new window)'s early attempt at a scalable tax service for the self-employed.

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🚀 News

Taxdoo (Opens in a new window) amongst top 100 AI start-ups in Europe and Israel (Taxdoo Blog (Opens in a new window))

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Ageras (Opens in a new window)' acquisition of French Shine (Opens in a new window) gets approval; eyes cross-border expansion (Cision (Opens in a new window))

Austrian fiskaly (Opens in a new window) expands to Italy with new tax compliance solution SIGN IT (Trending Topics (Opens in a new window))

DATEV's CEO Prof. Dr. Robert Mayr (Opens in a new window) looks back to 2024 and ahead to 2025 (DATEV magazin (Opens in a new window))

Tobias von Reiche (Opens in a new window) shares his summary from this year's Tax Technology Conference (tax&bytes (Opens in a new window))

On step at a time: Digital Gewerbesteuermessbescheide are a thing now in Lower Saxony, Germany (Haufe (Opens in a new window))

Tax advisor Bianca Wöhrer (Opens in a new window) from FH Campus Wien | University of Applied Sciences (Opens in a new window) talks about e-invoicing and its future (REthinking: Tax (Opens in a new window))

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How Hnry (Opens in a new window) went from spreadsheet to personal tax solution for Australians and New Zealanders (💰 | Capital Brief (Opens in a new window))

Tax solution Blockpit AG (Opens in a new window) joins forces with crypto and investment app BISON App (Opens in a new window) by Boerse Stuttgart Group (Opens in a new window) (Trending Topics (Opens in a new window))

Ben Borodach (Opens in a new window) on how to apply AI in complex domains. Ben is the CEO of april (Opens in a new window) 🇺🇸, an AI driven, embedded tax software. april has recently expanded its embedded offerings with the launch of their filing service: aprilPro (Fast Company (Opens in a new window))

🇬🇧 TaxTech of the Week: Briefcase

London-based Briefcase (Opens in a new window), which recently secured three million dollars in seed funding (Opens in a new window), joins the latest wave of AI-powered accounting startups. Investors include Earlybird, Tiny, Entrepreneur First and angels like Charlie Songhurst (Opens in a new window), the founders of French company Pennylane (Opens in a new window), and scouts from Sequoia and a16z.

The Briefcase team wants to redefine the way accounting is done. They are building a platform that automates the time-consuming aspects of accounting, from bookkeeping to month-end closing, using technologies such as multimodal AI, agentic workflows and embeddings.

They're currently on a rapid growth trajectory, having partnered with several accountancy firms in the UK and claiming to have a runway of over 24 months.

Take a look at their website (Opens in a new window) to find out all about them. We will certainly be following any future developments.

🎩 Jobs

Online-Marketing (Opens in a new window) @ Blockpit AG (🇦🇹)

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Steuer-Fachangestellte oder Steuerfachwirte (Opens in a new window) @ Steuer- und Anwaltskanzlei Boldt (Opens in a new window) (🇩🇪)

Junior Steuerfachangestellte:r (Opens in a new window) @ Taxfix (🇩🇪)

🤖 LinkedIn Bits

Lars Bohn (Opens in a new window) announces launch of TaxTech consultancy kallman (Opens in a new window), a new VAT process consultancy for integrations into SAP and other systems (Link (Opens in a new window))

tax-tech.de (Opens in a new window) publishes: KI in Kanzleien-Magazin Spezial (Link (Opens in a new window))

bimetrics (Opens in a new window) releases update for AI-based e-invoicing recognition (Link (Opens in a new window))

Orbitax (Opens in a new window) releases version 8.5 of its Orbital International Tax Platform (Link (Opens in a new window))

French Pennylane grows fast with over 1.000 new company sign-ups daily (Link (Opens in a new window))

Markus Thomas Boldt (Opens in a new window) shares vision of a new digital tax consultancy for start-ups (Link (Opens in a new window))

TaxTech Chatter: French Indy (Opens in a new window) tries to poach Shine customers after Ageras acquisition (Link (Opens in a new window))

Berlin-based mika (Opens in a new window) opens waitlist for their beta product launch, offering an AI-enabled accounting solution (Link (Opens in a new window))

Adsum (Opens in a new window) releases InstantVAT, so that Intuit QuickBooks (Opens in a new window) users have the possibility to get their VAT refunds within 24 hours (Link (Opens in a new window))

💡 Update

We're going into hibernation for the next few weeks. Thank you for almost 450 followers on LinkedIn, over 300 newsletter subscribers and the support over at tax&bytes (Opens in a new window). We really appreciate all your support and hope to keep you engaged with our tailored TaxTech content. Enjoy the rest of the year and the start of 2025. See you 💜

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