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Holistiplan Reorganizes Clients By HouseholdsHolistiplan Reorganizes Clients By Households

The tax return review tool is officially receiving 2019 tax return uploads, as well as announcing new tools to support income- and capital gains-based advice.

Samuel Steinberger, Senior Technology Editor

March 11, 2020

2 Min Read
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Holistiplan co-founder Roger PinePhoto by Samuel Steinberger

Digital tax return review and planning tool Holistiplan is officially supporting 2019 tax return uploads, it said in an emailed announcement. The firm also announced support for organizing client tax returns by household, as of Feb. 29, a change that will result in a number of expected improvements in the coming months.

For advisors unfamiliar with the Holistiplan, the tool can be thought of as a digital, more automated version of the comprehensive tax return review checklists that some advisors offer their clients. It can help advisors find situations like Medicare adjustments and Roth conversions that add value for clients. The tool is also able to model hypothetical scenarios for clients, so they can plan for certain tax situations in the coming year. 

The revamp to focus on households should allow the software developer to more quickly integrate with CRM systems, particularly those that already organize client information by household, according to Holistiplan's announcement. Additionally, the enhancement facilitates enterprise use-cases where advisors in particular groups may only be permitted to see certain households assigned to them, as well as supporting advisors making “tax observations” using data not listed on tax returns. Examples of the latter could include financial advice around client age or client location for determining Affordable Care Act subsidy availability. Household support will allow for side-by-side comparisons of 2018 and 2019 returns in the Scenario Analysis pane, according to the firm. 

Going forward, Holistiplan is working on a tool that will project the marginal impact of incremental ordinary income and capital gains income. “It’s a graphical way of seeing, what do I need to do to drop myself down a [tax bracket] level,” said Roger Pine, co-founder of the firm. “It’s really going to be a game changer for your tax planning, because now, instead of hunting and pecking to try to find that number, boom, [Holistiplan] is going to give it to [advisors].” 

With the new development, which did not include a development timeline, advisor decision-making around moving income in or out of a particular year will be visually apparent and projected, said Pine. It is designed to replace advisors using inefficient trial-and-error to find the income or capital gains tax-planning sweet spot.

Holistiplan was the XYPN FinTech competition winner for 2019.

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About the Author

Samuel Steinberger

Senior Technology Editor, WealthManagement.com

Samuel Steinberger is Senior Technology Editor for Informa Connect’s WealthManagement.com. In his role, Mr. Steinberger provides the publication’s wealth and financial technology coverage. 

Mr. Steinberger’s editorial insight and familiarity with technology accelerates Informa’s growth within the financial advisor and wealth management communities, providing in-depth news for advisors and financial professionals. 

Before joining Informa Connect, Mr. Steinberger produced documentaries with former CNN anchor Soledad O’Brien at Soledad O’Brien Productions (formerly Starfish Media Group). He specialized in research, shooting and editing, as well as finding distinct voices to explain topics like mental health, poverty and racial divide. 

Prior to joining Soledad O’Brien Productions, Mr. Steinberger managed multi-departmental technology projects for global legal technology leader Transperfect Legal Solutions. After obtaining his graduate degree in journalism from Columbia University, he completed his transition from technology management to media. 

Mr. Steinberger is an award-winning journalist, author and researcher who has written, edited and reported for a number of publications, including The New York Times, Financial PlanningAmerican Banker and PBS. He is founder of beverages publication Give Me Weird Drinks

Mr. Steinberger’s technology analysis and insight has been featured in several books on virtual and augmented reality. Mr. Steinberger has received awards and recognition for his reporting and research, including the American Business Media's prestigious Jesse H. Neal Award for editorial excellence.

Follow on Twitter: @slsteinberger