BossTax: Self-Employed Taxes
BossTax: Self-Employed Taxes Summary
BossTax: Self-Employed Taxes is a with in-app purchases iOS app in Finance by mLogg. Released in Feb 2022 (4 years ago). It has 35 ratings with a 4.94★ (excellent) average. Based on AppGoblin estimates, it reaches roughly 493 monthly active users and generates around $<10K monthly revenue (100% IAP / 0% ads). Store metadata: updated Apr 24, 2026.
Store info: Last updated on App Store on Apr 24, 2026 .
4.94★
Ratings: 35
Screenshots
App Description
Hire us to do your taxes! Save valuable time you could be spending on building your business.
BossTax App tracks your business expenses for free. Then upload your tax forms and sit back while your team professionally prepares your tax return. Federal, state, and local U.S. tax returns completed and filed - all right from your phone. No printer required! Pay for tax prep only when you decide to file. Here's how it works:
1. TRACKING FOR YOUR SELF-EMPLOYED OR SMALL BUSINESS
BossTax App organizes your receipts and categorizes your expenses, and automatically prepares a summary of your business expenses. Save hours of calculator time with piles of receipts – just snap a pic and you’re done. Connect your bank or credit card accounts using secure, bank-grade connections and the app will search for additional deductions you might have missed. Track more complex tax items like business use of your personal vehicle and your home office. If accounting software isn't for you, try BossTax App for auto-magic tracking. Get help any time.
2. GET YOUR TAXES FILED
Snap photos or upload any tax forms you received from your employer, your gig platform, the bank, etc. We'll read and process the forms automatically, then our team will ask you just the questions that are relevant for you. The app covers full federal, state, and local tax filings. Verify your identity and submit your taxes right from your phone.
DISCLAIMER: BossTax is an independent company and does not represent any government entity. The websites for the IRS (https://www.irs.gov) and state and local tax authorities are the source of information for specific tax requirements.