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AI tax planning for financial advisors: what the tools do and cost
The short version
- What it is: scanning software that reads a client's tax return, extracts the numbers, and surfaces planning observations and scenarios — Roth conversions, bracket headroom, charitable timing — for you to evaluate.
- What it isn't: tax advice. The software flags; you, the fiduciary, decide what any client should actually do.
- What it costs: Holistiplan Basic Tax from $749/year (up to 30 households), Premium Tax from $1,499/year; FP Alpha All-In-One is $1,995/year with 55 snapshots across tax, estate, and insurance.
- How to choose: Holistiplan if tax is the whole job; FP Alpha if you want tax, estate, and insurance document reading under one roof.
- Why advisors buy it: a scanned return turns "we should look at your taxes sometime" into a concrete planning conversation at the next meeting.
What does tax-scan software actually do?
The workflow is the same across tools. The client uploads a 1040 (or you do). The software reads it, pulls the line items into a structured picture of the household's tax situation, and generates a set of observations: where the marginal bracket sits, what a Roth conversion at different sizes would look like, whether charitable bunching or a QCD (qualified charitable distribution, a gift made directly from an IRA) changes the math.
Then the human part starts. You read the scenarios, throw out the ones that don't fit what you know about the client, and build the recommendation yourself. The software's output is raw material for your judgment, not a substitute for it.
Most tools also produce a client-facing report. Review it before it goes out — a report you send a client is a client communication, with everything that implies. Our RIA compliance guide covers where that lands.
What does Holistiplan cost, and what do you get?
Holistiplan is the tax-first option. Basic Tax starts at $749/year and covers up to 30 households, with pricing that scales as your household count grows. It scans the 1040 and produces the observation report and scenario analysis that made the product the category's reference point.
Premium Tax starts at $1,499/year and adds state tax handling, Roth conversion projections, and cash-flow visuals. Both plans run on a 12-month term, and there's a 7-day free trial to test it on a real (or sample) return first.
What does FP Alpha cost, and when is it the better buy?
FP Alpha is the wider net. Its All-In-One plan is $1,995/year and includes 55 snapshots across tax, estate, and insurance — it reads not just the 1040 but estate documents and insurance policies, and generates recommendations across all three for your review. Beyond the included snapshots, pricing is credit-based by module, and enterprise arrangements are custom.
The pitch is breadth: if your planning conversations already wander from taxes into trusts and coverage gaps, one platform reading all three document types beats three subscriptions.
Holistiplan vs FP Alpha at a glance
| Holistiplan | FP Alpha | |
|---|---|---|
| Focus | Tax planning, deep | Tax + estate + insurance, broad |
| Verified price | Basic Tax from $749/yr (up to 30 households); Premium Tax from $1,499/yr | All-In-One $1,995/yr (55 snapshots); credit-based beyond |
| Reads | Client 1040s | 1040s, estate documents, insurance policies |
| Premium extras | State tax, Roth conversion projections, cash-flow visuals | Recommendations across all three planning areas |
| Trial / term | 7-day free trial; 12-month term | Annual plan |
| More detail | Our Holistiplan review | Our FP Alpha review |
Prices are vendor-published and can change — confirm current pricing with each vendor before you buy (checked 2026-07-09). Full head-to-head: Holistiplan vs FP Alpha.
Which one fits your firm?
Start with Holistiplan Basic Tax at $749/year if tax review is the specific service you're adding and 30 households covers your active planning clients. Step to Premium when state tax and Roth projection work becomes routine.
Choose FP Alpha at $1,995/year if you want one platform reading tax, estate, and insurance documents — particularly if estate reviews are already part of your annual meeting agenda and you're doing them by hand.
If your bottleneck is getting client documents into usable form at all — brokerage statements and account paperwork, not just returns — Powder does document extraction for wealth firms, but its pricing is demo-based and unpublished, so no figure appears here.
This page covers software, not tax strategy.
Nothing here is tax, legal, or investment advice. These tools generate observations from documents; your fiduciary judgment owns every recommendation a client receives, and a tax professional owns the tax return itself.
Common questions
Does the software give tax advice?
No, and that's by design. It reads the return and surfaces observations and scenarios. Deciding whether a Roth conversion or a charitable strategy is right for a specific client is your call as the fiduciary — the software has no idea the client is retiring next spring unless you do the thinking.
Do I need to be a CPA to use these tools?
No. They're built for advisors who plan around taxes, not preparers who file them. Plenty of firms use them precisely to have sharper tax conversations while leaving preparation to the client's CPA — and the scanned report gives you and that CPA the same starting picture.
Can clients upload returns directly?
Yes, both platforms support client uploads. Before you turn that on, check where the vendor stores and processes those documents — a tax return is about as sensitive as client data gets. Our compliance guide covers the Reg S-P questions to ask.
Is $749 a year worth it for a small book?
Do the arithmetic on your own practice: if a scanned return turns even a handful of annual reviews into concrete planning conversations, the plan costs less than most firms spend on coffee for the conference room. If you rarely discuss taxes with clients, start with meeting notes instead — it pays back faster.
Sources: pricing pages published by Holistiplan (holistiplan.com) and FP Alpha (fpalpha.com) — vendor-published, checked 2026-07-09. Powder (powderfi.com) publishes no pricing; demo-based. Nothing here is tax, legal, or compliance advice. Last reviewed: 2026-07-09.
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