The Year You Realize Your Taxes Are No Longer Simple

The Year You Realize Your Taxes Are No Longer Simple
There's usually a specific year when it happens.
Nothing dramatic on paper. No audit. No IRS letter. Just a quiet moment where you're gathering documents and something feels off. The file list is longer. The questions feel harder. The confidence you had last year isn't there anymore.
It often follows a small shift. A new contract. A side business that stopped being "just a side thing." Income from outside the country. A move, a marriage, a new account that didn't exist before. Each change seems manageable on its own.
But together, they change the shape of the filing.
This is the year when tax software starts asking questions you can't answer immediately. When you hesitate before clicking "continue." When you realize you're not sure whether last year's approach still applies.
Most people don't notice this moment right away. They push through it, tell themselves it's probably fine, and move on. The return gets filed. The discomfort gets ignored.
That's usually the year that sets the tone for the next five.
Not because a mistake was made, but because complexity was acknowledged and then deferred. The filing worked, but the structure didn't evolve with it.
Taxes don't become complicated overnight. They become complicated the year you outgrow the system you're using — and keep using it anyway.
