Highlights
Tax compliance data automation has reduced return preparation time by 50% and delivered 148% ROI.
Disconnected legacy systems previously cost organizations $275,000 more annually in avoidable compliance expenses.
Real-time dashboards transform tax departments from reactive compliance to strategic business partners.
Data is king in today’s fast-paced world of finance and tax. Yet, for many companies, the journey of data from disparate sources to financial close, tax returns, and reporting can be torturous. The challenges of manual tax reporting — data consolidation bottlenecks, complex calculations, and fragmented systems — turn the trek into a daunting ordeal fraught with time-consuming inefficiencies and greater risk of errors.
And the problem isn’t getting better. According to the 2026 Corporate Tax Department Technology Report from the Thomson Reuters Institute (produced in partnership with the Tax Executives Institute), more than half of corporate tax departments are still stuck in what the report calls the “reactive” phase of their technological development — meaning some processes are automated, but not enough to allow for more forward-looking, strategic tax work. That share has barely budged in three years.
The reason is no mystery: tax teams are drowning in data but starved of insight. The data they need lives in fragmented systems, manual spreadsheets, and disconnected tools. Tax compliance data automation is the answer — but until organizations make that investment, the tortured journey continues.
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The hidden challenges of manual tax reporting
What is tax compliance data automation?
How tax technology speeds up compliance and provision
The strategic shift: From reactive tasks to proactive analysis
Future-proofing with connected compliance solutions
Take the next step toward tax compliance data automation
The hidden challenges of manual tax reporting
Why data consolidation remains a critical hurdle
One of the greatest challenges facing tax departments is a lack of data integration and automation among systems. Companies use various software platforms — accounting software, payroll systems, ERP tools — to run their businesses, and too often these are siloed, legacy systems that lack the capability to communicate with each other and share data cleanly.
When data is siloed in disconnected systems, or tax teams are dependent on manual processes to enter and aggregate it, the result is significant inefficiency and a heightened risk of error. The 2026 Corporate Tax Department Technology Report reinforces this: 56% of tax professionals said they are dissatisfied with their department’s current tech stack — up sharply from just 34% the prior year. Satisfaction has dropped across the board, regardless of company size.
The cost of disconnected legacy systems
A November 2025 Forrester Consulting Total Economic Impact™ (TEI) study commissioned by Thomson Reuters puts this problem in sharp relief. Prior to adopting an integrated direct tax solution, the organizations Forrester interviewed described a common picture: tax provision calculations and return preparation relied heavily on manual, spreadsheet-based processes that lacked automation, standardization, and audit trails. Resources spent significant time preparing and reconciling tax data, losing productivity to repetitive, low-value tasks. Disconnected tools and legacy systems created data silos and persistent difficulties ingesting and mapping data from ERP systems — leaving tax teams unable to manage real-time regulatory changes or maintain visibility across entities and jurisdictions.
Tax professionals can see clearly what good technology looks like. For those whose departments aren’t getting the investment needed to close the gap, the frustration is palpable.
What is tax compliance data automation?
Tax compliance data automation is the use of integrated software to automatically collect, validate, and process tax data across an organization’s systems — eliminating manual data entry, reducing errors, and accelerating compliance, provision, and reporting workflows from a single connected platform.
Moving from spreadsheets to a single source of truth
Perhaps nowhere is the data problem more acute than in the sheer volume of manual effort required just to collect and reconcile data before any real analysis can begin. Tax teams that rely on spreadsheets and manual feeds spend an outsized portion of their time simply getting data ready — leaving little bandwidth for the strategic work that delivers value to the business.
The Forrester TEI study quantifies what that has cost organizations. On average, a single tax return took 40 hours to complete before organizations adopted Thomson Reuters Direct Tax. After implementation, that figure dropped by 50% — saving 20 hours per return. For the composite organization completing 500 returns per year, that added up to 10,000 hours or more reclaimed annually, translating to $1.2 million in tax preparation time savings over three years (risk-adjusted present value).
The composite organization based on Thomson Reuters customers Forrester interviewed also avoided $275,000 per year in compliance costs — including late filing penalties, resubmission costs, error remediation, and third-party consulting fees. Over three years, that added up to more than $600,000 in avoided compliance spend.
The cumulative result: a 148% ROI and a net present value of $1.7 million over three years, with payback in less than six months. One senior director of finance and business operations in the software industry put it simply: “We reduced our external advisory fees by half.”
This isn’t just about cost savings. It’s about what becomes possible when tax professionals are freed from the data grind. As the same interviewee described it: “We have gone from reactive compliance to regulatory confidence and proactive insights.”
How tax technology speeds up compliance and provision
Among companies that have invested meaningfully in tax data automation, the top measured benefits are:
Time savings and efficiency gains — cited by 66% of respondents in the 2026 Corporate Tax Department Technology Report
Improved accuracy and error reduction — cited by 55% of respondents
ROI and cost savings — cited by 41% of respondents
More importantly, two-thirds (67%) of respondents said their company’s technological investment over the past three years has enabled their department to shift toward more strategic, proactive work — with 23% saying the change has been significant. In larger tax departments, nearly half reported spending more time on strategic and proactive activities as a direct result of automation.
The infrastructure investment is already underway at many companies. According to the 2026 report, 42% of respondents said their organization is currently undertaking an ERP implementation or upgrade, with another 28% pursuing enterprise-wide finance system transformations and 28% undertaking enterprise AI and automation initiatives. These are the foundational moves that make connected tax technology possible.
Reducing return preparation time by 50%
Perhaps the most critical phase of the data journey is tax provision. Accurately estimating tax liabilities can be complex, especially amid ever-changing tax regulations and evolving business structures. Advanced automated tax provision solutions — powered by robust integration — deliver accurate calculations, minimize error risk, and accelerate the financial close process.
The Forrester TEI study found that the transition to a structured, automated direct tax system reduced tax preparation time by up to 50% for the organizations studied. Beyond speed, those organizations also gained audit confidence: improved documentation, reusable workpapers, and automated updates for changing tax laws meant fewer auditor pushbacks and less time spent on remediation. As one vice president of tax in the industrial technology industry described it: “Five years later, we are absolutely thrilled with the Thomson Reuters Direct Tax solution. It gives us what we need and is the foundation of our tax department.”
Streamlining tax provision not only ensures compliance — it frees resources previously consumed by manual rework. The Forrester study found that organizations also avoided the equivalent cost of hiring two additional full-time resources annually, as efficiency gains meant existing teams could handle growing complexity without expanding headcount. One senior director captured it well: “Our business stays scalable without adding headcount. We can move into a new jurisdiction without hiring in each jurisdiction.”
Direct tax compliance and tax provision remain among the most widely adopted technology solutions across corporate tax departments — and their usage continues to grow as teams look to automate more of the direct tax lifecycle.
Enhancing clarity with real-time dashboards
Tax compliance data automation is only half the battle. Once the data is consolidated and flowing cleanly, the next challenge is making sense of it all. Raw numbers and spreadsheets can quickly become overwhelming, and sifting through data to surface strategic insights requires the right tools.
Intuitive dashboards change that equation. Visualizing data through charts and graphs accelerates comprehension of complex financial information, surfaces insights that would otherwise stay buried, and helps practitioners build confident business recommendations. Tax departments that leverage dashboards compatible with tools like Microsoft Power BI or Alteryx can:
Get a comprehensive, real-time view of their organization’s tax data
Monitor and review key metrics on demand
Compare year-over-year tax trends
Identify anomalies before they become problems
Share intuitive graphs with non-financial stakeholders and senior leadership
The Forrester study confirms that real-time analytics and consolidated reporting don’t just improve efficiency — they elevate the tax department’s contribution to the business. With reliable, consolidated data across entities and geographies, tax teams can support M&A activity, model transfer pricing scenarios, and forecast global effective tax rates with confidence. Tax transforms from a back-office function into a strategic asset.
When evaluating automated tax compliance solutions, look for software that delivers:
Dashboard options for monitoring key performance indicators and allocating resources more effectively
Access to provision data for visualization tools that facilitate multi-period comparisons and trend analyses
Rapid drill-down capability — the ability to analyze data in seconds and move from consolidated amounts to supporting detail
Flexible data dimensions to store and perform complex calculations across entities and jurisdictions
The strategic shift: From reactive tasks to proactive analysis
The 2026 Corporate Tax Department Technology Report is unambiguous: the gap between where technology is heading and where most tax departments currently stand is widening fast.
In just one year, tax professionals’ expectations for AI integration shifted dramatically. Previously, most anticipated AI would become central to their workflow in three to five years. Today, the most common estimate is one to two years — and 7% say AI is already central to their day-to-day work, up from just 2% the prior year. The departments that have built the data infrastructure to support these tools will be positioned to take full advantage. Those that haven’t face an increasingly steep climb.
The Forrester findings make clear that the investment pays off quickly. With payback achieved in under six months and a three-year ROI of 148%, the financial case for tax compliance automation is well established. The longer a tax department waits, the more compliance risk, manual cost, and strategic opportunity cost it absorbs in the interim.
Future-proofing with connected compliance solutions
This is exactly the challenge that ONESOURCE Direct Tax is built to solve. The suite — encompassing Income Tax, Tax Provision, WorkFlow, and DataFlow — integrates data flows across the full tax lifecycle, eliminating the manual handoffs, siloed systems, and reconciliation bottlenecks that slow tax teams down.
Rather than forcing tax professionals to stitch together data from disconnected sources, these automated tax provision software solutions create a single, authoritative source of truth that feeds every phase of the tax workflow. Data is collected once, validated, and used across functions — turning what was once a tortured journey into a streamlined, strategic process. Built-in compliance logic, automated localization, and reusable templates allow tax teams to enter new jurisdictions and onboard acquired entities without starting from scratch every time.
When tax data flows seamlessly, the job of the tax professional changes fundamentally. Instead of spending hours gathering and reconciling, teams can focus on analyzing, advising, and driving value for the business — exactly the shift that the most successful tax departments are already making.
Take the next step toward tax compliance data automation
The data problem is solvable. But solving it requires the right platform — one that connects your systems, automates your workflows, and gives your team the insight they need to work at their highest level.



















