I have been using tax act for 5 or 6 years. I have done itemized deductions for the last 5 years, and it has a nice feature to calculate the value of thrift store donations, although this year I will probably fall under the new standard deduction. There have been times when tax act lacked the information needed, and I had to go to the IRS website for clarification, such as when I got a refund check from the gas company with a 1099-PATR (decided to report as farm rental income).
Tax Act works fine but TurboTax tax might be worth the extra money because it can import some of the forms and save some tedious data entry. Tax Act makes you enter each transaction for capital gains/losses, which can be a PITA, especially when your husband first discovers Robin Hood : ). I have figured out how to handle schedule K1, but I asked my husband to please sell that stock so I wouldn't have to keep doing it. I got rid of Wealthfront as well because their "tax loss harvesting" results in a million tiny transactions that have to be individually entered (some for less than one dollar), and if we put enough into pre-tax savings our income is low enough not to even benefit from TLH.
Last year was my first time doing my state return for tax act (in other years I have filled out the form and mailed it) I remember it took a while to figure out how to enter 529 contributions, but other than that it was ok. I got a refund on my property taxes that I otherwise might not have known I qualified for (my state does two separate returns for income tax and property tax, in the past I have never qualified for the property tax one but last year I reduced my income enough through pre-tax deductions).