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Interest/Dividends/Taxable Refunds

Brought Over From FAQ Under Category

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State Tax Refund – Received in Current Year for Last Year’s State Return

If you itemized deductions on your prior year tax return, then a state refund that you received this year may be taxable. If you did not itemize deductions on your prior year tax return, your state refund won’t be taxed. To report Form 1099-G State Refund Document in the TaxAct program, follow the steps below.  […]

Form 1099-G – Box 2 – Entering State Income Tax Refund in Program

This amount is generally only taxable if you itemized deductions in the prior year. To enter or review your state income tax refund in the TaxAct program, follow the steps below.  The program automatically uses the Form 1040 State Refund – State Refund Worksheet to determine the taxable amount based on the information entered for […]

Form 1099-G – Unemployment, Tax Refunds, RTAA, and More

Form 1099-G is used to report a variety of government payments, including: Unemployment compensation (Box 1) – See Form 1040 – Unemployment Compensation for details on data entry.  State or local income tax refunds, credits, or offsets (Box 2) – See Form 1099-G – Box 2 – Entering State Income Tax Refund in Program for […]

Form 1099-G – Box 6 – Taxable Grants

Entries on Form 1099-G Certain Government Payments, Box 6 (this covers certain government payments) are generally reported on IRS Schedule 1 (Form 1040) Additional Income and Adjustments to Income, Line 8. If the item relates to an activity for which you are required to file Schedule C, Schedule E, Schedule F, or Form 4835, you need […]

Capital Gains and Losses – Dividends Received on Restricted Stock

Restricted stock is stock that you get from your employer for services you perform. It is non-transferable and subject to a substantial risk of forfeiture. You do not have to include the value of the stock in your income when you receive it. If you get dividends on restricted stock, however, you must include them […]

Form 1099-DIV – Entering Dividend Income in Program

Follow the steps below to enter Form 1099-DIV Dividends and Distributions in the TaxAct program. Online  Dashboard  From within your TaxAct return, click Income.   On smaller devices, click the menu at the top left corner of your screen, then make your selection.   Click the Investments & Savings drop-down.  Click Add beside Dividends.   Complete the rest […]

Form 1099-INT – Entering in Program

To report Form 1099-INT, Interest Income, in the TaxAct program, follow the steps below.  Online Dashboards From within your TaxAct return, click Income. On smaller devices, click the menu at the top left corner of your screen, then make your selection.  Expand Investment and Savings. Click Add beside Interest to add a new Form 1099-INT.   […]

Form 1099-INT – Exempt with Accrued Interest

Per IRS Instructions for Forms 1099-INT and 1099-OID, page 3: Box 8. Tax-Exempt Interest Enter tax-exempt interest that is not OID of $10 or more that is credited or paid to the person’s account if that interest is paid on obligations issued by a state, the District of Columbia, a U.S. possession, an Indian tribal […]

Schedule B – When to Use/Print Only if Required

Per IRS Instructions for Schedule B Interest and Ordinary Dividends, page 1; Schedule B (Form 1040) will print with your return only for the any of the following reasons: You had over $1,500 of taxable interest or ordinary dividends. You received interest from a seller-financed mortgage and the buyer used the property as a personal […]

Prior Year Tax Refund Withheld By State

If you did not directly receive the prior year’s tax refund, meaning it was used to pay a debt on your behalf, it is still considered income to you in the current year.

Form 1099-INT – CUSIP Number – Consolidate Entries

Per IRS Instructions for Forms 1099-INT and 1099-OID, on page 4: Box 14. Tax-Exempt and Tax Credit Bond CUSIP No. For single bonds or accounts containing a single bond, enter the CUSIP number of the tax-exempt bond for which tax-exempt interest is reported in box 8 or tax credit bond (including build America bond and […]

Form 1099-INT – Federal or State Exempt Interest

Follow the steps below to report exempt interest. If you need help accessing Form 1099-INT, go to our Form 1099-INT – Entering in Program FAQ. To enter only interest that is exempt from State: From within your Form 1099-INT, continue with the interview process until you reach the screen titled Interest Income – 1099-INT Income. Click the data entry […]

Form 1099-DIV – Rounding

Per IRS Instructions for Form 1040 and 1040-SR, page 23: Rounding Off to Whole Dollars You can round off cents to whole dollars on your return and schedules. If you do round to whole dollars, you must round all amounts. To round, drop amounts under 50 cents and increase amounts from 50 to 99 cents […]

Qualified Dividends and Capital Gain Tax

Information reported to you on Form 1099-DIV and Form 1099-B can be entered in the TaxAct program in the Investment Income section of the Federal Q&A, or directly on the forms where applicable. The Tax Summary screen will indicate if the tax has been computed on the Schedule D Worksheet or the Qualified Dividends and Capital Gain […]

Forms 1099-INT and 1099-DIV – Errors That Could Prompt a Notice

There are many reasons you could have received a notice regarding your Form 1099-INT Interest Income and/or Form 1099-DIV Dividends and Distributions . The most common reasons are listed below: The form was never entered into the TaxAct® program and the income was not reported elsewhere on the return. (According to the IRS instructions, the […]

Form 1042-S – Foreign Person’s U.S. Source Income Subject to Withholding

Form 1042-S Foreign Person’s U.S. Source Income Subject to Withholding is used to report amounts paid to foreign persons (including persons presumed to be foreign) who are subject to income tax withholding. For an individual taxpayer, Form 1042-S is a document provided to you (and the IRS) by the payer of the income reported. That […]

Form 1099-INT – Interest Earned for the Year is More than $10

You should receive a Form 1099-INT Interest Income from banks and financial institutions where you earned more than $10 in interest. Even if you did not receive a Form 1099-INT, or if you received $10 or less in interest for the year, you must still report any interest earned and credited to your account during […]

Form 1099-DIV – No EIN or Payer’s FEIN

If you receive a dividend income report without a payer’s identification number, enter the information in the TaxAct program as though you received a Form 1099-DIV Dividends and Distributions, but leave the Payer’s Federal Identification Number (FEIN) blank. This number is not required and the return will e-file without the number. The information required by […]

Form 1099-DIV – Entering Dividends in Program

You need to report your Form 1099-DIV ordinary and qualified dividends in the TaxAct program for the information to transfer to your Form 1040. To report your Form 1099-DIV and enter your ordinary and qualified dividends (if you need help reporting your Form 1099-DIV, go to our Form 1099-DIV – Entering Dividend Income in Program […]

Form 1099-DIV – Nondividend Distribution

Your basis is generally the cost of the investment less any prior nondividend distributions received. Once you enter the basis in TaxAct, the program will determine if there is a gain to report and it will report it on Form 8949 Sales and Other Dispositions of Capital Assets. The most common kinds of distributions are: […]

Reporting interest of $10 or less from Form 1099-INT in TaxAct

Financial institutions with which you do business are required to send you a Form 1099-INT: Interest Income if you earned from them more than $10 of interest over the year.  Even if you haven’t received a Form 1099-INT, or if you’ve earned interest of $10 or less over the year, you’ll still need to report […]

Form 1099-INT – Accrued Interest

If you state that all your tax-exempt interest is accrued tax-exempt interest, you are essentially saying that none of the interest is attributable to you. When you buy a bond between interest payment dates, there is interest that has accrued since the last interest payment date. The price you pay for the bond will include […]

Life Insurance Benefits

Per IRS Publication 525 Taxable and Nontaxable Income, page 23: Life Insurance Proceeds Life insurance proceeds paid to you because of the death of the insured person aren’t taxable unless the policy was turned over to you for a price. This is true even if the proceeds were paid under an accident or health insurance […]

Schedule B – Schedule 1 For Form 1040A

Beginning with 2009 federal tax returns, Schedule 1 (Form 1040A) Interest and Ordinary Dividends for Form 1040A Filers is obsolete. The amounts previously reported on that schedule are now reported on Schedule B (Form 1040A or 1040) Interest and Ordinary Dividends. Schedule B will print if, based on your entries, the IRS requires its inclusion in […]