Disposed entirely of MLP units, held over several years. In “Sales Close Out” statement, the ordinary income (recapture ordinary income) amount far exceeds the sum of "cash distributions" I have received during those years.
I suspect this is an error since a recapture should not be greater than “cash distributions.” Otherwise, I would be paying taxes on money I did not get.
Called MMP tax support center and told me they could not help because they simply distribute K-1s.
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Its definitely possible, and highly likely. The 'Ordinary Gains' have nothing to do with the distributions you received. But you're not paying tax on cash you didn't get. That's because the total tax you pay shows up in at least 4 places, spread over all the years you own the MLP:
1) The Ordinary Gains reported on the Sales Schedule. This goes to Form 4797, and is closely related to the losses you've been seeing in Box 1 of the K-1 each year.
2) All the suspended losses that have been building from prior years are now released on Sched E. Those losses help offset the Ordinary Gains.
3) Certain items on the K-1, like interest and dividends, have been taxed each year they show up (TT transfers them to the appropriate forms). Also, certain deductions (like charitable donations made by the PTP) are also transferred.
4) Finally, there's the actual Cap Gain/Loss. That's calculated using the K-1 Sales Schedule and is adjusted for everything above. So your reported Cap Gain/Loss is further reduced by whatever shows up as Ordinary Gain.
It is definitely complicated, but if you've been entering everything into TT over the years it is taxed correctly.
Its definitely possible, and highly likely. The 'Ordinary Gains' have nothing to do with the distributions you received. But you're not paying tax on cash you didn't get. That's because the total tax you pay shows up in at least 4 places, spread over all the years you own the MLP:
1) The Ordinary Gains reported on the Sales Schedule. This goes to Form 4797, and is closely related to the losses you've been seeing in Box 1 of the K-1 each year.
2) All the suspended losses that have been building from prior years are now released on Sched E. Those losses help offset the Ordinary Gains.
3) Certain items on the K-1, like interest and dividends, have been taxed each year they show up (TT transfers them to the appropriate forms). Also, certain deductions (like charitable donations made by the PTP) are also transferred.
4) Finally, there's the actual Cap Gain/Loss. That's calculated using the K-1 Sales Schedule and is adjusted for everything above. So your reported Cap Gain/Loss is further reduced by whatever shows up as Ordinary Gain.
It is definitely complicated, but if you've been entering everything into TT over the years it is taxed correctly.
My MLP converted from a MLP to a C corporation. My total investment in the company came to slightly more than $255K. When each unit of the old MLP was "swapped" for shares in the new C corporation, my investment fell by around $50K.
So I have 2 questions:
1) Will I have to pay income tax on the distributions I received when the MLP paid distributions which were tax exempt, and
2) Will I be able to write off the decline in the value of the shares I was given in the new C corporation for the units I had in the MLP, or will my questions all be included in the last K-1 that will be issued in January for old MLP?
I am sorry but I got lost in the post which you put on the board re: distributions, taxes, etc. Please see my most recent post asking questions on whether I will have to pay income taxes on all the previous year's distributions I received before the MLP converted to a C corporation and when the swap for each unit of the MLP was for 1.16 shares in the new C corporation formed to replace the MLP. And, I invested $250K for the MLP units, but after the conversion to the C corp the value of my investment lost money and was worth $40K less. Do I count this loss this year or when I actually sale my shares in the new C corp and adjust for the capital loss at that time?
Thanks..
I am still confused (and lost). Bottom line if in year 1 of owning the MLP units I received $20K in distributions, year 2 $22K in distributions all the way to year 10 of me owning the MLP units and receiving the distributions totaling about $240K, when they then converted the MLP to a C corp. Will the IRS go back and tax me on all the non-taxable distributions from the following years or was the tax paid by the MLP and after all their other mathematical tax gyrations am I liable for the previous years distributions that I received tax free and have to pay back taxes on this amount. Common sense is telling me no, because this would be an ex post facto imposition of an income tax, that if I understand correctly from all the boxes you mentioned the income tax on the distributions was paid by the MLP, and now that it is a C corp I am responsible for paying taxes on the dividends I receive.
Thanks,
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