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A—Bankruptcy;
B—Other judicial debt relief;
C—Statute of limitations or expiration of deficiency period;
D—Foreclosure election;
E—Debt relief from probate or similar proceeding;
F—By agreement;
G—Decision or policy to discontinue collection; or
H—Other actual discharge before identifiable event
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I'm jumping on the thread instead of starting anew, but I can start a new query if preferred.
I received a 2016 1099C from a cc company of 0 dollars with specific account info. The account was stale for easily 8 years and we were insolvent even with IRS activity during that time.
I received a 2018 1099C from the same cc company of 30k on the exact same account. I sent them a note and advised this was not permitted and they responded that they were issuing it correctly anyway.
I suppose this is the spot where an IRS form 4598 is to be used?
Your thoughts would be appreciated.
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I have a 2019 1099c. Line 6 has the letter H. Does this mean I owe taxes on the debt that was discharged?
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Possibly.
According to the IRS, nearly any debt you owe that is canceled, forgiven or discharged becomes taxable income to you. You'll receive a Form 1099-C, "Cancellation of Debt," from the lender that forgave the debt.
For more information, please see When to Use Tax Form 1099-C for Cancellation of Debt.
But even if you receive a Form 1099-C from a lender, you still may be able to avoid taxation on the forgiveness of a debt. If your debt was discharged in a Title 11 bankruptcy proceeding, such as a Chapter 7 or Chapter 13 case, you're not responsible for taxes on that debt. Also, if you can demonstrate to the IRS that you were insolvent at the time the debt was cancelled, you can similarly avoid taxes on that debt.
To qualify for the insolvency, you must show that all of your liabilities (debts) were more than the Fair Market Value of all of your assets immediately before the cancellation of debt.
To show that you are insolvent and are excluding your canceled debt from income, you must fill out Form 982. Although the form is available in Turbo Tax, it is not available on line. You would have to use a cd/download and fill out the form manually, there is no interview questions for this.
I recommend that you first read the following links and fill out the insolvency worksheet and the form from the IRS website. Once you have completed it, purchase the cd/download to enter the forms' information into the software.
Please refer to page 5 for insolvency explanation and page 8 for insolvency worksheet:
https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p4681.pdf
Form 982 and its instructions:
https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/f982.pdf
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@highreturn There is not a way around the 1099-C. It must be entered. It may not be taxable. Please see Topic No. 431 Canceled Debt – Is It Taxable or Not? | IRS
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