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Retirement tax questions
No. The IRS allows a housing allowance to retired ministers to the extent the recipient can justify the amount. Should you receive more than you can justify, the excess should be considered taxable.
You may include this statement with an electronically filed return using the instructions below.
- You may file a paper return with an attachment stating that you received an exempted housing allowance as a retired clergy member. Be sure to include the amount received. You should keep documentation in your records to justify the amount of the housing allowance. This subject is covered in IRC Section 107, which you can mention in your statement.
- You should have received form 1099-R reporting the distribution.
To access the entry fields for the 1099-R:
- From within TurboTax, scroll down the Income Summary List
- In Category Retirement Plans and Social Security select IRA, 401(K), Pension Plan Distributions (Form 1099-R).
- Add a 1099-R to create a new copy of the form or Click Edit to review a form already created.
- The program will proceed with the interview questions for you to enter or review the appropriate information. Enter the data from the 1099-R
If Box 2b is not checked, please enter the 1099-R exactly as it appears on the form. This will cause the full amount to show as taxable. You will make your adjustment in Other Income, following the instructions below:
- Open your Federal return and choose Wages & Income
- Scroll down to Less Common Income and Show more
- Choose Miscellaneous Income, 1099-A, 1099-C
- Choose Other reportable income, and Start/Revisit
- Select Yes and you will be prompted to enter Description and amount. Enter the description "Retired Minister Housing Allowance," and enter the amount as a negative number.
At this point, the form 1040 will show your full pension as taxable, but the negative adjustment on Schedule 1, line 8, which carried to Form 1040, line 8, will remove it from taxation. Remember you can only enter an amount equal to your housing expense if it is less than your actual amount received.
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