turbotax icon
Announcements
Attend our Ask the Experts event about Itemized Deductions - Schedule A on Jun 11! >> RSVP NOW!
Close icon
Do you have a TurboTax Online account?

We'll help you get started or pick up where you left off.

All Posts

Hello All,   During the course of 20222 and early part of 2023, I was depositing into my Vanguard traditional IRA account for year 2023 because I didn't know if my wife and I combined adjusted inco... See more...
Hello All,   During the course of 20222 and early part of 2023, I was depositing into my Vanguard traditional IRA account for year 2023 because I didn't know if my wife and I combined adjusted income would have exceeded the threshold  to deposit into my Vanguard Roth IRA account.  I determined that I could deposit into my Roth IRA for year 2023 when I was filing my tax return. I therefore did a withdrawal and redirected that amount into my Roth IRA before the filing due date of April 15, 2024.    Vanguard provided a year 2024 Form 1099-R for the Traditional IRA account which shows  the distribution.   However, Vanguard didn't produce a year 2024 Form 1099-R for the Roth IRA.  How is this being handled and how could I tell that I'm not going to be tax on the distribution within the form 1040? I shouldn't right? Hope I have explained my situation.   Aloha in advanced!
My mistake. I went back and see that I need to use the Qualified Dividends and Capital Gain Tax worksheet, picking the smaller of line 23 or line 24, for the tax amount.
At 2005, I bought the property. In the Form 4562, the basis is the sale price only (not include any closing cost also not subtract the land cost). so the depreciation  I calculated is a bit off. At ... See more...
At 2005, I bought the property. In the Form 4562, the basis is the sale price only (not include any closing cost also not subtract the land cost). so the depreciation  I calculated is a bit off. At 2012, I started to use Turbotax and I noticed I have entered wrong building cost 70K more, but also entered 4000 land cost. That calculation get me wrong depreciation. 2012-2023 I did the same way to calculate depreciation.   at 2024 I sold the property. Now I have to properly fix this problem, how should I do ?
First, I'd say your custom tables you provided above are nice and took some work!   TurboTax doesn't always use just the IRS Tax Tables to calculate the tax shown on Line 16.  There are several cal... See more...
First, I'd say your custom tables you provided above are nice and took some work!   TurboTax doesn't always use just the IRS Tax Tables to calculate the tax shown on Line 16.  There are several calculation methods, depending on specific situations in your return.  For instance, did you have any capital gains or qualified dividends?   If so, then TurboTax would use the Qualified Dividends and Capital Gains Tax Worksheet to make the calculation.  That can frequently result in less tax owed.   First, here's how to find out the method(s) that TurboTax used to calculate your tax.   Go into Forms Mode.  Close to the top of the forms list is the 1040 Worksheet (1040 Wks).   Open that worksheet, and scroll way down to between Lines 15 and 16.  You should see an interposed Tax Smart Worksheet.    What method(s) does it show that TurboTax used?   If you DID have any capital gains or qualified dividends, while in Forms Mode you can also review the Qualified Dividends and Capital Gain Tax Worksheet, which in the forms list is abbreviated as qual div/cap gain (or similar).  It would show how the calculation is done on that worksheet, if applicable.   When you provide the additional info, it will be easier for someone to comment.
If you are not filing Sch D (1040) because your only capital gains are reported on Form 1099-Div in box 2a then make sure that the box on Form 1040 line 7 is checked.  Then, on the Qualified Dividend... See more...
If you are not filing Sch D (1040) because your only capital gains are reported on Form 1099-Div in box 2a then make sure that the box on Form 1040 line 7 is checked.  Then, on the Qualified Dividends and Capital Gain Tax Worksheet, the No box on line 3 should be checked and only include the amount once.
Hi James,  My case is  inherited home sale as personal home  Do I need to submit supporting documents (for example apprasial, grand deed, Revocable Living Trust, and Grant Deed into Living Trust, d... See more...
Hi James,  My case is  inherited home sale as personal home  Do I need to submit supporting documents (for example apprasial, grand deed, Revocable Living Trust, and Grant Deed into Living Trust, driving license, bank statement.. ect) to IRS?    Can I upload supporting documents which I mentioned above to IRS via turbotax? or Do I need wait IRS to inform me to upload supporting documents ?  
Due to losses the Capital Accounts ended up negative after last year, BUT TurboTax won't let me put a negative value into the "Beginning Capital"...any ideas how to fix this???
At least for MFJ, the value from IRS tax table and TT amount is about $18 different. Example #1: Form 1040, Line 15 taxable income = $68,220. IRS tax table gives the tax amount as $7,723 for MFJ wit... See more...
At least for MFJ, the value from IRS tax table and TT amount is about $18 different. Example #1: Form 1040, Line 15 taxable income = $68,220. IRS tax table gives the tax amount as $7,723 for MFJ with income between $68,200 to $68,250. However TT give a tax amount of $7,705. Example #2: Line 15 taxable income= $85,682; tax table amount= $9,817 for MFJ. But TT tax amount is $9,799 instead. I anticipated hearing from the IRS for not paying enough tax because of this. TT wrong tax value
TurboTax has no copy of your W-2 forms, only the data you entered from them.   The best and cheapest way (free) to get a complete W-2 is to ask for a copy from your employer or payroll department. ... See more...
TurboTax has no copy of your W-2 forms, only the data you entered from them.   The best and cheapest way (free) to get a complete W-2 is to ask for a copy from your employer or payroll department. Social Security would charge a hefty fee.   The IRS has "Wage & Income" transcripts (2024 may or may not be ready yet), but the IRS transcripts do not include any state information.    See the FAQ below for more info.   FAQ:  How can I get a copy of my W-2? https://ttlc.intuit.com/turbotax-support/en-us/help-article/tax-forms/get-copy-w-2/L8FTim9MO_US_en_US
I'm finding the questions about home office mortgage interest and property taxes very confusing in Turbo Tax. First of all, when filling out the home office business section, you don't know at the po... See more...
I'm finding the questions about home office mortgage interest and property taxes very confusing in Turbo Tax. First of all, when filling out the home office business section, you don't know at the point whether you will qualify to itemize deductions or not, since the personal deduction section is later.  You have to jump around.  Having said that, when I answer the questions about "excess real estate taxes", the form doesn't seem to be filling out correctly. Somehow, my property tax was doubled on the Schedule A which clearly isn't correct. What could be causing that? Please make this section more clear!  I itemized last year, and will take the standard deduction this year.
How to get my w-2 forms from 2023 and 2024?
My friend had a health insurance plan through the Federal Marketplace for his spouse only. The plan was only active for the month of January, at which point it was determined that the spouse was elig... See more...
My friend had a health insurance plan through the Federal Marketplace for his spouse only. The plan was only active for the month of January, at which point it was determined that the spouse was eligible for Medicaid and the couple terminated their Marketplace plan. My friend received a form 1095-A for a plan that covered only the spouse, with amounts listed only for the month of January—all other amounts were zero.   During the year, after January but before July, my friend moved out of the residence due to being a victim of domestic abuse. He will file Married Filing Separately for the same reason. No change was reported to the Marketplace because the policy had already been terminated. The policy was not shared between people in different tax families because it only included one person, who is now in the other tax family. However, he is the recipient. The SLCSP is likely incorrect due to the changed tax family size. My friend also moved to a different ZIP code, but there it is easy to identify the "affected months" as being later in the year and not having a policy associated with them. However, the tax family change seems to affect the SLCSP for the entire year. He would like to allocate some of the credit to the spouse.  The instructions very clearly lay out situations in which the allocation must occur, but his situation does not fall under required allocation due to the plan not covering at least one person from each tax family. However, nothing in the instructions seems to prohibit electing to allocate policy amounts. The circumstances seem to align in spirit with Allocation Situation 2 and the domestic abuse exception, but since Situation 2 requires at least two people to be covered by the plan, a strict reading of the instructions seems to throw him into the "other" Allocation Situation 4. However, the SLCSP is likely incorrect, which again seems like Situation 2. The calculation for Allocation Situation 4 in the case where the parties cannot agree is interesting because it comes out to 1/1 (100%) for my friend and 0/0 (undefined; catastrophic error) for the spouse. So they had better come to an agreement, for the sake of humanity (I jest). Or, since the core issue is the splitting of a tax family into MFS families, he should just go to Allocation Situation 2. Maybe the solution is to allocate premium and APTC 50/50 and then lookup the correct SLCSP to use, which also seems to align with the general notion that the SLCSP on Form 1095-A can be incorrect when changes are not reported and that the correct SLCSP should always be used. It also seems to align particularly well with the instructions for the domestic abuse exception in situation 2, which are precisely that).   However, my friend is unable to use the online tool at HealthCare.gov/Tax-Tool/ to calculate the correct SLCSP because, right out of the gate, the answer to "How many people in your household meet all of the above requirements" about being in his tax household and also being enrolled in the plan is in fact zero, and the tool requires a response of 1 or higher! So is SLCSP just... not defined at all? There is also this language in the instructions, which seems to be trying to address an edge case:  "Individual you enrolled who is not included in a tax family. "If you indicated to the Marketplace at enrollment that you would claim an individual in your tax family for the year of coverage but the individual is not included in any tax family for the year of coverage, you must report any APTC paid for that individual's coverage. Follow the rules under Column (f), earlier, to report this APTC." But that doesn't seem like it should apply, because the enrolled spouse is included in a tax family! The spouse will file a tax return (MFS). If they can agree on an allocation, the spouse can be provided a copy of the 1095-A and can reconcile the allocated amount, whatever it is. Such an agreement seems possible, because the spouse has an unused child tax credit that could absorb the repayment entirely. Also, in this case, it is the enrolled spouse, not the individual who enrolled the spouse in the plan, who would be able to easily find the correct SLCSP using the online tool. The correct SLCSP for my friend's tax family seems possibly not even defined for him anymore. Nobody in his tax family was ever enrolled in the policy. In fact, the policy seems like it should belong fully to the spouse's tax family. And it would be mutually beneficial if that were the case! There seems to be a gap in the instructions when nobody in the recipient's tax family is enrolled in the policy. Can my friend and his spouse agree on an allocation in this scenario even though one is not required? Any thoughts on how to proceed would be appreciated.
I’m using TurboTax Desktop 2024 and entering a 1099-DIV from Charles Schwab with: Box 1a: $3,219.56 Box 1b: $818.84 Box 2a: $2,172.39 (capital gain distribution) TurboTax is correctly including... See more...
I’m using TurboTax Desktop 2024 and entering a 1099-DIV from Charles Schwab with: Box 1a: $3,219.56 Box 1b: $818.84 Box 2a: $2,172.39 (capital gain distribution) TurboTax is correctly including the Box 2a amount on Form 1040, line 7, but it is also including it on Schedule D, line 13, which causes it to be double-counted in the Qualified Dividends and Capital Gain Tax Worksheet. This results in overstating my long-term capital gains and increases Form 1040, line 16 by $1,185 more than it should.   I did not make any overrides or forced edits. I followed the interview and forms mode properly, and TurboTax confirms that the return is eligible for e-filing without any red flags.   My goal is to file an accurate return through e-file, but TurboTax seems to lack the option to prevent Box 2a from flowing to Schedule D when that amount is already reported on 1040 line 7.   Question: How can I properly enter a 1099-DIV Box 2a amount so that it appears on 1040 line 7 without also being added to Schedule D?
@ jeannelejeune  No, if it were me, I wouldn't put ambulance expense under Medical Travel.   It's probably best to list it separately as I mention in the next paragraph and show in my image below.  ... See more...
@ jeannelejeune  No, if it were me, I wouldn't put ambulance expense under Medical Travel.   It's probably best to list it separately as I mention in the next paragraph and show in my image below.  While it would work there in Travel as for being included in your total expenses, medical travel expenses are usually for items such as transportation expenses to/from the doctor's office, travel to a specialty clinic/hospital in or out of state, lodging on a medical trip, medical mileage for your auto, etc.   Near the very end of the medical expense section there is a place where you can list any miscellaneous medical expense that didn't fit nicely into one of the categories, and you can specifically notate it there as ambulance expense.   In the end, TurboTax lumps all the allowable expenses together to report on your return.  The categories are mainly to remind you to include everything.    See this image below for entering a custom expense.  Your screen may not look exactly like this image from desktop TurboTax, but the principle is the same. . .  
My return has been in the pending stage for 72 hours and me and my cousin filed at the same exact time and his was accepted 
Thanks for the reply, is there any specific Turbo Tax product i need to buy to do this? like premier, deluxe, or any Turbo tax product would provide this?   thanks.