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August 1, 2025
11:22 AM
@user17538342114 , having read through your post what I get is :
(a) You a US person ( GreenCard), and living in the US -- US Tax home
(b) have sold jointly held property in Spain
(c) You ha...
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@user17538342114 , having read through your post what I get is :
(a) You a US person ( GreenCard), and living in the US -- US Tax home
(b) have sold jointly held property in Spain
(c) You have had TDS ( Taxes Held at Source ) of 3%
(d) You now wish to recognize this alienation of asset and corresponding gain/loss for US tax purposes.
The questions I have at this point are :
1. How did you acquire the asset ? Is it purchase ( what was the price at the time, translated to US$ ?) or inheritance ( when was the passing of the decedent, what was the FMV-- Fair Market Value -- on that day or soon thereafter )?
2. If there was a significant time between acquisition and disposal, how was the property used in the meantime ? If it was rented out / income generation, did you report those incomes in your US return during that income generation period ? Were you a US resident ( GreenCard or Resident for Tax Purposes) during that period?
3. When did the sale complete ? Did the proceeds ( your share ) rest in a Spanish/ Non-US bank account ( that you own or have/had signature authority over ) for any period?
Please answer my questions and I will circle back -- yes ?
August 1, 2025
11:21 AM
TurboTax does not have a copy of the W-2 or Form 1099. It would have a Form W-2 Wage and Tax Statement that included the tax data from the forms that were entered. The forms would be included in t...
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TurboTax does not have a copy of the W-2 or Form 1099. It would have a Form W-2 Wage and Tax Statement that included the tax data from the forms that were entered. The forms would be included in the PDF of the tax return in the tax year the return was completed.
Copies of a Form 1099 would have to obtained from the issuer of the form.
To access your current or prior year online tax returns sign onto the TurboTax website with the User ID you used to create the account - https://myturbotax.intuit.com/
Scroll down to the section Your tax returns & documents. Click on the Year and Click on Download/print return (PDF)
If you cannot obtain the W-2 from your employer, then for a fee you can get a complete copy of a W-2 from the Social Security Administration - https://faq.ssa.gov/en-us/Topic/article/KA-02501
You can get a free Wage and Income transcript from the IRS - https://www.irs.gov/individuals/get-transcript
For a fee of $30 you can get a complete federal tax return to include copies of W-2's, if you mailed the tax return and included a paper W-2, from the IRS by completing Form 4506 - http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/f4506.pdf
See this IRS Tax Topic - http://www.irs.gov/taxtopics/tc159.html
August 1, 2025
11:05 AM
@adri-cisneros
(a) Por tu publicación no estoy seguro de tu situación.
(b) ¿Insinúa que tuvo ingresos (¿de qué tipo?) y que pagó impuestos en México por ellos? Por ejemplo, vendió una casa en M...
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@adri-cisneros
(a) Por tu publicación no estoy seguro de tu situación.
(b) ¿Insinúa que tuvo ingresos (¿de qué tipo?) y que pagó impuestos en México por ellos? Por ejemplo, vendió una casa en México y, por lo tanto, pagó impuestos en ese país. Dado que esos ingresos también estarían sujetos a impuestos en EE. UU., ------ necesitaría obtener un Crédito Fiscal Extranjero.
(c) Si no está seguro de cómo proceder, le sugerimos que contacte con un asesor fiscal o utilice el soporte en vivo de TurboTax.
(d) ¿Es usted una persona estadounidense (ciudadano/GreenCard/residente para impuestos) y vive en los EE UA. o qué?
Tenga en cuenta que, si bien puedo trabajar en español, aquí utilizo el traductor de Google para asegurarme de que mi gramática sea correcta.
Dime cómo puedo ayudarle ?
August 1, 2025
11:00 AM
the tuition is about 30k and by computer was over 1k and i pay a bunch in taxes at the moment working full time, my classes count as full time enrollment
Topics:
August 1, 2025
10:54 AM
how do I get a copy of my w2
Topics:
August 1, 2025
10:50 AM
August 1, 2025
10:49 AM
Let's assume you buy the solar panels for $20,000 with a 10 year loan. You would claim the credit one time, in the year they were installed, for the full purchase price not counting interest ($20,00...
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Let's assume you buy the solar panels for $20,000 with a 10 year loan. You would claim the credit one time, in the year they were installed, for the full purchase price not counting interest ($20,000 in this example), even though you have not actually paid the full $20,000. Then you don't claim anything extra in future years for the monthly payments.
I don't know what your terms are, but with a traditional car lease, you are "buying" the portion of the car that you will use. For example, suppose you have a two year lease and the cash price would be $40,000. You might finance $15,000 for two years with a residual value of $25,000. That means you are "buying" $15,000 worth of the car, and you can either turn in the car at the end of the lease, or buy the other $25,000 if you want to keep the car. But you don't actually own the car for those 2 years, the lessor does.
Assuming the solar panel lease is the same thing, then you aren't buying the solar panels in a way that is eligible for any federal tax credits, because you aren't buying the panels, you are only buying the right to use them for a certain number of years. The lessor still owns them. (At the end of the lease, would you have the option to buy them or have them removed?)
If this is a purchase agreement, you claim the purchase price in the year the panels are installed, regardless of when you actually pay. And you only claim the purchase price, not the interest on any loans.
August 1, 2025
10:47 AM
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August 1, 2025
10:46 AM
@jagpreet71 ,
(a) While I don't know all the antecedents of the case ( except the items mentioned in this thread ), I happy that MI did take into consideration your father's situation and gave h...
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@jagpreet71 ,
(a) While I don't know all the antecedents of the case ( except the items mentioned in this thread ), I happy that MI did take into consideration your father's situation and gave him " foreign tax credit" equivalent. I am hoping that this was the final determination. ( And not because the analyst read taxing "state"/ authority as Indiana -- IN -- instead of India-- dyslexia effect ?)
(b) I am quite surprised at the argument of your cpa on the definition of "state" and equating that to a state of the United States and /or its territories. In that particular definition the word "state" is being used in reference and use as an entity that can levy / impose/ collect taxes on incomes and NOT as equivalent to a "state" within the meaning of United "States" of America i.e. a state of the union. To me that is a misuse of the definition. Thus the state of Michigan is limiting the type of "entities" the taxes from whom are to recognized but says nothing about the "states" as used for purposes of tax credit i.e. for taxes paid to another "state". Please note that the "credit" related subsection of the code takes pains to define/ recognize the "states" ( of the union), DC, etc. the taxes paid to whom are eligible for tax credit.
@abhishtu2 , I wish you luck with your effort, esp. since the federal FTC is valid.
Namaste ji
pk
August 1, 2025
10:19 AM
You are substantially correct; distributions of principal (corpus) do not have tax consequences but income does have tax consequences (e.g., interest, dividends, retirement accounts, etc.). Hopef...
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You are substantially correct; distributions of principal (corpus) do not have tax consequences but income does have tax consequences (e.g., interest, dividends, retirement accounts, etc.). Hopefully, the trust is not named as the primary beneficiary of the IRA as that's generally not a great idea unless there are exigent circumstances.
August 1, 2025
9:36 AM
https://ttlc.intuit.com/turbotax-support/en-us/help-article/import-export-data-files/save-2021-turbotax-online-return-pdf/L8dHfRkpT_US_en_US?uid=m7e64td0
August 1, 2025
9:36 AM
Or....if you used the same online account for your own return and your daughter's return, the second return overwrote the first one and the first one is lost for good. With online TT you get one re...
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Or....if you used the same online account for your own return and your daughter's return, the second return overwrote the first one and the first one is lost for good. With online TT you get one return per fee. If you used the same account and user ID for two returns, you lost the first one.
August 1, 2025
9:34 AM
You have to access your own account and/or print it for yourself using exactly the same account and user ID that you used when you prepared the return.
https://myturbotax.intuit.com/
...
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You have to access your own account and/or print it for yourself using exactly the same account and user ID that you used when you prepared the return.
https://myturbotax.intuit.com/
Start a 2024 return online and enter some personal information so that the menu on the left opens up and lets you access your past year returns.
https://ttlc.intuit.com/community/prior-year-return/help/how-do-i-access-my-prior-year-return/01/27010
https://ttlc.intuit.com/turbotax-support/en-us/help-article/import-export-data-files/save-2021-turbotax-online-return-pdf/L8dHfRkpT_US_en_US?uid=m5y4ch1y
Many people have multiple TT accounts and forget how to access them. Log out of the account you are in now.
https://ttlc.intuit.com/turbotax-support/en-us/help-article/account-management/many-intuit-accounts-turbotax/L9aVfKS1Z_US_en_US?uid=ll5g6zcx
Account Recovery
Or did you use the desktop version of TurboTax? If so, the files are on your own hard drive or any backup device you used like a flash drive.
https://ttlc.intuit.com/turbotax-support/en-us/help-article/tax-return/find-last-year-tax-data-file-tax-file-computer/L0XJvPaJr_US_en_US?uid=m6gufxei
https://ttlc.intuit.com/turbotax-support/en-us/help-article/data-systems/find-tax-data-file-mac/L4VNGm33S_US_en_US?uid=m6guhab0
You can get a free transcript from the IRS or for a fee of $30, an actual copy of your tax return.
https://www.irs.gov/individuals/get-transcript
https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/f4506.pdf
SAVE YOUR TAX RETURNS !
EVERY year before mid-October you should save a copy of your tax return as a pdf and print a copy of it for your records. That way you will not be searching online frantically when you need it for a lender, FAFSA forms, your next tax return, etc.
https://ttlc.intuit.com/turbotax-support/en-us/help-article/import-export-data-files/save-2021-turbotax-online-return-pdf/L8dHfRkpT_US_en_US?uid=m6guj526
https://ttlc.intuit.com/turbotax-support/en-us/help-article/import-export-data-files/save-2021-turbotax-online-return-pdf/L8dHfRkpT_US_en_US?uid=m78eb8pc
In order to transfer a past year return to the new return you need the tax file
https://ttlc.intuit.com/turbotax-support/en-us/help-article/import-export-data-files/save-turbotax-online-return-tax-data-file/L4xwOG3LF_US_en_US?uid=m6guk3xl
NOTE: TurboTax and the IRS save returns for seven years. Returns older than seven years are purged.
August 1, 2025
9:30 AM
Have you already filed the tax return with the wrong amount?
If you have not filed, see the reply from DoninGA above.
If you have already filed, and your e-file was accepted, wait until the I...
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Have you already filed the tax return with the wrong amount?
If you have not filed, see the reply from DoninGA above.
If you have already filed, and your e-file was accepted, wait until the IRS has finished processing your tax return. They might see the error and correct it without you having to do anything. If they do not correct it, you will have to file an amended return to make the correction.
August 1, 2025
9:22 AM
"settlement payment with my former employer"
Did the employer pay you, or did you pay the employer?
August 1, 2025
9:21 AM
1 Cheer
That is incorrect. the instructions for 4a & 4b for form 8960
Line 4a—Income From Trades/Businesses, Rental Real Estate, Royalties, Partnerships, S Corporations, and Trusts Enter the following amo...
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That is incorrect. the instructions for 4a & 4b for form 8960
Line 4a—Income From Trades/Businesses, Rental Real Estate, Royalties, Partnerships, S Corporations, and Trusts Enter the following amount from your properly completed return. • Schedule 1 (Form 1040), line 3. • Schedule 1 (Form 1040), line 5.
Use line 4b to adjust the amounts included on line 4a, for gains and losses that are excluded from the calculation of net investment income. Enter the amount of gains (as a negative number) and losses (as a positive number). Enter the net positive or net negative amount for the following items included on line 4a that aren’t included in determining net investment income.
Net income or loss from a section 162 trade or business that’s not a passive activity and isn’t engaged in a trade or business of trading financial instruments or commodities.
so 4a should be $4K ($13K-$9k), 4b should be $9K as a positive number making line 4c $13K
not sure what worksheet you entered the business loss on. check your entries.
also check what's on schedule 1 lines 3 and 5
August 1, 2025
8:18 AM
Since the panels are leased and not owned by you, it is not possible for you to receive a solar tax credit on your federal tax return. If the panels were actually purchased by you and you are making...
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Since the panels are leased and not owned by you, it is not possible for you to receive a solar tax credit on your federal tax return. If the panels were actually purchased by you and you are making payments, then you enter the total cost of the panels on your federal tax return for the solar credit.
August 1, 2025
8:17 AM
If your daughter should not have said no one could claim her, she is the one who needs to amend that 2022 return--not you. When she amends she will need to change the way she answered the questio...
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If your daughter should not have said no one could claim her, she is the one who needs to amend that 2022 return--not you. When she amends she will need to change the way she answered the question in MY INFO that asked if someone else could claim her as a dependent.
Your own 2022 return can only be filed by mail. You could have done that when it was rejected, but it is not too late yet. Print, sign and date your 2022 return in ink, and mail it in.
When you mail a tax return, you need to attach any documents showing tax withheld, such as your W-2’s or any 1099’s. Use a mailing service that will track it, such as certified mail so you will know the IRS/state received the return.
Federal and state returns must be in separate envelopes and they are mailed to different addresses. Read the mailing instructions that print with your tax return carefully so you mail them to the right addresses.