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TurboTax does not use the depreciation "tables" for depreciation (unless you go into the "Forms" and specifically tell it to use the "tables").  It uses a mathematical method that results in extra-hi... See more...
TurboTax does not use the depreciation "tables" for depreciation (unless you go into the "Forms" and specifically tell it to use the "tables").  It uses a mathematical method that results in extra-high depreciation when the business percentage goes up, and and extra-low depreciation when the business percentage goes down.  There is no way to see the actual calculation.   If TurboTax (and several other major software brands) is doing the correct order of calculations, that is correct when using that method.    If you don't want to use that method and you are using the desktop/downloaded version of TurboTax, you can go into the "Forms", find the "Asset Entry Wks" and scroll WAY down to the bottom and check the box to use the IRS "tables".
You should select the format of the date that appears on your state ID - most are MM/DD/YYYY.  Also be sure that you are entering the issue date and the expiration date in the correct fields as rever... See more...
You should select the format of the date that appears on your state ID - most are MM/DD/YYYY.  Also be sure that you are entering the issue date and the expiration date in the correct fields as reversing those will cause an error.   If you still encounter issues with this, please reply back with as much detail as possible about the issue you are seeing as that will help us to better help you.
I bought Intuit TurboTax Deluxe Federal State License 2024 for the first time last year, and made a mistake by filing my taxes using TurboTax online, so I didn't use the license code. This year, I bo... See more...
I bought Intuit TurboTax Deluxe Federal State License 2024 for the first time last year, and made a mistake by filing my taxes using TurboTax online, so I didn't use the license code. This year, I bought two Intuit TurboTax Deluxe Federal State License 2025 since my son needed to file his taxes too, and only one of the two license codes was used. Can I still use the unused license codes for 2026?  Thank you
I have a farm, operated as an LLC, and report its income/expenses on Schedule F. For many years I have used Turbotax Home & Business edition. The farm showed a loss for several years resulting in the... See more...
I have a farm, operated as an LLC, and report its income/expenses on Schedule F. For many years I have used Turbotax Home & Business edition. The farm showed a loss for several years resulting in the accumulation of a significant Qualified Business Loss which Turbotax is reporting on Form 8995. In 2025 the farm finally generated a significant profit. I expected the losses carried forward from previous years would be available to reduce the 2025 profit, but the full amount of income calculated on Schedule F is reported on the 1040 as income for 2025.   Adding to the pain, the total Qualified Business Loss carryforward (Form 8995 Line 16) has been reduced by the amount of qualified business income shown on Form 8995 Line 2 (as a result of the Line 16 instruction to combine lines 2, a positive number, and 3, a negative number).    To further magnify the pain, it appears that if there had been no loss carried forward I would have been able to take a qualified business income deduction equal to 20% of the 2025 total farm income.  So prior losses mean that I now pay more tax.   Can this be correct? Or is something being missed somewhere? The Schedule F in the Turbotax view form mode shows pages called Carryovers to 2025 Smart Worksheet including columns labeled QBI with lines for losses, but all of those lines are blank.    The IRS information (https://www.irs.gov/newsroom/qualified-business-income-deduction ) indicates that I qualify for the deduction equal to 20% of the farm profit, but it is not being reflected in Turbotax. 
@RETIREDGRANDDAD wrote:   I was wondering if it would simplify things if I were to  attach the 1009S to my return with an explanation   The IRS will not look at anything that you attach.  
Thank you But I've already been doing this many many times and it still reverts back to the standard deduction. I have checked for updates in turbotax As well as on my computer and have rebooted and ... See more...
Thank you But I've already been doing this many many times and it still reverts back to the standard deduction. I have checked for updates in turbotax As well as on my computer and have rebooted and still  It won't allow me to change to the itemized deduction Option !
I believe that a logic flaw in TurboTax's education credit interview is causing users to be incorrectly assigned only the Lifetime Learning Credit (LLC) instead of the American Opportunity Credit (AO... See more...
I believe that a logic flaw in TurboTax's education credit interview is causing users to be incorrectly assigned only the Lifetime Learning Credit (LLC) instead of the American Opportunity Credit (AOC), resulting in a significantly smaller and less favorable tax credit.   Financial Impact AOC: Up to $2,500, with 40% refundable (up to $1,000 back even with no tax liability) LLC: Up to $2,000, entirely non-refundable I am worried that users affected by this bug are leaving real money on the table.   The Broken Assumption TurboTax seems to treat two distinct facts as equivalent: "This is not your first year of college" is being used as a proxy for "You have previously claimed the AOC or Hope Credit"   These are not the same. A student can be in their second, third, or fourth year of college and have never claimed the AOC because they didn't know it existed, weren't informed by the software, or filed incorrectly in a prior year.   Steps to Reproduce The Issue Begin the education deduction credit section Select "No" when asked if this is your first year of college When asked how many times you've claimed the Hope Credit or American Opportunity Credit, leave the defaults at 0 Continue through the questions Observed result: User is placed on the LLC Expected result: A user with 0 prior AOC claims should still qualify for the AOC regardless of what year of school they are in — the software should not assume prior claims based on school year alone. Contributing UX Problem The question about prior Hope/AOC claims provides no in-context explanation of what those credits are. There is no tooltip, no "learn more" link, and no inline definition unless you manually use the help chat to the right. A user who has never encountered these terms has no way to answer accurately, they will default to 0 out of uncertainty not even realizing this. Additionally, TurboTax has access to prior year return data for returning users right? The software could cross-reference that data to pre-populate or at least verify this answer rather than relying on user recall of tax terminology they may not understand.   Suggested Fixes Add tooltips explaining the AOC and Hope Credit at the point of the question For returning TurboTax users, cross-reference prior returns to pre-populate the number of prior claims If prior return data is unavailable, add a prompt such as: "Not sure? We can help you check your prior return" Thank for your time and attention on this potential issue.  
Thank you for replying.
There was an issue with Georgia that was fixed, however, it is not clear to me that you are referring to the same issue. Note that there are more than one issue listed in the thread above.   Can ... See more...
There was an issue with Georgia that was fixed, however, it is not clear to me that you are referring to the same issue. Note that there are more than one issue listed in the thread above.   Can you do me a favor? Can you send me a "token"? A token is a database index that points to a sanitized version of your return (i.e., TurboTax has removed all personal references in the return before putting it in our secure database). Here are the instructions:   TurboTax Online:     Click Tax Tools in the menu to the left. Click Tools, and then Click Share my file with Agent.   A pop-up message will appear. Click OK to send the sanitized diagnostic copy to us. Provide the token number that is generated onto this thread.   TurboTax Desktop:   Select Online menu if the customer is using Windows. Select “Help” if using a Mac. Select Send Tax File to Agent. A pop-up message will appear, and the customer will select, Send. If using Mac "Send Tax File to TurboTax Agent"    Note: Desktop will save a file to your computer unless you uncheck the box. Another message will appear. Provide the token number that is generated onto this thread.   At the bottom of your reply (with the token) add "@" "BillM223" (without the space in between and without the double quotes) so I will be notified.   This will let us see what is happening on your return. Thanks.
If you did the worksheet in the link MaryK4 gave you, did the 16% taxable amount come out using that worksheet?  It's very difficult for us to know exactly how much would be non-taxable, but given th... See more...
If you did the worksheet in the link MaryK4 gave you, did the 16% taxable amount come out using that worksheet?  It's very difficult for us to know exactly how much would be non-taxable, but given that most traditional IRA accounts are mostly or all tax deferred contributions, that 16% figure may not be far off.   If you did such a large conversion, it may be worthwhile to hand off your taxes to one of our experts given the tax liability of such a large amount of taxable income.  Check out TurboTax Full Service - we also have local offices in some locations - that link will have details about those.
I am having an issue with a dependent's peoples worksheet when dealing with education expenses. The specific dependent peoples worksheet shows an error message but no explanation. The educational ent... See more...
I am having an issue with a dependent's peoples worksheet when dealing with education expenses. The specific dependent peoples worksheet shows an error message but no explanation. The educational entries  on the people worksheet do not transfer to the student info worksheet. So at this point no educational credits are allowed for this dependent. Unless something else is wrong appears to be a program issue. Is there a fix coming or is there a work around?
Why is it $263  with $15 off for me to file state and federal taxes online?   If you browse the internet you can get CD version for $85.   I don't understand the extreme price difference.   Same soft... See more...
Why is it $263  with $15 off for me to file state and federal taxes online?   If you browse the internet you can get CD version for $85.   I don't understand the extreme price difference.   Same software, same everything, but $180 additional price more to file online?   Make it make sense!
TurboTax likes to divide by 4 since that is what most agencies do and then it did something odd. You did the math correctly and know the requirements so you will want to submit the correct amounts to... See more...
TurboTax likes to divide by 4 since that is what most agencies do and then it did something odd. You did the math correctly and know the requirements so you will want to submit the correct amounts to CA. Since you must file online, you won't use the vouchers anyway.   CA FTB under Mandatory Electronic Payments - requires estimated payments exceeding $20,000 be filed online. Once it is required, your future payments for the year must also be online. If you pay be check, you can be charge a 1% penalty on the payment amount.
I have two ira accounts at fidelity and I think that is why they doubled the RMD ammount,  My wife is too young to have RMD.  I dont know how to correct the problem.  The number for RMD is not changa... See more...
I have two ira accounts at fidelity and I think that is why they doubled the RMD ammount,  My wife is too young to have RMD.  I dont know how to correct the problem.  The number for RMD is not changable.  Please help.
If you're in TurboTax Online, FEDERAL is in the left-side menu,  then 'Income' and 'Self Employment Income', then 'Expenses'.  If you entered a 1095-A in your return and indicated you were 'self empl... See more...
If you're in TurboTax Online, FEDERAL is in the left-side menu,  then 'Income' and 'Self Employment Income', then 'Expenses'.  If you entered a 1095-A in your return and indicated you were 'self employed' the deduction for self-employed insurance may have transferred automatically.   TurboTax will automatically limit your deduction if you're not allowed to take it due to business income limits and move the expense to Schedule A as a medical expense.   Here's more info on Self Employed Health Insurance.   @TuckerdogAVL 
I saw the same problem on our married filing jointly taxes. It's not a Turbo Tax problem, it's an error on the IRS form by whoever designed the form, part V.  I looked up the 1-A form online at IRS.g... See more...
I saw the same problem on our married filing jointly taxes. It's not a Turbo Tax problem, it's an error on the IRS form by whoever designed the form, part V.  I looked up the 1-A form online at IRS.gov to see if they caught the error in the form and had an updated form.  The form was the same.  It is an error, or a deliberate issue by the IRS/government which essentially takes money away from married filing jointly couples.  It uses the combined income threshold to calculate the 6% reduction per $1,000 of income over the threshold of $150,000.  But then it applies the same reduction separately to each married spouse. That increases the reduction to 12% per $1,000 of COMBINED income over $150,000.  They should have applied the reduction amount from COMBINED INCOME to the COMBINED $12,000 deduction starting point.  To compare, if you take half of the combined income, calculate the 6% reduction, then apply it to the $6000 deduction for only one spouse (as though you were filing separately) , you would see that their reduction is half of the amount of the 6% reduction calculation of the amount over $150,000, but on the married filing jointly, the 6% is doubled by applying it twice, separately to each spouse. If you compare the two scenarios, by applying the reductions separately to each spouse, the filing separately is actually 25% of the combined reduction to married couples filing jointly. I hope that makes sense the way I explained it. It's definitely a marriage penalty that no one is talking about and I couldn't find it anywhere on any online searches.  If you think about how much each couple could be loosing, then multiply it by the number of seniors it would affect across the United States, that is a lot of money taken away from seniors.  Is it intentional or someone's mistake in the design and application of he OBBB?  Who knows, but it is wrong!
I did that but it still did not work.  the suggested format was DD/MM/YYYY
Hello,   We elected section 179 depreciation when we placed the equipment in service in 2022. We closed the business in 2025 and donated or trashed most of the equipment. What is the Journal Entry ... See more...
Hello,   We elected section 179 depreciation when we placed the equipment in service in 2022. We closed the business in 2025 and donated or trashed most of the equipment. What is the Journal Entry and what accounts to use to show the total loss to get the assets off our books?   For instance: 5/01/2022 - Pressure washer. Cost $2000. Section 179 $2000. Method 200DB/HY, 5 year. Donated 11/30/2025. and 5/01/2022 - Paint sprayer. Cost $2000. Section 179 $1000. Method 200DB/HY, 5 year. trashed 11/30/2025.   Thank you.    
I saw the same problem on our married filing jointly taxes. It's not a Turbo Tax problem, it's an error on the IRS form by whoever designed the form, part V.  I looked up the 1-A form online at IRS.g... See more...
I saw the same problem on our married filing jointly taxes. It's not a Turbo Tax problem, it's an error on the IRS form by whoever designed the form, part V.  I looked up the 1-A form online at IRS.gov to see if they caught the error in the form and had an updated form.  The form was the same.  It is an error, or a deliberate issue by the IRS/government which essentially takes money away from married filing jointly couples.  It uses the combined income threshold to calculate the 6% reduction per $1,000 of income over the threshold of $150,000.  But then it applies the same reduction separately to each married spouse. That increases the reduction to 12% per $1,000 of COMBINED income over $150,000.  They should have applied the reduction amount from COMBINED INCOME to the COMBINED $12,000 deduction starting point.  To compare, if you take half of the combined income, calculate the 6% reduction, then apply it to the $6000 deduction for only one spouse (as though you were filing separately) , you would see that their reduction is half of the amount of the 6% reduction calculation of the amount over $150,000, but on the married filing jointly, the 6% is doubled by applying it twice, separately to each spouse. If you compare the two scenarios, by applying the reductions separately to each spouse, the filing separately is actually 25% of the combined reduction to married couples filing jointly. I hope that makes sense the way I explained it. It's definitely a marriage penalty that no one is talking about and I couldn't find it anywhere on any online searches.  If you think about how much each couple could be loosing, then multiply it by the number of seniors it would affect across the United States, that is a lot of money taken away from seniors.  Is it intentional or someone's mistake in the design and application of he OBBB?  Who knows, but it is wrong!
Which TurboTax works, I have TurboTax Home & Business.  It sounds like TurboTax version works?