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@iltm Your spouse's account will bring up his information. He (or you if you are the one at the keyboard) needs to go to  MY INFO and click his name.     In MY INFO the interview questions will ask i... See more...
@iltm Your spouse's account will bring up his information. He (or you if you are the one at the keyboard) needs to go to  MY INFO and click his name.     In MY INFO the interview questions will ask if he was married in 2025 and he needs to say YES.   After that it will ask if he wants to file together with his spouse and he needs to choose YES.    Then there will be prompts to enter your information.
@thecovert wrote: Just to clarify some details: for the first half of 2024, my wife was on my health plan. For the second half of the year, in August, she got a new job so we removed her from my... See more...
@thecovert wrote: Just to clarify some details: for the first half of 2024, my wife was on my health plan. For the second half of the year, in August, she got a new job so we removed her from my health plan since she got health insurance through her new company. Since I had my account setup to autopay, we contributed the full family amount to the HSA plan in my name for 2024.  Now that I have some time, let me answer more fully without waiting for your answer.     If you did not downgrade your coverage to single, and kept a family plan, then you can use the family limit to contribute to your account even though your spouse also has other coverage.  What counts is your coverage.  Your contribution limit would be $8300 for 2024 and $8550 for 2025.   If you did downgrade your coverage to a single HDHP, your contribution limit is reduced.  Your contribution limit is determined month by month, based on your insurance coverage on the first day of each month.   For this answer I will assume that your wife started her new job in August 2024 and you downgraded your coverage effective September 1.  That means your limit for 2024 was 8/12ths of the family limit plus 4/12ths of the single limit.   That's $8300 ÷ 12 = $691.66 per month x 8 month = $5533, plus $4150 ÷ 12 =$345.83 per month x 4 months = $1383, for a total 2024 limit of $6916.   If you contributed the full $8300, you have an excess contribution of $1384.  It is too late to use the special "removal of excess contribution" procedure.  You must file an amended tax return for 2024, declare the excess contribution, and pay a 6% penalty.  You also lose the tax deduction on the $1384, so you will pay some extra income tax besides the penalty.  When asked if you had qualifying insurance all year, answer NO, then check the boxes for family HDHP for the months you were covered by a family plan and check the box for single HDHP for the months you were covered by a single HDHP.  Turbotax will calculate the excess and assess the penalty.   Then for 2025, your contribution limit with single coverage is $4300.  Because you have an excess of $1384, what you want to do is reduce your 2025 contribution to $2916.  That way, you can "use up" the excess from 2024 by applying it to your 2025 limit.   So you need to look at your 2025 contributions and remove everything except $2916.  (If you contributed $8550, remove $5634.  Contact the HSA bank and ask for a special procedure to remove excess contributions, this is not a regular withdrawal.  You must also withdraw any interest earned on the excess contribution, the bank will do this for you.  You have until April 15, 2026 to remove the excess.  If you perform the removal before Dec 31, 2025, you should get a statement showing the earnings as taxable income that you will include on your tax return.  If you perform the removal after January 1, the attributed interest is still taxable on your 2025 return, because that's when the contributions were made.  You will manually add the interest income to your tax return.    Then going forward, this will clear the excess, you won't pay a penalty, and you can contribute $4400 for 2026. 
TurboTax is no longer supported before 2022 tax year.  Try FreeTaxUSA or somewhere else.
No one can call you from the user forum.     To check on regular tax refund status via automated phone, call 800-829-1954.   Federal and state refunds come from completely separate entities... See more...
No one can call you from the user forum.     To check on regular tax refund status via automated phone, call 800-829-1954.   Federal and state refunds come from completely separate entities.  There is no rule as to which one will come in first or how long it will be between their arrival in your account.   TurboTax gives you an estimated date for receiving your refund based on a 21 day average from your date of acceptance, but it can take longer.  “21 days”  is not a promise from TurboTax or the IRS.      First, check your e-file status to see if your return was accepted:  https://turbotax.intuit.com/tax-tools/efile-status-lookup/   Once your federal return has been accepted by the IRS, only the IRS has any control.  TurboTax does not receive any updates from the IRS. Your ONLY source of information about your refund now is the IRS.     You need your filing status, your Social Security number and the exact amount  (line 35a of your 2024 Form 1040) of your federal refund to track your Federal refund:    https://www.irs.gov/refunds   To track your state refund:     https://ttlc.intuit.com/turbotax-support/en-us/help-article/tax-refund/track-state-refund/L3jgO8PGs_US_en_US?uid=lt447ebr   If you chose to have your TurboTax fees deducted from your federal refund, that will take some extra time, while the third party bank handles the refund processing     https://ttlc.intuit.com/turbotax-support/en-us/help-article/tax-refund/refunds-take-longer-others/L14YlqFrH_US_en_US?uid=lexdr7zh . https://ttlc.intuit.com/turbotax-support/en-us/help-article/tax-refund/irs-refund-taking-longer-21-days/L2vRAJbdU_US_en_US?uid=lexe7lst    
I have taken a nonqualified withdrawal from my child's 529 account under the scholarship exception. For federal taxes, I understand this means that I will pay federal tax on the earnings portion but ... See more...
I have taken a nonqualified withdrawal from my child's 529 account under the scholarship exception. For federal taxes, I understand this means that I will pay federal tax on the earnings portion but no 10% penalty (because of the scholarship exception).   However, I am struggling with the state impact of this. I understand that I will also pay a state tax on the earnings portion of the withdrawal. The complication is with the triggering of a state recapture of deductions taken in the past for 529 contributions. If all of the principal in the 529 had gotten there through my own contributions for which I had taken state deductions, I understand that there would be a recapture of those deductions. If all of the principal in the 529 had gotten there through gifts from out-of-state grandparents for which nobody had taken state tax deductions, I understand that there would be no recapture (since there would be no deductions to recapture). In my situation, contributions to the 529 were made in both ways: I contributed some and took state tax deductions for those. The child's out-of-state grandparents contributed some for which state tax deductions were never taken.   Looking online at the history of the 529 account, it is very clear when contributions were made as gifts (noted as such on the statements).   Let's say (using round numbers that are approximations) I made $20,000 in contributions and took corresponding state deduction for that $20K at various times over the past 20 years Gift contributions (for which no state tax deductions were taken) were made for about $60,000 over the years to date, $50,000 of the 529 has been used for qualified distributions (child is still a college student). Of this $50,000, the basis (non earnings portion) used for qualified distributions has been $25,000.  After those qualified distributions had all come out of the account, I then withdrew $30,000 non qualified (due to the scholarship exception). Of note: the principal/basis portion of the money withdrawn for qualified distributions ($25,000) is MORE THAN the $20,000 I originally took a state tax deduction for. Therefore, by the time I took the non-qualified $30,000 withdrawal, the account, though it still had money in it, was essentially emptied of my original contributions (the ones for which state tax deductions were taken). In effect, the only principal remaining in the account was from the gifts for which no state tax deductions were ever taken.   Therefore, there shouldn't be a recapture of any state tax deductions, right ? The $20K (for which state tax deductions were taken) was used for qualified purposes, and the gift contributions ended up being more than needed due to a scholarship, so a nonqual withdrawal was made. Is there a way to proceed accordingly (to not automatically trigger the state tax recapture)?
The instructions and regulations have not been finalized.  Based on the how the law is worded, my best guess is that to use the interest deduction, the taxpayer must (a) own the car, and (b) pay the ... See more...
The instructions and regulations have not been finalized.  Based on the how the law is worded, my best guess is that to use the interest deduction, the taxpayer must (a) own the car, and (b) pay the interest.  If the car is titled in both names, you are an owner.  But who makes the payments?
Only the person whose name is on the new car loan is eligible to deduct the loan interest on their federal tax return.
You cannot sign up for the 2025 tax refund advance.  It can only be offered to you after you have completed your 2025 tax return that includes a federal tax refund and are ready to e-file the return.... See more...
You cannot sign up for the 2025 tax refund advance.  It can only be offered to you after you have completed your 2025 tax return that includes a federal tax refund and are ready to e-file the return.   The TurboTax 2025 tax refund advance will not be available until after January 1, 2026 TurboTax support FAQ for the 2025 tax refund advance - https://ttlc.intuit.com/turbotax-support/en-us/help-article/tax-refund/refund-advance/L52Mg0G5u_US_e...
The CD I purchased on Amazon came in an unopened container.  The CD won't download and has "transforming" issues. Any suggestions?    
I downloaded the CD for turbotax deluxe 2020, and successfully completed the 2020 tax return.  Another CD for turbotaxdeluxe 2021 won't download.  Any suggestions?  
That's disappointing - looks like I'll need to switch from the Turbo Tax product. 
Note that the IRS generally retains tax returns (Form 1040) for 7 years from filing before they are destroyed by law. 
@cwr64 Yes, you can import your 2025 financial data into the 2025 TurboTax online editions.   See this TurboTax support FAQ for importing forms 1099 - https://ttlc.intuit.com/turbotax-support/en-... See more...
@cwr64 Yes, you can import your 2025 financial data into the 2025 TurboTax online editions.   See this TurboTax support FAQ for importing forms 1099 - https://ttlc.intuit.com/turbotax-support/en-us/help-article/import-export-data-files/import-1099s/L2hPcduMb_US_en_US
Did you file your 2024 federal tax return with TurboTax? If so, did you use TurboTax Online or the TurboTax desktop software?  
Go to this IRS website for tax return transcripts - https://www.irs.gov/individuals/get-transcript   Go to this IRS website for a copy of a tax return - https://www.irs.gov/forms-pubs/about-form-... See more...
Go to this IRS website for tax return transcripts - https://www.irs.gov/individuals/get-transcript   Go to this IRS website for a copy of a tax return - https://www.irs.gov/forms-pubs/about-form-4506
I am on W10 with a free year of MS updates.  My fairly modern desktop cannot be upgraded to W11.  I want to know if the online TurboTax will allow me to import 2025 tax year data from my financial in... See more...
I am on W10 with a free year of MS updates.  My fairly modern desktop cannot be upgraded to W11.  I want to know if the online TurboTax will allow me to import 2025 tax year data from my financial institution as I did with the 2024 tax year Deluxe TurboTax product. 
While you could avoid a penalty by completing form 2210 when you do your return, the form is a real pain. So sending estimated tax to cover her tax liability would be a good idea.