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4 weeks ago
After clicking the button on the page that lists the Forms 1099-R that you have entered, when you indicate to TurboTax that you made nondeductible traditional IRA contributions, TurboTax will ask you...
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After clicking the button on the page that lists the Forms 1099-R that you have entered, when you indicate to TurboTax that you made nondeductible traditional IRA contributions, TurboTax will ask you to provide your basis in such contributions. You would find this amount on the next-to-last line (usually line 14) of Part I of the most recent previous Form 8606 that you filed. (No Form 8606 could have been filed in the '70s. Form 8606 came into existence in 1987 when the tax code changed to permit nondeductible traditional IRA contributions.)
4 weeks ago
1 Cheer
Just ran across a similar post from last year. Delete the tax summary form and it regenerates without the error, SOFTWARE BUG
4 weeks ago
If you are using online TurboTax you should be able to access your return from any computer or device that has internet access, as long as you are using exactly the same account and user ID that you ...
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If you are using online TurboTax you should be able to access your return from any computer or device that has internet access, as long as you are using exactly the same account and user ID that you used to start the return.
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
If you are using desktop download software, you can only access your return from the computer you started it from; the tax return is only stored on your own hard drive. It is not in the cloud or anywhere online.
4 weeks ago
1 Cheer
Just ran across a similar post from last year. Delete the tax summary form and it regenerates without the error, SOFTWARE BUG
4 weeks ago
What are you trying to enter for Charitable Donations that you are not able to? This section is working, so if you can clarify, we'll try to help. Here's more info on How to Enter Charitable Donatio...
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What are you trying to enter for Charitable Donations that you are not able to? This section is working, so if you can clarify, we'll try to help. Here's more info on How to Enter Charitable Donations.
@user17708279145
4 weeks ago
Amended forms are generally not available until mid February to mid March. You can use this tool to check on form availability.
4 weeks ago
@terriheid I entered 180,000 into my spreadsheet for you. Is t his what you got?
4 weeks ago
THAT WORKED THANX
4 weeks ago
Yes
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4 weeks ago
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4 weeks ago
To enter the 1099-Misc as royalty income select the following:
Income
1099-MIsc under Other Common Income
Enter the information from the 1099-MIsc
When you enter the amount in box 2, Tu...
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To enter the 1099-Misc as royalty income select the following:
Income
1099-MIsc under Other Common Income
Enter the information from the 1099-MIsc
When you enter the amount in box 2, TurboTax will guide you through the rest of the questions regarding royalties.
4 weeks ago
Federal and state refunds come from completely separate entities, There is no rule as to which one will come first or how much time there will be between their arrivals. Some states process returns...
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Federal and state refunds come from completely separate entities, There is no rule as to which one will come first or how much time there will be between their arrivals. Some states process returns quickly and some are very slow.
STATE RETURN
Make sure your state return was accepted: https://turbotax.intuit.com/tax-tools/efile-status-lookup/
To track your state refund:
ttps://ttlc.intuit.com/turbotax-support/en-us/help-article/tax-refund/track-state-refund/L3jgO8PGs_US_en_US?uid=lt447ebr
https://ttlc.intuit.com/turbotax-support/en-us/help-article/state-taxes/contact-state-department-revenue/L9qVToi02_US_en_US?uid=m6e06um0
4 weeks ago
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4 weeks ago
ditto here
4 weeks ago
Hello, I'm turning to this forum in hopes that someone can help me: I am a Dutch citizen and I was in the US for 18 years on an F1 visa, getting various degrees. I became a tax resident in 2012 and I...
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Hello, I'm turning to this forum in hopes that someone can help me: I am a Dutch citizen and I was in the US for 18 years on an F1 visa, getting various degrees. I became a tax resident in 2012 and I left the country on July 20, 2025 after I completed a postdoc on OPT. I returned to the Netherlands, where I had no income at all for the remainder of 2025. I completed paperwork with the IRS before departure to show I did not have any tax liability before leaving. In November 2025 I returned for a 2.5 week visit, and in December 2025 I was back for a 6-day conference. My question is whether I can legally be a tax resident the whole year instead of a dual status individual. Based on my presence in previous years, I calculated that I meet the SPT for 2025. Pub 519 seems to suggest that there is a choice (i.e not declare that I want residency to end earlier). It is obviously fiscally advantageous to remain a tax resident since I could use the standard deduction and I wouldn't have any income in the Netherlands to include. However, I don't want to do the wrong thing here. TIA
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4 weeks ago
What @Mike9241 says also applies to Pennsylvania. The state requires that you make an estimated payment to cover the taxes due if you are going to owe more than a thousand dollars for the year. In ...
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What @Mike9241 says also applies to Pennsylvania. The state requires that you make an estimated payment to cover the taxes due if you are going to owe more than a thousand dollars for the year. In your case you don't know what you'll owe until December so the estimated payment to Pennsylvania as well as to the IRS is due on January 15th. Assuming that you will owe more than a thousand dollars to either agency. If you don't make the estimated payments in a timely manner then they will charge you a penalty for underpaying your estimated taxes.
You can overcome this penalty in the future a couple of different ways. You can increase the withholding amount from any income that you have - including from the investments that you are talking about here - and have that withholding submitted on your behalf just as though it were coming out of a paycheck. If your withholding is high enough then you don't need any estimates.
Otherwise, you can send in your estimated payment by January 15th every year and cover it that way. TurboTax can help you prepare estimates going forward as well as helping you figure out the safe amount to send in for the following year to help avoid penalties.
4 weeks ago
same thing with me too--Shows on federal review . The "check this entry Itemliab is marked as estimated." The second error shown is "Stdref" This is on the tax summary page.
4 weeks ago
No. If you did not earn any money at all while a resident of MO, then you would not need to file a tax return for MO. All of your income would technically be taxable to TX, but since TX does not ha...
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No. If you did not earn any money at all while a resident of MO, then you would not need to file a tax return for MO. All of your income would technically be taxable to TX, but since TX does not have a state tax, you would not need to file a state return for 2025. Since you do not have any income earned while a resident of MO or MO sourced income, you can just delete the MO state return.
4 weeks ago
Can’t track my state refund
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