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For a pension, it's whatever they send you. Say all of it is the RMD. If you have a RMD requirement it will ask you if it is the RMD. Say yes and enter the amount as the RMD amount. The pension doesn... See more...
For a pension, it's whatever they send you. Say all of it is the RMD. If you have a RMD requirement it will ask you if it is the RMD. Say yes and enter the amount as the RMD amount. The pension doesn't need to calculate any RMD. Anything your pension pays you is considered to be the RMD. Traditional pensions automatically fulfill the rules of an RMD. So just enter the same amount in box 1 for the RMD for each 1099R.
You are correct. This is a huge problem that cost us two days effort just to workaround.  We used Claude, the AI, to help us find a solution, which itself is a big workaround.   We have documented... See more...
You are correct. This is a huge problem that cost us two days effort just to workaround.  We used Claude, the AI, to help us find a solution, which itself is a big workaround.   We have documented all the details to share here, and also in a separate post of its own.  This took several hours to do, but we do know for sure that it works.  Please review this article we wrote: ****** TurboTax Premier Desktop 2025: Broken Crypto Import & The Only Workaround Platforms affected: TurboTax Premier Desktop 2025 (Windows & Mac) | Crypto tax software: SUMM (formerly Crypto Tax Calculator) | Tax year: 2025 (filed in 2026) Written for the TurboTax Community Support Forum and shared with SUMM Support. Based on direct user experience, two days of troubleshooting, and confirmed research into TurboTax's own documentation.     The Problem: Every Crypto Import Method Is Broken in the TurboTax Premier (desktop) Version TurboTax Premier Desktop is marketed as fully supporting cryptocurrency tax reporting, including capital gains and staking rewards. For tax year 2025, this claim is false in a very specific, show stopping way: every import method that crypto tax software users rely on is either broken, silently removed, or generates the wrong IRS form.   Issue 1: The TXF Import Generates the Wrong Form TXF has long been the standard file format for importing investment data into TurboTax Desktop. Crypto tax platforms like SUMM export a TXF file, and users import it via File > Import > From Accounting Software.   In tax year 2024, this method silently generated a 1099-B entry, instead of the now-required 1099-DA (Digital Asset Proceeds From Broker Transactions). The IRS mandated Form 1099-DA for all digital asset transactions beginning with tax year 2025. Filing crypto transactions under 1099-B when the IRS expects 1099-DA risks form mismatches, processing delays, and potential audit flags.   This is entirely Intuit's failure. Koinly, another major crypto tax platform, confirmed publicly that TurboTax has not updated its TXF format to support 1099-DA, and that no crypto tax software provider can generate a TXF file containing valid 1099-DA data. Intuit had years of advance notice that 1099-DA was coming.   Issue 2: CSV Import Has Been Silently Removed CSV import was advertised as a feature of TurboTax Desktop Premier and worked in prior years. In 2025, it errors out or is simply absent. TurboTax's own support documentation now states plainly: "Gain/Loss CSVs are no longer supported in TurboTax."   In community forums, a TurboTax representative acknowledged the issue and promised restored functionality by mid-February 2026. It is now late March 2026. The fix has not fully materialized. The product continues to be sold without disclosure of this limitation.   Issue 3: PDF Import Does Not Exist in Desktop Premier Both SUMM's AI support and Koinly's published guide describe a PDF upload workflow that includes a screen offering "Enter a different way" followed by an upload option. Neither support resource discloses that this screen exists only in TurboTax Online Premium -- not in TurboTax Desktop Premier.   SUMM's own step-by-step guide for PDF import states explicitly at the top: "You will need your Summ TurboTax PDF report and a TurboTax Online account." That single sentence, easy to miss, is the only acknowledgment that the entire workflow is Online-only. Desktop Premier users who followed these instructions wasted significant time looking for screens that simply do not exist in their software.   Issue 4: The Online Bridge Workaround Cannot Save an In-Progress Desktop Return Multiple sources -- including TurboTax's own community moderators -- suggest starting a free TurboTax Online return, importing crypto there, and then exporting the file to Desktop. This workaround is real and ultimately functional (see solution below), but it comes with a critical limitation that is almost never disclosed upfront:   Data entered into TurboTax Desktop for the current tax year CANNOT be transferred to TurboTax Online. The transfer only works in one direction: Online to Desktop. There is no merge or piecemeal import -- opening an Online-exported .tax2025 file in Desktop replaces the entire existing Desktop return.   This means any user who had already partially completed their Desktop return -- entering Social Security income, interest income, K-1 forms, 1099-Bs, trust distributions, and other items -- would lose all of that work if they attempted the Online bridge at that stage. We discovered this the hard way.     The Workaround: Step-by-Step The following method is confirmed to work as of late March 2026. It requires abandoning your in-progress Desktop return and starting afresh via TurboTax Online Premium, then transferring the partially completed return back to Desktop. It is not elegant, but it is currently the only fully reliable path for Desktop Premier users who need proper 1099-DA crypto reporting.   IMPORTANT: Do this BEFORE you begin entering other tax data in Desktop Premier. If you have already entered significant data in Desktop, completing the entire return in Online Premium may be faster than starting over.   Step 1: Prepare Your SUMM Reports Log into SUMM and go to the Reports page Confirm your report period is January 1 - December 31, 2025 and tax settings are correct Download the TurboTax - Capital Gains Report (PDF version) -- this is the file you will upload to TurboTax Online   Step 2: Start a Free TurboTax Online Premium Return Go to turbotax.com and sign in or create an account Start a new 2025 return -- select Premium when asked which version you need You do not pay until you file, so this step is free When prompted to transfer last year's data, upload your 2024 .tax2024 file from your computer to pre-populate your name, SSN, address, and carryover figures   Step 3: Import Your Crypto Capital Gains via PDF Upload In TurboTax Online, go to: Federal > Wages & Income > Investments and Savings Click Add/Edit next to Investments and Savings Click Add investments When asked to choose a crypto service, do NOT click Connect -- instead click "Enter a different way" Select "Upload (Files from this device)" and click Continue Drag and drop your SUMM TurboTax Capital Gains PDF into the upload area TurboTax will process the PDF and extract your transactions automatically If you see a NEEDS REVIEW flag: click the pencil/edit icon on any flagged transaction, then click Back without making changes. TurboTax will reload and correct descriptions will appear. This is a known TurboTax display bug, not a data error.  You can correct these review flags individually, or in bulk.  This is another minorTurboTax bug. If the upload fails due to transaction volume: split your SUMM PDF into two smaller files and repeat this step for each file as a separate import session If the first PDF version fails entirely, download the "TurboTax - Capital Gains Report (Alternate)" from SUMM and try that version instead   Step 4: Enter Staking Income Separately Staking rewards (e.g., Solana staking income) are NOT included in the capital gains PDF and the total must be entered manually regardless of which import method you use.   In TurboTax Online, go to: Federal > Wages & Income > Less Common Income > Miscellaneous Income, 1099-A, 1099-C > Other Reportable Income Click Start or Add Select Yes when asked if you received other taxable income In the Description field, enter: Crypto staking income - Solana (or whichever network applies).  [Note: Some crypto tax will generate an Income Report and/or it will create a Schedule 1 Form. On Schedule 1, the total is found in Section 1, Line 8v.] If you have other crypto income types such as airdrops, click Add Another and repeat for each There’s another bug in TurboTax Premier: even after correctly entering your crypto reward total as Other Reportable Income, the Step by Step Interview Summary page may not show the value you entered onscreen. You have to switch over to Forms View to confirm the data is present in Schedule 1, Section 1, Line 8v.  It seems that TurboTax has not coded their software for crypto rewards entry at all, and it works by happenstance.   Step 5: Export the .tax2025 File from TurboTax Online (Free) Once your crypto data and staking income are entered in Online, export the file before paying anything:   In the left-hand menu, click Tax Tools Click Tools In the Tools Center pop-up, click "Save your 2025 return to your computer" The file downloads as taxReturn.tax2025 -- rename it to something recognizable but do not change the .tax2025 extension This export is free -- you are not required to pay to download this file   Step 6: Open the Exported File in TurboTax Desktop Premier Open TurboTax Premier Desktop Go to File > Open Tax Return Browse to and select your downloaded .tax2025 file TurboTax Desktop will open it and you will see your crypto data already populated Continue completing your return in Desktop -- enter Social Security income, interest income, K-1 forms, 1099-Bs, trust distributions, and all other items File from Desktop as normal   Step 7: Verify Before Filing Check that your short-term and long-term capital gain totals match your SUMM Capital Gains Report Check that your staking income matches your SUMM Income Report Review Schedule D to confirm totals are populating correctly Keep all SUMM reports saved as your audit documentation   What Intuit Needs to Fix Update the TXF format to support 1099-DA so Desktop Premier can generate the correct form from third-party crypto tax software Restore Gain/Loss CSV import functionality in Desktop Premier -- this was an advertised feature that was silently removed mid-tax season Build the PDF upload workflow into Desktop Premier, not just Online -- or clearly disclose on the product page and at point of sale that PDF crypto import is an Online-only feature Remove the undisclosed transaction limit on PDF uploads in TurboTax Online, or at minimum display a clear error message explaining the limit and how to resolve it Update all support documentation and partner guides (SUMM, Koinly, etc.) to clearly distinguish which steps apply to Online vs. Desktop       Bottom Line for Other Users If you bought TurboTax Premier Desktop for 2025 because you trade crypto, you were misled. The advertised import features do not work. The PDF upload workflow shown in all major crypto tax platform guides is Online-only. The TXF method generates the wrong form. The CSV method was removed.   The workaround above works, but it requires either starting your entire return fresh in TurboTax Online Premium, or completing the crypto portion in Online first before entering anything else in Desktop. If you start in Desktop first and get partway through, you will face a painful choice: re-enter everything in Online, or use the IRS-compliant Summary Method instead (enter short-term and long-term totals as summary figures and mail your Form 8949 as a supporting document).   Our strong recommendation for next year: If you have meaningful crypto activity, either start with TurboTax Online Premium from the very beginning, or use TurboTax Desktop but handle the crypto portion first via the Online export bridge before entering any other data.
Hi @DanaB27 I've just started a Recharacterization process from my Fidelity Roth IRA account to a Traditional IRA account (opened today just for this purpose) as I've made an excess Roth IRA contrib... See more...
Hi @DanaB27 I've just started a Recharacterization process from my Fidelity Roth IRA account to a Traditional IRA account (opened today just for this purpose) as I've made an excess Roth IRA contribution in 2025 (well above the MAGI limit). I don't have any other IRA accounts....The eventual goal is to do a Backdoor Conversion of the entire amount from the Trad IRA to the Roth IRA once the fund settles, thus leaving the balance of the Trad IRA account as $0.   I plan to follow the steps mentioned in these two posts while filing my taxes in Turbo Tax for the year 2025, exactly in this order once my Backdoor Conversion process is completed:   https://ttlc.intuit.com/turbotax-support/en-us/help-article/retirement-income/recharacterize-roth-ira-contribution-traditional/L6VoYVkaP_US_en_US   https://ttlc.intuit.com/turbotax-support/en-us/help-article/retirement-benefits/enter-backdoor-roth-ira-conversion/L7gGPjKVY_US_en_US   The email that I've received from Fidelity after submitting my Recharacterization request includes a Note that says - The amount of the recharacterization reported on your next statement and your Fidelity issued tax forms may be slightly different than this calculation due to intra-day price fluctuations of the securities recharacterized.    Here, I must mention that I did the Recharacterization in-kind by moving my Shares from my Roth IRA to the Trad IRA account, instead of cash.   Will it be a problem if I go by the numbers mentioned in today's email to file my taxes but if the numbers are slightly different when I get the 1099-R next year? Is that a red flag?    My plan is to report the recharacterization as well as the backdoor conversion on my 2025 tax return following the above two links...will you recommend against it or is this the right approach?    
I am using the Desktop TurboTax 2025.   TurboTax incorrectly computes my benefits deduction from my Federal AGI for my Illinois income tax.  All Social Security benefits, pension benefits, and IRA/... See more...
I am using the Desktop TurboTax 2025.   TurboTax incorrectly computes my benefits deduction from my Federal AGI for my Illinois income tax.  All Social Security benefits, pension benefits, and IRA/401k are exempt from Illinois Taxation.   Federal Income tax taxes 85% of my Social Security. In computing my benefit deduction from Illinois taxable income, TurboTax adds the TAXED amount rather than the TOTAL Social Security benefit to my Illinois deductions to AGI. This results in Illinois taxing 15% of my Social Security benefit in the TurboTax computation of benefit deductions.   I went back to 2022, 2023, and 2024 returns. In each case, I have been taxed incorrectly on 15% of my Social Security Benefit.
I am retired, married filing separate, and over 65. I am taxed as a full-year resident in Maryland. I also have a small amount of income from mineral rights royalties in Oklahoma. On Schedule E, the ... See more...
I am retired, married filing separate, and over 65. I am taxed as a full-year resident in Maryland. I also have a small amount of income from mineral rights royalties in Oklahoma. On Schedule E, the address listed for this income is Oklahoma, and this shows up as Oklahoma income in the "Other State Income" section of TurboTax.    However, when TurboTax generates my state returns, the Oklahoma Nonresident/Part Year Income Tax Return (Form 511-NR 2025) has an X in the box that says "Not required to file - Place an X in this box if you are a nonresident whose gross income from Oklahoma sources is less than $1000" -- even though I received more than $1000. The amount I received doesn't show up on the OK state return forms anywhere -- the form is basically blank, other than fully refunding me the small amount that OK withheld in state taxes.   Whereas in previous years, Maryland and Oklahoma each taxed me on that portion of my income generated within each of their states, this year it looks like all my income is counted as Maryland income, including the Oklahoma mineral rights income.   Is this correct? It doesn't look right to me and I'm afraid to file it like this without understanding why. Thank you for any insight you can offer.
Where do I find IRS Form 5498 on Turbo Tax?
@localhero wrote: .......how many days a property was occupied.  Every CPA has just put 365 days.... As we have been saying here, it really makes no difference since you have no personal use.... See more...
@localhero wrote: .......how many days a property was occupied.  Every CPA has just put 365 days.... As we have been saying here, it really makes no difference since you have no personal use.   In TurboTax, for example, you could answer "Yes" to the question as to whether the property was rented all year. It would make no difference whether you did that or answered "No" and then entered, for example, 200 days at fair rental value and 0 days of personal use.   Technically, as @AmeliesUncle indicated, you should enter the exact number of days actually rented. The key here is personal use days (of which there are none).   Just as a sidebar (and homily), I, personally, always just enter "365" for the number of days rented since the one property is always available for rent. Again, technically probably not correct but it really makes no difference tax-wise since I never have any personal use days.
Follow these steps to enter: To make sure the math is right, you need two things from your 2024 tax return: Form 4562 and the Depreciation Report (or Asset Life History). Go to the Rental Pro... See more...
Follow these steps to enter: To make sure the math is right, you need two things from your 2024 tax return: Form 4562 and the Depreciation Report (or Asset Life History). Go to the Rental Properties and Royalties section under Wages & Income. Under the "Assets/Depreciation" area, select Add an Asset. Continue through but be very careful when entering: Cost & Date: Enter the original cost and the date it was originally "placed in service" (e.g., 2022). Prior Depreciation: This is the most important field. Look at your 2024 "Depreciation Report" for the "Accumulated Depreciation" or "Prior Year Depreciation" amount. You must enter the total amount of depreciation taken from the day you bought it through December 31, 2024. Asset Class: you want everything to match. When you look at these forms be sure they match the prior year. This will give the number of years the item is being depreciated. Verification: Once entered, TurboTax will show you the "Current Year Depreciation." Compare this to your previous year's report; for a roof (straight-line), the annual amount should be identical to last year’s full-year deduction.   To print or view  your forms, including all worksheets: In desktop, switch to Forms Mode.  For online: On the left side, select  Tax Tools Select Print center Select Print, save or preview this year's return If you have not paid, select pay now.
TT asks RMD questions for pensions that have nothingto do with RMD. Why, and how to respond to TT regarding these questions?
It will increase your tax if you are not eligible to make the Roth IRA contribution based on your income for the year. That would mean that you have an excess contribution and you will pay a 6% excis... See more...
It will increase your tax if you are not eligible to make the Roth IRA contribution based on your income for the year. That would mean that you have an excess contribution and you will pay a 6% excise tax on the excess until it is removed from the IRA.   Take a close look at the screens in the Roth IRA section of your return. If you do have an excess contribution, there will be messages to that effect along with information about how to fix the situation.    
  My son is a full-time graduate student going for a degree. He receives a stipend for his research work with a corresponding W2 for tuition, and he received a W-2 for his research work and degree. ... See more...
  My son is a full-time graduate student going for a degree. He receives a stipend for his research work with a corresponding W2 for tuition, and he received a W-2 for his research work and degree. He also did engineering software services part-time for another company.   Is his part-time income considered a qualified business income, and is he eligible to take a QBI deduction?
I logged on this afternoon and my Idaho state taxes are now calculating correctly for the new SALT limitation amount for files who itemize. I had previously filed my Federal taxes and this afternoon ... See more...
I logged on this afternoon and my Idaho state taxes are now calculating correctly for the new SALT limitation amount for files who itemize. I had previously filed my Federal taxes and this afternoon I filed my Idaho taxes.
Sorry, I know my response is late, but I wanted to add that the reason you had to send in your 1099B by mail is not because your broker is not affiliated with Turbotax.  It is because the 1099B had a... See more...
Sorry, I know my response is late, but I wanted to add that the reason you had to send in your 1099B by mail is not because your broker is not affiliated with Turbotax.  It is because the 1099B had at least one sale on it that was for a box other than Box A or Box D, or one of the sales had an adjustment to it.  This can happen even if your broker is affiliated with TurboTax.
You purchased land. It is a capital asset. If you are filing as an individual - you have established your basis in the land. Keep your paperwork. Nothing to report. If you are a partnership/ ... See more...
You purchased land. It is a capital asset. If you are filing as an individual - you have established your basis in the land. Keep your paperwork. Nothing to report. If you are a partnership/ S Corp - enter it as a capital asset into your accounting software. Once you build the rental, you will report the rental property and depreciate it. Land does not depreciate.   While the property is being built, you are in the "pre-productive" stage. Carrying Costs: Expenses like property taxes and mortgage interest incurred during construction must usually be capitalized (added to the cost of the building) rather than deducted immediately. Depreciation Start Date: You cannot start claiming depreciation (the tax break for the building's wear and tear) until the building is "placed in service"—meaning it is ready and available for rent.
  I got this error message because my e-trade account was closed. You may be able to call them to re-open.
I need to correct my 2022 tax return. I launched the installed 2022 edition. It is the original installation I used in 2023.  After updating, I was asked to input the License Code.  But the code no l... See more...
I need to correct my 2022 tax return. I launched the installed 2022 edition. It is the original installation I used in 2023.  After updating, I was asked to input the License Code.  But the code no longer works.  Why?    
  My son is a full-time graduate student going for a degree. He receives a stipend for his research work with a corresponding W2 for tuition, and he received a W-2 for his research work and degree. ... See more...
  My son is a full-time graduate student going for a degree. He receives a stipend for his research work with a corresponding W2 for tuition, and he received a W-2 for his research work and degree. He also did engineering software services part-time for another company.   Is his part-time income considered a qualified business income, and is he eligible to take a QBI deduction?