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December 2, 2025
10:13 AM
@VolvoGirl Interesting. And just how different is the environment in this TT Business set up compared to Deluxe? Do you know?
December 2, 2025
10:12 AM
i am considering a new job that will include equity compensation in the form of restricted stock awards with a monthly vesting schedule. this is early in the company and the total value of all 'my' s...
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i am considering a new job that will include equity compensation in the form of restricted stock awards with a monthly vesting schedule. this is early in the company and the total value of all 'my' shares is 'negligible' based on the 409a valuation. i intend to make an 83b election and expect to pay regular income tax on the 'negligible' value of all not-yet-vested shares. my understanding is that future tax implications consist only of my selling of the shares and the according capital gains taxes owed after the sale. i have not researched the details but i am aware that capital gains taxes vary depending on whether i hold the shares for less than a year or more than a year. are there other tax implications i should be aware of? i know that with other situations, such as not electing 83b, stock options, etc, that there can be other issues like the AMT trap, owing tax at vesting without the ability to sell the shares yet, etc. i am just looking to confirm that my rsa compensation with immediate 83b filing should not have such surprises later. thanks for your time and thoughts. cheers, -kyle
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December 2, 2025
9:54 AM
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December 2, 2025
9:50 AM
Hi, everyone. I have a question about how to report a subtenant's utility payments on Schedule E. I had a lease for a room in a shared house. I moved out before the lease ended, so I found someon...
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Hi, everyone. I have a question about how to report a subtenant's utility payments on Schedule E. I had a lease for a room in a shared house. I moved out before the lease ended, so I found someone to sublet my room. I continued to pay rent to the landlord, and I also paid for some of the utilities. The subtenant reimbursed me for both the rent and the utilities I paid, so I had neither a gain nor a loss. On Line 3 ("Rents received") of the Schedule E, should I report the total amount I received from the subtenant for rent and utilities, or only the amount that was for rent? I thought I should report the utilities I paid on Line 17 and the rent I paid to the landlord on Line 19, but if I do that and don't include the subtenant's utility payments on Line 3, it will show that I had a net loss, which is incorrect. Your help would be greatly appreciated. Thank you!
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December 2, 2025
8:51 AM
Hi, everyone. I have a question about what qualifies as business income. During the tax year in question, I translated written materials for a nonprofit organization approximately a dozen times. ...
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Hi, everyone. I have a question about what qualifies as business income. During the tax year in question, I translated written materials for a nonprofit organization approximately a dozen times. For one of my assignments, I was offered and I accepted financial compensation. How should this income be reflected on my tax return? For context, I provided translation support to the nonprofit over a period of several years, both before and after the tax year in question, and the assignment mentioned above is the only one for which I was paid. I'm wondering whether the income should be reported on Schedule 1 or Schedule C. The instructions for Schedule C explain that "[a]n activity qualifies as a business if your primary purpose for engaging in the activity is for income or profit and you are involved in the activity with continuity and regularity." The instructions also say that "a sporadic activity, a not-for-profit activity, or a hobby does not qualify as a business." Given that I provided translation support over a period of several years, it seems clear that I was involved in the activity with continuity and regularity. As to whether my primary purpose was for income or profit, I translated for the organization on a volunteer basis before and after completing the paid assignment, which I think supports the conclusion that my primary purpose was not for income or profit. Am I correct that the income from the paid assignment should be reported on Schedule 1 instead of Schedule C? Thank you in advance for your help!
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December 2, 2025
8:47 AM
Apply for a Flex Loan https://turbotax.intuit.com/personal-loan What is the Turbo Tax Flex Advance? https://ttlc.intuit.com/turbotax-support/en-us/help-article/loans/whats-turbotax-flex-advance/...
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Apply for a Flex Loan https://turbotax.intuit.com/personal-loan What is the Turbo Tax Flex Advance? https://ttlc.intuit.com/turbotax-support/en-us/help-article/loans/whats-turbotax-flex-advance/L2Xg6In6b_US_en_US?uid=mhz8qpz8
December 2, 2025
8:37 AM
You can buy the Desktop Download program here or in stores or online like Amazon, Costco, etc. https://turbotax.intuit.com/personal-taxes/cd-download You need a full Windows 11 or Mac OS Sonoma 14 ...
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You can buy the Desktop Download program here or in stores or online like Amazon, Costco, etc. https://turbotax.intuit.com/personal-taxes/cd-download You need a full Windows 11 or Mac OS Sonoma 14 computer to install it. Then how to get started with the Desktop program, install and activate it https://ttlc.intuit.com/turbotax-support/en-us/help-article/product-delivery/download-software-turbotax-com/L7u9oLEkq_US_en_US?uid=luqgvzrd
December 2, 2025
8:34 AM
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December 2, 2025
8:31 AM
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 giv...
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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
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https://ttlc.intuit.com/turbotax-support/en-us/help-article/tax-refund/irs-refund-taking-longer-21-days/L2vRAJbdU_US_en_US?uid=lexe7lst
December 2, 2025
8:13 AM
No one in the user forum knows anything about settlement money you think you should have received, nor can we find out. We have no access to your information.
Is this what you are referring to...
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No one in the user forum knows anything about settlement money you think you should have received, nor can we find out. We have no access to your information.
Is this what you are referring to?
The settlement agreement covers users who used TurboTax in 2016, 2017 or 2018. If you are one of the affected users you will receive about $30 for each of those years in which your income was $34,000 or less and in which you started in the Free Edition and were upgraded to a paid version of the software.
https://agturbotaxsettlement.com/Home/portalid/0
"Covered Consumer" means any individual, or individuals if a joint return was filed, who in Tax Years 2016, 2017, or 2018 was (1) eligible to use an Intuit IRS Free File Product; (2) began his or her tax returns using a TurboTax Free Edition Product; (3) was informed that he or she was ineligible to use a TurboTax Free Edition Product; (4) subsequently paid to use a TurboTax Paid Product, and (5) had not used the Intuit IRS Free File Product in a previous tax year.
You do not have to “sign up” or get on a list. The payments will be sent out automatically to the affected users.
https://www.verifythis.com/article/news/verify/money-verify/turbotax-settlement-you-do-not-have-to-make-claim-to-receive-money/536-7a90e8ba-329b-4ad9-aa14-bb487623905e
As for 2022---again---we have no access to your information or to your account. TurboTax gets no information from the IRS after you file your tax return.
DID YOU E-FILE?
Did you e-file? Did you go through all three steps of the FILE section and click a big orange button that said “Transmit my returns now?”
When you e-file your return you will get two emails from TurboTax. The first one will say your return has been transmitted; the second one will tell you the IRS has accepted or rejected your federal e-file. If you filed a state return, there will be a third email (usually a day or two later) that tells you if the state e-file was accepted or rejected.
What does it say in your account for 2022? Does it show that the return was accepted? Or does it say something else---like "rejected," "printed," or "ready to mail?”
If you discover or realize that your e-file was rejected, you will need to print it, sign and date it in ink, and file it by mail now, since e-filing is closed for returns for tax year 2022.
Or....did you choose to pay your 2022 software fees from your federal refund?
First you need to check the IRS refund site to see if your refund was issued, and look to see how much they issued.
https://www.irs.gov/refunds
Your tax refund was not sent to TurboTax. TurboTax does not handle your refund at all.
Santa Barbara Tax Products Group, LLC (SBTPG) is the bank that handles the Refund Processing Service when you choose to have your TurboTax fees deducted from your refund. This option also has an additional charge from the bank that processes the transaction.
You can contact them SBTPG, toll-free, at 1-877-908-7228 or go to their secure website www.sbtpg.com
How can I see my TurboTax fees?
https://ttlc.intuit.com/turbotax-support/en-us/help-article/intuit-account-billing/review-fees-turbotax-online/L1XnIzgzg_US_en_US?uid=m682vq7k
What is Refund Processing Service?
December 2, 2025
8:07 AM
TurboTax 2025 Premier has two carryover issues from TT 2024: a) Carried over 2024 state estimated payment paid in 2024 as being paid in 2025 giving incorrect schedule A deduction b) In calculating ...
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TurboTax 2025 Premier has two carryover issues from TT 2024: a) Carried over 2024 state estimated payment paid in 2024 as being paid in 2025 giving incorrect schedule A deduction b) In calculating 2024 state refund impact, believe the worksheet is incorrect. Amount above 2024 $10K state tax deduction cap was more than 2024 state refund therefore none of the refund should be taxable, yet worksheet shows some of the refund is taxable. a) Can be corrected in the forms carryover worksheet, but extremely doubtful 2025 updates will correct carryover errors. b) Unsure how to correct calculation.
December 2, 2025
8:04 AM
Hi Click, THanks for the quick reply. I understand that having a Roth IRA over five years, covers the five year requirement for all Roth IRAs, and being over 59 1/2 old, as far as the principal goes...
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Hi Click, THanks for the quick reply. I understand that having a Roth IRA over five years, covers the five year requirement for all Roth IRAs, and being over 59 1/2 old, as far as the principal goes, meaning contribution and conversions. But, the other five years rulke is on earnings. The distribution from earning portion to be qualified, the account has to be over five years old. This is my understanding. Am I missing something here? Due to IRS' ordering rule, I thought it is cleaner if I have separate Roth accounts for each conversion. Then, it is clear where money is withdrawn from, easier to document. Is it a valid approach, or unnecessary one?
December 2, 2025
8:03 AM
1 Cheer
@Click wrote: > 2025 software mostly uses the 2024 numbers until AT LEAST the mid-December update What gave you that idea? What numbers are you talking about? The 2025 tax brackets, deduction...
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@Click wrote: > 2025 software mostly uses the 2024 numbers until AT LEAST the mid-December update What gave you that idea? What numbers are you talking about? The 2025 tax brackets, deductions, even much of the OBBB changes (including the extended senior deduction) were in the initial public release around the first of November. Maybe they have improved things from prior years. In most prior years, MANY items (HSA limits, maximum IRA/401k contributions, and much more) were not updated to the current year until at least the mid-December update. Thanks for letting me know that they have improved.
December 2, 2025
8:01 AM
Lobbying is legal bribery. You treat the American people as marks. Be ashamed. And you stole my settlement money as well as my money in 2022.
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December 2, 2025
7:48 AM
Usually mid December.
December 2, 2025
7:41 AM
Why do you expect it to be taxed differently? You are taxed on the amount of income you earned -- whether it was weekly pay or a bonus. When you prepare your tax return, the software will reconcil...
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Why do you expect it to be taxed differently? You are taxed on the amount of income you earned -- whether it was weekly pay or a bonus. When you prepare your tax return, the software will reconcile the amount of income you earned against the amount of tax withheld to determine if you owe more or if you get a refund.
December 2, 2025
7:41 AM
Only conversions to a Roth IRA are excludible from MAGI for the purpose of determining Roth IRA contribution limits. In-plan Roth Rollovers are not excludible from this MAGI. (As the terms are defi...
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Only conversions to a Roth IRA are excludible from MAGI for the purpose of determining Roth IRA contribution limits. In-plan Roth Rollovers are not excludible from this MAGI. (As the terms are defined in the tax code, an In-plan Roth Rollover is not a Roth conversion.) To eliminate the excess contribution for 2025, you'll either need to obtain an explicit return of the excess Roth IRA contribution or you'll need to request that the Roth IRA custodian recharacterize the excess to be a traditional IRA contribution instead.
December 2, 2025
7:35 AM
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