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January 12, 2026
9:43 PM
How do I file old
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January 12, 2026
9:21 PM
Hi. I’m also under the same boat but I don’t think the parent exception would kick in for me because 1) my child is under 18 and 2) I’m divorced. In that case can my parents still report the money (a...
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Hi. I’m also under the same boat but I don’t think the parent exception would kick in for me because 1) my child is under 18 and 2) I’m divorced. In that case can my parents still report the money (about $4k) I paid from dada as other income? They are also not running a nanny business and they are taking care of my son at my house. Thanks!
January 12, 2026
9:09 PM
Hi Forum, I’d appreciate help confirming that I’m handling this correctly. Background I moved from CA to NY in December 2021 and stayed with the same employer. For tax year 2022, I mistake...
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Hi Forum, I’d appreciate help confirming that I’m handling this correctly. Background I moved from CA to NY in December 2021 and stayed with the same employer. For tax year 2022, I mistakenly reported all income as NY income and $0 CA income. I now need to amend my NY return to get a refund and file/amend CA to pay tax on CA-sourced RSU income. W-2 / income details My W-2 appears to overstate CA wages, since I worked 100% in NY during 2022. My January paycheck still showed CA state wages, likely because payroll hadn’t updated my location yet. I don’t think this can be corrected now. RSU allocation matches my records, so no issue there. I also see a December CA state taxable wage amount on a statement, and I’m not sure where it came from. The only possibility I can think of is my bonus, but that was paid earlier in the year. My W-2 income consists only of salary, bonus, and RSUs, all from the same employer. Questions For CA wages, should I use the CA amount shown in Box 16 of the W-2, or should I use my own allocation/calculation? I’m leaning toward using the W-2 amount even if it’s slightly overstated, because I’m concerned CA could challenge it later (CA has a 4-year statute of limitations). I expected NY to fully credit the CA tax I pay, but it looks like the NY credit is lower than the CA tax owed. My understanding is: CA taxes me at a higher marginal rate (around 8% over $66k) than NY (5.85%). CA determines the tax rate using total W-2 income, even though only a portion is CA-sourced. Is this understanding correct? I plan to amend NY first, receive the refund, and then amend/file CA. ChatGPT suggested this approach. Is there any risk in doing it in this order? For the NY amendment, I’m filing IT-201-X and IT-112-R (CA). Are these the only NY forms I need? Can I e-file my NY amended return, or does it have to be paper-filed? Thank you very much. Sorry for the long questions. Want to make sure I am not missing anything.
January 12, 2026
8:59 PM
1 Cheer
Every several years I discover a bug in Turbotax. I report them, but after seeing the errors (confirmed by TT as errors) recur in future years, I no longer have any confidence Intuit cares much. ...
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Every several years I discover a bug in Turbotax. I report them, but after seeing the errors (confirmed by TT as errors) recur in future years, I no longer have any confidence Intuit cares much. ONLY the download version allows you to overwrite a field. With the online version, you're stuck. Keep the download version, Intuit. Precisely because you cannot be trusted to produce a clean product. Even when we show you what's wrong with it.
January 12, 2026
8:57 PM
Typo on date should read 1.12.2026 not 36
January 12, 2026
8:55 PM
2 Cheers
1.12.2036. Still unable to enter income from pensions. Anyone else having that issue with updates not loading?
January 12, 2026
8:55 PM
Interest paid on "Acquisition Debt" on primary residence is tax deductible. Includes debt to acquire the home and also debt which is directly used to IMPROVE the home. EXCLUDES all other uses of d...
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Interest paid on "Acquisition Debt" on primary residence is tax deductible. Includes debt to acquire the home and also debt which is directly used to IMPROVE the home. EXCLUDES all other uses of debt taken out on home. Let's move past that, please. My concern is how TT is calculating this. Round number example: $300,000 Mortgage at 10% interest, 30yr note to acquire home. Dated 1/1/20xx. Fine. All interest deductible (it will be $29,925 that first year, cents rounded off). Let's say the very second after the mortgage is taken out, you refinance, also at 10% interest, 30yr, to 400,000 total. But the additional $100,000 you DO NOT use to improve the house. Total 1st year interest is now $39,900, but not all of it is deductible. You may notice that 75% of the refinanced 400,000 equals the original 300,000 and 7% of the $39,900 interest equals the original $29,925 interest. Question: As the homeowner slowly pays off the principal, MUST the assumption be that homeowner pays off both the acquisition debt and the non-acquisition debt, ratably? In other words, for every $4 of principal paid down, MUST it be the case that $3 reduces acquisition debt and $1 reduces non-acquisition debt on the mortgage? It would be to the homeowner's benefit, on taxes, to preferentially pay down the non-acquisition debt to zero before paying a dime toward acquisition debt. There's no tax benefit to the nonacquisition debt but there is to the acquistion debt. This distinction is irrelevant to the bank (just wants its full payment every month) and it's irrelevant to the monthly pocketbook of the home owner - the mortgage payment is the mortgage payment, however you like to think about slicing and dicing it. UNTIL tax time. Homeowner would want to pay off that debt with no tax benefit first before the debt that provides a tax benefit. At the end of year 10, the mortgage balance on the $400,000 refi is $363,752. Period. The bank, the homeowner all agree. BUT, for taxes, the homeowner would prefer that the full 300,000 of "acquisition debt" remain on the books while the non-acquistion debt has been amortized from 100,000 down to only 63,752. In so doing, the homeowner can continue to deduct the interest each year paid on the full 300,000 of acquisition debt (just like if it were an interest only loan where the principal is not amortized). Eventually, of course, homeowner pays off more than 100,000 of the mortgage and further principal amortization must be to the acquition debt. So, Question 1: MAY the taxpayer designate which "pot" of principal is being amortized? Question 2: How does TT calculate this - does it presume RATABLE principal payment allocation between acquisition and non-acquisition debt? If so, why?
January 12, 2026
8:51 PM
From what...to what?
January 12, 2026
8:48 PM
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January 12, 2026
8:41 PM
Same problem as user BarryK123. I updated my Turbo Tax Premiere Desktop on 1/12/2026. I was able to enter charitable contributions, but when going back to the deductions and Credits heading, it say...
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Same problem as user BarryK123. I updated my Turbo Tax Premiere Desktop on 1/12/2026. I was able to enter charitable contributions, but when going back to the deductions and Credits heading, it says "Now Available" rather than presenting a 2025 total. How do I fix this?
January 12, 2026
8:33 PM
I am trying to install TurboTax desktop and I am going nowhere....
January 12, 2026
8:24 PM
2 Cheers
Isn't security what we're concerned about here! Why does Intuit care if I'm getting new functionalities, improvements, and enhancements from windows!! I have a perfectly good PC that MS says I can't ...
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Isn't security what we're concerned about here! Why does Intuit care if I'm getting new functionalities, improvements, and enhancements from windows!! I have a perfectly good PC that MS says I can't put W11 on, so bugger MS!
January 12, 2026
8:24 PM
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January 12, 2026
8:19 PM
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January 12, 2026
8:01 PM
I have been out of the country for a little over 330 days so I didn’t take on health insurance coverage through Covered California this year but I did get coverage for my son because he was my depend...
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I have been out of the country for a little over 330 days so I didn’t take on health insurance coverage through Covered California this year but I did get coverage for my son because he was my dependent. At the end of June I canceled coverage for him because he went for an internship were he made enough money to have to file his own taxes and he became eligible for Medical. Now I want to file taxes as a single paying more taxes than if I filed as head of household but I am concerned there will be a conflict with the Covered California coverage my son got as my dependent in the first half of the year and I may have to pay back what was paid in advance for that coverage by the government, although my claiming him at the time was correct. My son will also be filing on his own. What is the correct way to proceed with the tax filing without having to incur in any issue. Thank you
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January 12, 2026
7:32 PM
Did you do your city income tax through TurboTax or manually, because it only does a few cities? If thru TurboTax, see @xmasbaby0 response. If you did it manually, we have no idea where you did it or...
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Did you do your city income tax through TurboTax or manually, because it only does a few cities? If thru TurboTax, see @xmasbaby0 response. If you did it manually, we have no idea where you did it or even if you stored a copy on your computer.
January 12, 2026
7:29 PM
Thank you so much
January 12, 2026
7:29 PM
if you were covered under the Affordable Care Act, Obamacare, you should have received Form 1095-A which must be included in your return. The IRS doesn't open e-filing until 1/26/2026. Your return is...
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if you were covered under the Affordable Care Act, Obamacare, you should have received Form 1095-A which must be included in your return. The IRS doesn't open e-filing until 1/26/2026. Your return is just sitting on a TurboTax computer waiting to be submitted. You can do nothing now. Eventually, it will be submitted and you will get an email saying either "accepted" or "rejected". If rejected, you can enter the info and resubmit. If accepted, you'll have to wait until your return is fully processed and then amend. Note that Forms 1095-B and C are not reported on your Federal return. Some states have their own reporting requirement that differs from the Federal. We can advise if you post back as to your state of Domicile.
January 12, 2026
7:24 PM
You only have to enter information about health insurance if you had insurance through the marketplace---aka healthcare.gov aka "Obamacare". You need a 1095A for that. If you had insurance thou...
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You only have to enter information about health insurance if you had insurance through the marketplace---aka healthcare.gov aka "Obamacare". You need a 1095A for that. If you had insurance though your employer, etc. you do not enter anything about that. A 1095B or 1095C are not entered on a tax return. If the IRS is expecting a 1095A on your tax return and you did not enter it, your e-file will most likely be rejected and you will have to get your 1095A and enter it, and then re-file the return. The IRS will not begin to accept/reject e-files until January 26.
How to find your 1095-A online
Log in to your account.
Under "Your Existing Applications," select your 2025 application — not your 2026 application.
Select “Tax Forms."
Download all 1095-As.
Get screen-by-screen directions, with pictures (PDF, 504 KB).
To enter your 1095A go to Federal>Deductions and Credits> Medical>Affordable Care Act (Form 1095A)
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