To find your acquired date, log into your ESPP stock plan portal and look for your purchase history, or transaction confirmation statement. You will need this in order to determine if your sales ...
See more...
To find your acquired date, log into your ESPP stock plan portal and look for your purchase history, or transaction confirmation statement. You will need this in order to determine if your sales are long-term (held for more than one year), or short-term (held for less than one year). If Box 1b is blank, you will need to find your actual "cost basis" so that you are not paying tax on money that you already paid tax on via your paycheck. To find your cost basis, you will need a copy of your W-2. Look for an amount in Box 14 to find your "total discount" for the year. Note: If you don't find it there, check your final paystub or Form 3922. Then, to calculate your cost basis, add the total price you paid for the shares to the total discounted amount, then divide that total cost by the number of shares sold. The most efficient way to input this information is to sort it by summarizing the sales section totals from your Form 1099-B, instead of entering each trade. You only need to make one entry for each category that has totals. For example, if you only have Long-Term and Short-Term "Covered," you only make 2 entries. Click on Income Select Add more income Scroll down to Investments and Savings and click down arrow Select Stock, Crypto...(1099-B...) Select Add investments, Add a different way Select Stock, Bonds, Mutual Funds (1099-B) Enter brokerage information, then Continue In the "Tell us about the sales..." section, answer those questions, then Continue In the "Now choose how to enter your sales", select Sales section totals, Continue Crucial: To adjust the basis, click on the box below the sales section, I need to adjust my total cost basis If you choose to summarize, you may need to mail in a copy of Form 8453 to the IRS after you e-file so that they have documentation of your summary.