turbotax icon
Close icon
Do you have a TurboTax Online account?

We'll help you get started or pick up where you left off.

All Posts

You may group all these countries into a single entry on your return. For the country name, you would pick "various". This is a widely accepted practice that the IRS has no objection to. 
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... See more...
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 2025 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 . https://ttlc.intuit.com/turbotax-support/en-us/help-article/tax-refund/irs-refund-taking-longer-21-days/L2vRAJbdU_US_en_US?uid=lexe7lst         If you are getting earned income credit on line 27 or additional child tax credit on line 28 You are subject to the delay required by the PATH act.  Do not expect your refund before early March   https://ttlc.intuit.com/turbotax-support/en-us/help-article/internal-revenue-service/federal-refunds-delayed-due-path-act/L5jnQJsBi_US_en_US   Note:  “Accepted” is not the same as “approved”.  TurboTax tells you the e-file was accepted if the IRS deems that there is enough information on the return for them to take it in for processing.   Only the IRS can approve of the refund, which is a later stage of processing.  If the IRS approves your refund they will provide a date for the refund to be issued.   FROM THE IRS WHERE’S MY REFUND SITE: https://www.irs.gov/wheres-my-refund How it works Where's My Refund shows your refund status: Return Received – We received your return and are processing it. Refund Approved – We approved your refund and are preparing to issue it by the date shown. Refund Sent – We sent the refund to your bank or to you in the mail. It may take 5 days for it to show in your bank account or several weeks for your check to arrive in the mail.        
Once your return is filed, TurboTax has no control over the processing or the timing when the IRS releases your refund.    The IRS Where's My Refund site gives a date range of when you can expect... See more...
Once your return is filed, TurboTax has no control over the processing or the timing when the IRS releases your refund.    The IRS Where's My Refund site gives a date range of when you can expect to receive your refund. Most refunds are deposited within the allotted timeframe.    You can contact the IRS and/or state to get additional information on the status of refunds. 
Regarding the Big beautiful tax bill, TurboTax is not adding the $6000 senior deduction for me. Any help?
If you used desktop software ----go to Federal>Other Tax Situations>Other Tax Forms>Amend a return
@eltigre    Did you figure out what to do yet?   It usually depends on whether you have a real non-zero value in box 2a of that 1099-R  (or CSA-1099-R, or RRB-1099-R) or not.   IF you have a va... See more...
@eltigre    Did you figure out what to do yet?   It usually depends on whether you have a real non-zero value in box 2a of that 1099-R  (or CSA-1099-R, or RRB-1099-R) or not.   IF you have a value in box 2a, then you may have answered "No" to a follow-up question about the taxable amount, where you should have answered "Yes".
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... See more...
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 2025 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 . https://ttlc.intuit.com/turbotax-support/en-us/help-article/tax-refund/irs-refund-taking-longer-21-days/L2vRAJbdU_US_en_US?uid=lexe7lst         If you are getting earned income credit on line 27 or additional child tax credit on line 28 You are subject to the delay required by the PATH act.  Do not expect your refund before early March   https://ttlc.intuit.com/turbotax-support/en-us/help-article/internal-revenue-service/federal-refunds-delayed-due-path-act/L5jnQJsBi_US_en_US   Note:  “Accepted” is not the same as “approved”.  TurboTax tells you the e-file was accepted if the IRS deems that there is enough information on the return for them to take it in for processing.   Only the IRS can approve of the refund, which is a later stage of processing.  If the IRS approves your refund they will provide a date for the refund to be issued.   FROM THE IRS WHERE’S MY REFUND SITE: https://www.irs.gov/wheres-my-refund How it works Where's My Refund shows your refund status: Return Received – We received your return and are processing it. Refund Approved – We approved your refund and are preparing to issue it by the date shown. Refund Sent – We sent the refund to your bank or to you in the mail. It may take 5 days for it to show in your bank account or several weeks for your check to arrive in the mail.        
 Can you please clarify the error you are seeing?
I cannot access my 2024 tax return saved on my computer. When I click on the file to open it, Turbotax tries to activate 2024 Turbotax and wants my license code which I cannot find. I am able to open... See more...
I cannot access my 2024 tax return saved on my computer. When I click on the file to open it, Turbotax tries to activate 2024 Turbotax and wants my license code which I cannot find. I am able to open 2023 and previous years' returns.
This is the 1st time I have taken Medicare B and N deductions on my 2025 taxes. I just learned that I could. Is there any way to take these deductions going back now 4 years when I enrolled in Medica... See more...
This is the 1st time I have taken Medicare B and N deductions on my 2025 taxes. I just learned that I could. Is there any way to take these deductions going back now 4 years when I enrolled in Medicare?  I am self employed. Every little bit of deduction helps. Thank you. Steven F.
TurboTax does not support Form 7220, Prevailing Wage and Apprenticeship (PWA) Verification and Corrections, but this form does not seem to apply in this situation.    To be eligible for the resid... See more...
TurboTax does not support Form 7220, Prevailing Wage and Apprenticeship (PWA) Verification and Corrections, but this form does not seem to apply in this situation.    To be eligible for the residential clean energy credit, your central air conditioner must meet certain efficiency requirements. Per the Energy Star website, the air conditioner must meet SEER2 ≥ 17.0 and EER2 ≥12.0 to be eligible for the credit.   See this TurboTax article for more information on the residential clean energy credit.    
It depends. While the instructions say to take your adjusted gross income and subtract your standard or itemized deductions, there is a catch. If you have qualified dividends or capital gains (taxed ... See more...
It depends. While the instructions say to take your adjusted gross income and subtract your standard or itemized deductions, there is a catch. If you have qualified dividends or capital gains (taxed at the lower 0%, 15%, or 20% rates), the IRS requires you to "adjust" those amounts before they go on Line 18.   This is because the Foreign Tax Credit (FTC) limit is based on your tax rate. Since dividends are taxed at a lower rate than your ordinary income, the IRS doesn't let you count the full amount of those dividends.   As a result, if you have entries on Form 1040, Line 3a (Qualified Dividends) or Schedule D, TurboTax is running the Foreign Tax Credit Worksheet to adjust your dividends to reflect the lower US tax rate for computation of the foreign tax credit.   The Adjustment: You must multiply your qualified dividends/capital gains by a specific fraction (usually 0.4054 or 0.5405 depending on the current tax year's brackets) before adding them to the total. The Result: This makes your Line 18 figure smaller than your taxable income on Form 1040, Line 15.      
The QBI loss carryforward is required by the IRS. See IRS Instructions for Form 8995 Line 4.
@reallyno    You should post the exact text.   For instance, is it really saying that the SSNs are the same as on an already filed tax return?    If so, then that's a different rejection....in... See more...
@reallyno    You should post the exact text.   For instance, is it really saying that the SSNs are the same as on an already filed tax return?    If so, then that's a different rejection....indicating the SSNs have already been used in a different tax filing already in the system. ___________
The 1095-A has an amount listed for column A, all months, premiums and 0.00 for all months in column B. But Turbo refuses to file because it says the 0.00 in column B is incorrect. I am unable to fix... See more...
The 1095-A has an amount listed for column A, all months, premiums and 0.00 for all months in column B. But Turbo refuses to file because it says the 0.00 in column B is incorrect. I am unable to fix this error. Clicking on 0.00 doesn't help and reloading the form 1095-A also doesn't work. What to do?
Yes, you will get another Form 5498 for 2025 - sometime in May as that is when they are typically due to be in your hands.  The Form 5498 is just for informational purposes only, so it isn't entered ... See more...
Yes, you will get another Form 5498 for 2025 - sometime in May as that is when they are typically due to be in your hands.  The Form 5498 is just for informational purposes only, so it isn't entered on your tax return anywhere - just file it with your tax records.  So no, you won't have anything at all to report for your former Roth IRA account in 2026 as it was closed in 2025.  And no, you would not have needed to report the Roth IRA contribution for 2024 because when you started to file your 2024 tax return, you found out that you could not make the contribution for either year which lead to your closing the account and taking a distribution.   It looks like you got all the tax documents that you needed for taking care of the Roth distribution as well as for reporting the dividends from your brokerage account.  Just make sure that your Roth distribution is free of tax on your return and enter the 1099-DIV (and all other tax documents) and you should be all set.