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nope the family maximum is $8550 is combined for both of you, despite being married during the year. Basically, you're considered married for the whole year.
The Rental Real Estate Enterprise Statement (RREES) will typically generate without needing to manually add it when you have indicated that you want to take the QBI safe harbor during your Schedule E... See more...
The Rental Real Estate Enterprise Statement (RREES) will typically generate without needing to manually add it when you have indicated that you want to take the QBI safe harbor during your Schedule E interview in Step-by-Step mode.   When you are completing the Step-by-Step interview questions and reach, "Let's see if you're eligible for the QBI safe harbor", select Yes and then check whether it is for this property only, or for an enterprise. Note that if you would like for a set of properties to populate on the same RRES, you will need to ensure that they are assigned to the same enterprise group number.   Once you have made those selections on your Schedule E, you can switch to Forms Mode to verify by checking the following:   Select your Schedule E and scroll down to the Qualified Business Income Deduction Smart Worksheet and you should see Yes in the A 1 box, "Is this a qualified trade or business" and also subsection a, "This rental is part of a Rental Real Estate Enterprise...", will be checked and the enterprise group number will appear in the box. From there, you can QuickZoom to the RREES.    Note that the information from the property transfers to your RREES automatically, so you should not make edits on this form directly. Instead, you can make any revisions on your Schedule E, which will then transfer to the RREES.   Additional forms to check are your Form 8995 Qualified Business Income Deduction Simplified Computation, as well as your Form 1040, Line 13.
Only enter the 1095-A that applies to the people on your tax return.  If your daughter received her own 1095-A, she will enter it in her return.  In the 1095-A interview, indicate that you 'shared a ... See more...
Only enter the 1095-A that applies to the people on your tax return.  If your daughter received her own 1095-A, she will enter it in her return.  In the 1095-A interview, indicate that you 'shared a policy with someone not on your return', give her SSN, and allocate a % of the policy on your return.     Your daughter indicates a 'shared' policy on her return also, your SSN and an allocation %.   The IRS wants to match up the amounts on both returns to equal 100%.  This will resolve your 'duplicate policy' error.   @markmontgomery103             
Your second statement is the correct one. I was on a family plan with my children and my wife was on a family plan with her children.  No other spouses in these plans.
You can't use the Simplified method for self-employment. You have the option to use a Simplified logbook, but you still have to claim your actual vehicle expenses. The flat rate is for medical expens... See more...
You can't use the Simplified method for self-employment. You have the option to use a Simplified logbook, but you still have to claim your actual vehicle expenses. The flat rate is for medical expenses & Northern residents deductions.    
Sounds like something got stuck. You can try these things:   Log Out Completely: Before doing anything else, click Sign Out in the TurboTax menu. Clear Cache and Cookies: This removes old, ... See more...
Sounds like something got stuck. You can try these things:   Log Out Completely: Before doing anything else, click Sign Out in the TurboTax menu. Clear Cache and Cookies: This removes old, "corrupted" data that might be confusing the website. Use an Incognito (Private) Window: This is the most effective "quick fix" because it launches the browser without any saved history or extensions (like AdBlockers) that often interfere with tax forms. Check Pop-up Blockers: TurboTax often opens forms (like the 1099 PDF) or payment windows in a separate pop-up. Look at the right side of your address bar for a small icon with a "red X"—click it and select "Always allow pop-ups from Intuit." Restart the Browser: Close all open windows of your browser entirely and then reopen it.   Most TurboTax errors happen because the browser is trying to use an old "session" from a previous visit. By clearing the cache or using Incognito mode, you force the browser to establish a brand-new, secure connection with the Intuit servers.
If your divorce or separation agreement was executed prior to 2019, then alimony you paid is reported on Schedule 1, line 19 along with the recipient's SSN and the date the divorce was finalized.  Al... See more...
If your divorce or separation agreement was executed prior to 2019, then alimony you paid is reported on Schedule 1, line 19 along with the recipient's SSN and the date the divorce was finalized.  Alimony is not counted as an itemized deduction, but is an adjustment to income and does reduce your taxable income by the amount of alimony paid.   Your screen printouts show that your Standard Deduction is the preferred deduction since it is larger than your itemized deductions.  Itemized deductions include items such as:  Medical expenses that are over 7.5% of your adjusted gross income, State and Local Taxes you paid (including the deductible amount of your Massachusetts excise tax payments), Mortgage interest, and Charitable contributions.  All of these amounts would need to be greater than the $31,500 standard deduction show on the screen for you as a Married Filing Jointly filing status.  Since the Massachusetts Excise Tax is not deductible separately, that would explain why it is showing as zero on the screenshot.  Even though the amount of Excise tax paid in 2024 shows up on that screen, that amount is not included in the total deductions for 2024.
sold rental property I work on this early a few days ago I know I need premiere but I thought I did that now going back I can't find it what I had already done I had help from a turbo tax persons can... See more...
sold rental property I work on this early a few days ago I know I need premiere but I thought I did that now going back I can't find it what I had already done I had help from a turbo tax persons can you help me
Yes!  When you get past the early entry part of the rental property you'll come to a screen with several options to enter data about the rental.  The fourth one down is "Assets/Depreciation" and you ... See more...
Yes!  When you get past the early entry part of the rental property you'll come to a screen with several options to enter data about the rental.  The fourth one down is "Assets/Depreciation" and you should click 'start' next to that.     Once in there you will enter the value of your home and what percentage of it you are renting out.  At that point the system will be able to prorate expenses for the entire home as a percentage deduction for the year, taking into account the 33% ownership and the rental days.  These are called 'indirect expenses'.     You will also need to enter 'direct expenses'.  These are expenses that are only for the rental (cleaning services, guest amenities, etc.).  Those aren't subject to the percentage.
I SOLD MY HOUSE CAN I DEDCUT SECURITY DEPOSIT
This is a very stupid design. Why isn't there a way to assign my different T4As to different businesses? This is Self Employed Turbo Tax after all... shouldn't it be designed for Self-Employed people... See more...
This is a very stupid design. Why isn't there a way to assign my different T4As to different businesses? This is Self Employed Turbo Tax after all... shouldn't it be designed for Self-Employed people with multiple businesses? If I have multiple T4As from multiple independent businesses - all for professional services - there is no way to properly link them. I am having to find a new platform other than TurboTax to file my taxes with this year because of this issue. It would just take one button on the T4A page to have a dropdown menu of the businesses... or a spot to enter the business industry code from the business... makes no sense.    Based on what you are saying Susan, I have to falsely report my income from different businesses to the goverment, cause Turbo Tax is so poorly designed that it lumps all in T4A income into one business... this would be a disaster if I was audited cause it would not match my records at all. This defeats the entire purpose of honestly and accurately filing my taxes via Turbo Tax. Why haven't you fixed this since people have been posting about it here for 2 years? Does Turbo Tax just honestly not care about their users? 
Yes, you have completed the Sale of Business Property correctly. You can continue to file your return. No is the correct answer to the following: There are no 'Sales of Other Types of Business Pro... See more...
Yes, you have completed the Sale of Business Property correctly. You can continue to file your return. No is the correct answer to the following: There are no 'Sales of Other Types of Business Properties',  Nothing to enter in 'Gross Proceeds' for another sale of other property types No to business use drops to 50% or less in 2025 - you are correct in your rationale. The sales profit is correct because the business cost basis is now below zero based on the depreciation taken. The gain cannot be more than the selling price, assuming your cost basis is reduced to zero after depreciation. If you had greater depreciation than the business cost, then your gain is maxed at the selling price of $1,820. @KR202526  [Edited: 03/21/2026 | 6:41 AM PST]
Il y a un problème technique dans cette section. Après plusieurs essais, même en changeant le X de la case 2 à la case 1, le X ne s'enregistre pas et revient toujours à case 2. La date ne s'affiche p... See more...
Il y a un problème technique dans cette section. Après plusieurs essais, même en changeant le X de la case 2 à la case 1, le X ne s'enregistre pas et revient toujours à case 2. La date ne s'affiche pas malgré toutes les bonnes entrées faites dans Easy Step et sur le formulaire INFO.    Veuillez rejoindre le service à la clientèle pour vous aider avec le partage d'écran  ou escalader à un niveau supérieur pour résolution pour demander une investigation à ce sujet.    Composez le 1-888-829-8608. Faites le 8 pour le service en français. Ensuite 0 et encore 0. Lorsqu'on vous demande si vous voulez un texto ou un courriel, dites 'non'. Le robot vous demande ensuite votre prénom, ensuite votre nom de famille, et vous serez transféré à un agent:   Pendant la période des impôts de l’ouverture du service IMPÔTNET de l’ARC le 23 février 2026 au 30 avril 2026 nous sommes disponibles 7 jours sur 7 durant les heures suivantes :   De 9 h à 21 h pour le soutien en français   Merci de choisir TurboImpôt.
I don't think there is anyway to see the detail on that. However, you enter the itemized deductions on the screen that says Enter your 2026 Itemized Deductions in the Other Tax Situations section, an... See more...
I don't think there is anyway to see the detail on that. However, you enter the itemized deductions on the screen that says Enter your 2026 Itemized Deductions in the Other Tax Situations section, and then Other Tax Forms, then Form W-4 and estimated taxes. Your itemized deductions should be the total of those entries, with allowances for limitations on things such as medical expenses (7.5% of adjusted gross income) and state/local taxes (limited to $40,000). 
Is using the placed-in-service date (when the property became available for rent) rather than the purchase date the correct starting point for depreciation?   Yes.  And in fact, if you have a prope... See more...
Is using the placed-in-service date (when the property became available for rent) rather than the purchase date the correct starting point for depreciation?   Yes.  And in fact, if you have a property that you bought and you're still getting it ready during the tax year and it's not placed in service at all during that year, then you have nothing at all you can report about it on your tax return.  You have to wait until it's placed in service as a rental, and then depreciation starts on that date and expenses before that date are handled differently than expenses after, and I'll cover that later.    For residential rental property, is it correct that only the building value (purchase price minus land value) is depreciated over 27.5 years?   Yes.  Unless it's a short-term rental with an average day of less than 30 days, and then it has to be depreciated over 39 years.  (That's one of the things that TurboTax doesn't do a good job of guiding users on when they have a short-term rental, so I always try to mention that so people are aware of that issue. )     Is it normal for a first-year rental property placed in service late in the year to show a Schedule E loss due to depreciation and startup expenses?   Yes.   Probably the majority of rentals show a tax loss in most years, including the first year.  By the way, that tax loss doesn't necessarily reduce your taxable income. Depending on whether or not you qualify for an exception, it may just get suspended and carried forward (on form 8582) until it can offset future rental income, or when you sell the property.    Are operating expenses deductible starting when the property was available for rent, even if it was vacant briefly before the tenant moved in?   Yes.  All that matters is the placed in service state, which is when it is ready for someone to move in and you have advertised it somewhere as being available.   So for example, if it's available and ready to be rented and you have it listed as for rent (you are genuinely trying to rent it out) and no one rents it that year, it's still placed in service as a rental from the date it's available to potentially be rented.    Are minor repairs and preparation costs before the tenant moved in generally deductible expenses rather than capital improvements?    By default, any expenses before the placed-in service date, you can't deduct as an expense. And the default treatment is to add those costs to the cost basis of the building, and they are depreciated along with the building.      But if you buy items that qualify as 5-year depreciation items such as furniture, appliances, and miscellaneous supplies, those items you can enter as a 5-year asset (and those will also qualify for a bonus depreciation, which means currently you get to deduct the full cost in the current year).  But you do still have to enter them as depreciation assets.  You can group them together if you have a group of 5-year assets that are all placed in service at the same time (which in this case will be the placed in service date of your rental).   Side note, furniture in a rental property is depreciated over 5 years, not 7 years as you may have seen (that applies to office furniture).    But other expenses before the placed in service date you will generally just add to the cost basis of the building, or depreciate in that same 27.5 or 39 year class.   This is optional, but you can elect to also deduct startup costs under (section 195 of the tax code).  This allows you to deduct startup costs for expenses before it's placed in service as a rental.  TurboTax doesn't walk you through this, but you can add another expense to your rental property expenses called "startup costs".  You can only deduct up to $5,000 this way. And then if you have additional startup costs above $5,000, the excess has to be amortized over 15 years (but I don't know if there is a way to do that with TurboTax).   It's important to be aware that the tax code doesn't allow property taxes or mortgage interest to be included in the startup costs.  Property taxes or mortgage interest attributed to the time before it was placed in service as a rental can only be added to the cost basis of the building.    In case there's any uncertainty about the legality of using section 195 for rentals, this treatment is supported in a number of tax court cases, including McPartland v. Commissioner, T.C. Sum. Op. 2012-88 and Charlton v. Commissioner, 114 T.C. 333, 338 (2000).
It's now the middle of March. I am having the same issue, the Netfile option for Quebec is greyed out. Do you have any updates on this? Is there some way for me to be notified whenever this form is f... See more...
It's now the middle of March. I am having the same issue, the Netfile option for Quebec is greyed out. Do you have any updates on this? Is there some way for me to be notified whenever this form is finalized so that I can file my taxes?!?
Then you don't include GST or PST in your total revenue. You'll put that info on the returns you need to do for the sales tax.      
I am clergy, and have an approved exemption from Social Security.  When entering a W2 in Turbotax, I'm presented with the option to state that it is clergy income and thus exempt from SE taxes.  Howe... See more...
I am clergy, and have an approved exemption from Social Security.  When entering a W2 in Turbotax, I'm presented with the option to state that it is clergy income and thus exempt from SE taxes.  However, I have an SCorp into which all honoraria I receive for speaking is deposit.  It issues me a K1.  When entering the K1 information into Turbotax, I don't see a place to state that it is clergy income and thus exempt from SE taxes.  Any help on this one?
Are you still unable to enter rental assets for depreciation? This section was updated several days ago. If you're still having problems, please provide the exact error you are seeing and/or why you ... See more...
Are you still unable to enter rental assets for depreciation? This section was updated several days ago. If you're still having problems, please provide the exact error you are seeing and/or why you can't enter your assets.
J'utilise la version en ligne, et le calcul fédéral est correct, c'est le total erronné est au niveau du calcul des frais médicaux provincial (Québec) RQ - TP1 Frais médicaux (page 36), qui est repor... See more...
J'utilise la version en ligne, et le calcul fédéral est correct, c'est le total erronné est au niveau du calcul des frais médicaux provincial (Québec) RQ - TP1 Frais médicaux (page 36), qui est reporté Annexe B – F (2025-12) à la page 16.   6341.72+6600.42=12942.14 et non 11391.53...(voir plus bas)     gc