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yesterday
@DanaB27 any tips or comments on my follow up question above ? thanks in advance.
yesterday
You should create an IRS Online Account to get the information regarding your 2017 - 2021 returns. You can access the sign up page here >> IRS Account
You can do the following with account acces...
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You should create an IRS Online Account to get the information regarding your 2017 - 2021 returns. You can access the sign up page here >> IRS Account
You can do the following with account access:
View key data from your most recently filed tax return, including your adjusted gross income, and access transcripts
View digital copies of certain notices from the IRS
View information about your Economic Impact Payments
View information about your advance Child Tax Credit payments
yesterday
You need to go back through the HSA interview, @hendejm . See the link below, then go back through the interview to ensure you have answered everything correctly.
Why am I showing an exces...
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You need to go back through the HSA interview, @hendejm . See the link below, then go back through the interview to ensure you have answered everything correctly.
Why am I showing an excess HSA contribution?
yesterday
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yesterday
I was out of the country and returned to the country on April 16. Today (the 17th) I realized I missed making my first estimated payment for 2026 that was due two days ago (April 15 2026). I belie...
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I was out of the country and returned to the country on April 16. Today (the 17th) I realized I missed making my first estimated payment for 2026 that was due two days ago (April 15 2026). I believe I have just incurred a two-day penalty. I understand I should use line 24 of the 2025 Form 1040 and divide it by 4 which will be the estimated tax I need to pay for each of the 4 periods. However, can I pay just 90% of my estimated taxes as I was unemployed in all of 2025 (most income was derived from ROTH IRA conversion)?
yesterday
@bpapa33 And it depends on the state. Mine (NC) took ~ 4 weeks with no particular reason other than sometimes it takes longer.
yesterday
Can I get someone to weigh in on this? Am I missing some nuance of depreciation that makes what TurboTax is doing correct? I think it might be treating the depreciation in some way relevant to sellin...
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Can I get someone to weigh in on this? Am I missing some nuance of depreciation that makes what TurboTax is doing correct? I think it might be treating the depreciation in some way relevant to selling a house, but this approach doesn't make sense to me in this context. I created a new TurboTax account did some targeted tests changing office-use percent and in-service dates. Given a home with a total basis of $390k, a whole-year of 10% office use using the straight-line method over 39 years should give us depreciation of $1,000 a year. A 5% office would be $500 a year. Move the in-service date to December 31st to limit the effect of the Mid-Month accounting rules. Home size is entered as 1000 sq ft, and no other expenses are listed for the house. Home-office in-service date can be any prior year, and it doesn't seem to matter as long as it's after the house in-service date. Here are the different scenarios for reporting 2025 office use percent. House Acquired House Placed In Service For Business Use Prior Use % Prior Depreciation Of House 2025 Use % Depreciation Allowed 1 12/31/24 12/31/24 0% $0 10% $1,001 2 12/31/04 12/31/24 0% $0 10% $1,001 3 12/31/24 12/31/24 0% $0 10% $1,001 4 12/31/14 12/31/14 0% $0 10% $1,347 5 12/31/04 12/31/04 0% $0 10% $2,057 6 12/31/94 12/31/94 0% $0 10% $4,353 7 12/31/84 12/31/84 0% $0 10% $0* 8 12/31/04 12/31/04 10% $20,042 15% $2,029 9 12/31/04 12/31/04 10% $20,042 10% $1,000 10 12/31/04 12/31/04 10% $20,042 9% $794 11 12/31/04 12/31/04 10% $20,042 8% $589 12 12/31/04 12/31/04 10% $20,042 7% $383 13 12/31/04 12/31/04 10% $20,042 6% $177 14 12/31/04 12/31/04 10% $20,042 0%-5% $0 * fully depreciated For the dates involved, $20,042 is the historical depreciation TurboTax itself suggests for the 2004-2024 time period. You can see that TurboTax gives us what we expect if we keep the office use percent steady the entire time after the house is placed in service for business use, but the depreciation allowed swings wildly if that use percent changes. For the specific scenario affecting me, note that after 20 years at 10% usage, a drop to 5% usage disallows all additional depreciation. For the alternate case - which is far worse - look specifically at rows 3-6: the same house with no depreciation ever taken, placed in service at varying points in the past, produces wildly different deductions depending on how close we are to the end of the 39-year life. At ~20 years in, TurboTax allows roughly 2x the straight-line amount: $2,057 at 10% use instead of the $1,000 the form's own formula would produce. At ~30 years it has roughly doubled again to $4,353. And then it doubles again in ~4.5 more years. And again in ~2 years after that. In the final year of the 39-year life, it approaches $39,000 - the entire 10% share of the home's basis, consumed in a single year. I can't get TurboTax to emit these final numbers directly because nonresidential real property placed in service before May 13, 1993 used a 31.5-year schedule rather than 39. I'm aware that depreciation "allowed or allowable" gets recaptured when you sell, but that seems like a disposition issue -- it shouldn't govern current-year deductions.
yesterday
@jakar Yeah, for 1099-DIV, box 12 tax-exempt dividends from Mutual Bond Funds or Municipal ETFs....CA only allows you to exempt/specify the CA-bond $$ portion....ONLY if that mutual fund has at...
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@jakar Yeah, for 1099-DIV, box 12 tax-exempt dividends from Mutual Bond Funds or Municipal ETFs....CA only allows you to exempt/specify the CA-bond $$ portion....ONLY if that mutual fund has at least 50% of it's assets in CA State/Municipal obligations. Thus, usually only CA-Specific Bond funds qualify for allowing you to exempt any of their interest from being CA-taxable income. If you happen to buy individual CA-Related bonds yourself, those $$ are reported in box 8 of a 1099-INT, and those $$ are allowed to be CA-Exempt.
yesterday
Thank you for replying. I'm not sure that I understand your response - so can I check with you again. I e-filed, including form 5695 with a valid QMID. According to my IRS transcript, their computer ...
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Thank you for replying. I'm not sure that I understand your response - so can I check with you again. I e-filed, including form 5695 with a valid QMID. According to my IRS transcript, their computer system reviewed that filing and failed to recognize the QMID because it contains the letter "I". The IRS computer then reduced my refund by $2000 and paid me. Are you suggesting that I print out my original e-filing forms, remove the QMID (to show that as blank), add a "Substantiate PDF" page, and then mail that in to the IRS because TurboTax won't allow me to e-file with a PDF? Thank you for confirming.
yesterday
The only places you will see tax payments you made when filing are in your bank account and on your IRS Online Account page. Your TurboTax return will always remain as you it was on the day you fi...
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The only places you will see tax payments you made when filing are in your bank account and on your IRS Online Account page. Your TurboTax return will always remain as you it was on the day you filed it, so no future payments will be applied.
If you paid your tax bill and are waiting the payment to go through, don't fret >> The first page of your tax return PDF is the Filing instructions - that page will show the date, account and amount you have scheduled. It normally takes the IRS a few days to take the payment, but it is effective the date you scheduled it, and confirmed by your e-file acceptance receipt.
See the IRS FAQ page
yesterday
It appears that a sum of $671 was deducted from my federal tax return, purportedly for state tax obligations. However, the state did not receive this payment, and an additional $671 was subsequently ...
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It appears that a sum of $671 was deducted from my federal tax return, purportedly for state tax obligations. However, the state did not receive this payment, and an additional $671 was subsequently withdrawn from my bank account. The initial amount that was debited has not yet been reimbursed by TurboTax.
yesterday
The party that finally pays over $600 to a provider issues a W-9 to get the TIN and corporate status, then a 1099 if the provider is unincorporated.
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yesterday
The fastest way to see where your money is is through the AZTaxes.gov portal. Online Tool: Visit the ADOR Where’s My Refund? page.
What You’ll Need:
Social Security Number (SSN).
...
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The fastest way to see where your money is is through the AZTaxes.gov portal. Online Tool: Visit the ADOR Where’s My Refund? page.
What You’ll Need:
Social Security Number (SSN).
Filing status (e.g., Single, Married Filing Jointly).
Zip Code.
Tax Year (2025).
By Phone: You can call the ADOR Customer Care Center at 602-255-3381 or toll-free at 800-352-4090.
yesterday
It appears that a sum of $671 was deducted from my federal tax return, purportedly for state tax obligations. However, the state did not receive this payment, and an additional $671 was subsequently ...
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It appears that a sum of $671 was deducted from my federal tax return, purportedly for state tax obligations. However, the state did not receive this payment, and an additional $671 was subsequently withdrawn from my bank account. The initial amount that was debited has not yet been reimbursed by TurboTax.
yesterday
@spsmth113 If none of the above work, some folks have found that they have to go in and delete the Social Security Benefits Worksheet....THEN go back to the interview and it will work. But that...
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@spsmth113 If none of the above work, some folks have found that they have to go in and delete the Social Security Benefits Worksheet....THEN go back to the interview and it will work. But that's kind-of a last resort.
yesterday
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yesterday
@user17764645085 What is the status of the 2024 tax refund on the IRS website - https://www.irs.gov/refunds
yesterday
If I never got my refund and never got help why wouldn’t i
yesterday
Duplicate message
yesterday
Did you e-file your state tax return and was it accepted? Only the IRS and your State control when and if a Federal or State tax refund is Approved and Issued.
You complete your tax return by ...
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Did you e-file your state tax return and was it accepted? Only the IRS and your State control when and if a Federal or State tax refund is Approved and Issued.
You complete your tax return by finishing all 3 Steps in the File section. In Step 3, to e-file your tax return, you must click on the large button labeled "Transmit my returns now".
After completing the File section and e-filing your tax return you will receive two emails from TurboTax. The first email when your tax return was transmitted and the second email when the tax return has either been accepted or rejected.
Note - Once a tax return has been Accepted by the IRS or a State, TurboTax receives no further information concerning the tax return or the status of any tax refund. Only the taxpayer listed on the tax return can obtain the status of a tax refund or a tax return.
To check the status of an e-filed return, open up your desktop product or log into your TurboTax Online Account. You can find your status within the TurboTax product.
If accepted by the state use this TurboTax support FAQ to check the state tax refund status - https://ttlc.intuit.com/turbotax-support/en-us/help-article/tax-refund/track-state-refund/L3jgO8PGs_...