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Could someone please walk me over how to put in the 3000 loss limit and then track it for the next many years? Because I have about $40,000 capital losses. And also, how does IRS track my losses for many years as I claim them?
Thanks,
Pooya
Question: If I have $103,000 short-term capital losses in year 1, and carry over $100k of them to Year2, and:
Do I *have* to use my carryforwards to offset the long-term capital gains in Y2 ? In other words, could I elect not to apply those carryforwards, in the hope of applying them (more profitably) to short -term capital gains in Y3.
Assume marginal income tax rate 37% in all years. Obviously, the value of applying the carryforwards to offset short-term capital gains (equal to 37% of those gains), would make them more "valuable" than using them to offset long-term capital gains in Y2 (20%). I'd rather pay the 20% long-term rate and bank them.
If this is allowed, how do I achieve it in Turbotax?
Sorry ... you MUST use up the loss carryforward as prescribed in the IRS regs ... you cannot pick and choose which years you use them in .
You have to report the carryover every year until it's used up. You can't skip a year. Even if you don't report it on your return you have to reduce it by the 3,000 (1,500 MFS) when you carry it over to next year. You can't choose when to use it.
This is from the IRS Pub 550 page 66
"When you figure the amount of any capital loss carryover to the next year, you must take the current year's allowable deduction into account, whether or not you claimed it and whether or not you filed a return for the current year. "
Here is pub 550… http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p550.pdf
If you have a negative AGI or negative taxable income it will show up on 1040 BUT it won't reduce the carryover to the next year.
Ouch! So, effectively, there's no advantage whatsoever to holding stocks for >1 year until after I use all of my captial loss carryforwards. Seems weird to me, b/c they require that like capital gain losses be used to offset like gains (thus requiring tracking of the two types of losses year-to-year). So (at least to that extent), they protect collection of a higher tax, but mandate loss of a more valuable tax credit as described. Thanks for you help!
You answer the TT questions about the sale of capital assets (or import the info from your broker). TT will create the Schedule D and other forms as needed.
To anyone reading this now: it is absolutely foolish not to report losses.
DID I CARRY FORWARD A LOSS IN 2018 ?
We can't tell from this end but you should have two forms in your return plus an entry on your Schedule D.
what if it is loss do to a storm to my house?
You posted to a thread that is several years old and on a different subject matter.
If you had a CASUALTY LOSS to your home due to storm damage it can only be taken if you are in a Federally Declared Disaster Area.
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