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No, you don't need to amend your return again if the income shown on the form is the same.
I am not certain what you mean by "capital gains the totals are the same but placed in distributions"
Does that mean you have a change in the capital gains distribution amount? If that is the case, you should do an amendment and see if it changes your refund or tax due.
If you still have questions, please respond back with more details of exactly what is changed on the latest form.
The total dividend is the same but in the corrections it is decided up some is ordinarily some is capital gains distributions . I don’t get a refund or owe anything. So can I just not do anything further or do I need to file the correction?
Yes, if your capital gains distribution changed, you should start an amendment to see if these changes affect your refund or tax due.
If the new 1099 information doesn't change your refund or tax due, you don't need to file it. Just keep the 1099 forms with your tax records.
Go ahead and do your amendment to the point after you enter the new 1099. If your refund is $0 at that point, you can just cancel the amendment.
This is how to cancel the amendment:
It is important to make sure that the IRS has time to process your first amendment before you send a second one.
If this change results in a balance due, pay the extra tax before April 18, but don't submit the return for six weeks. You can make your payment online without a form. Click here for more details.
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