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certain of your sales reported on the 1099-B may involve the sale of a publicly traded partnership or master limited partnership. for each partnership whether sold or not, the k-1 must be entered.
sale of a PTP?MLP is a bit complicated
here are some instructions
MLP reporting k-1 and 8949
Please follow these instructions. Incorrect entries can result in entering the sale twice or otherwise incorrectly. Also see the sales schedule that was included with the k-1
Enter the k-1 info
Check the PTP box
If total disposition proceed as follows:
Check final K-1 (s/b marked on actual k-1)
Check sold or otherwise disposed of entire interest
Use QuickZoom to get to the following section
On the k-1 disposition section for sales price use the ordinary income (sometimes you’ll see a column with the “751” or the words ”gain subject to recapture as ordinary income”
Cost is zero
Ordinary income is the sales price.
This info flows to form 4797 line 10 and is taxed as ordinary income.
Now for the 8949.
The broker’s form is probably coded as B or E – sales proceeds but not cost basis reported to the IRS. This is because the broker does not track the tax basis. It used what you paid originally which is not the correct.
The correct tax basis is:
What you paid originally, should be the same as what is on 8949,
Then there is a column on the sales schedule that says cumulative adjustment to basis. If it’s positive add it to the original cost. If it’s negative subtract the amount
Finally add the amount of ordinary income reported above.
The result is your corrected cost basis for form 8949.
Some other things. Look at lines 20Z1. That number should be added to the ordinary income above for reporting the 199A (qualified business income from the PTP). You don’t have to enter this but the you lose out on a tax deduction = 20% of this amount.
Please clarify.
YES
Yes, you would enter the 1099-B in both places.
The above works ONLY if 1) the entire sale was short-term or long-term (can't be both) AND 2) the sale was a complete disposition (not a partial sale). Otherwise, you need to adjust the cost basis in the 1099-B interview to handle any Cap Gain/Loss, and use the K--1 interview to handle Ordinary Income (if any) but NOT the cap gain. This link discusses it more fully: https://ttlc.intuit.com/community/investments-and-rental-properties/discussion/how-i-report-the-sale...
certain of your sales reported on the 1099-B may involve the sale of a publicly traded partnership or master limited partnership. for each partnership whether sold or not, the k-1 must be entered.
sale of a PTP?MLP is a bit complicated
here are some instructions
MLP reporting k-1 and 8949
Please follow these instructions. Incorrect entries can result in entering the sale twice or otherwise incorrectly. Also see the sales schedule that was included with the k-1
Enter the k-1 info
Check the PTP box
If total disposition proceed as follows:
Check final K-1 (s/b marked on actual k-1)
Check sold or otherwise disposed of entire interest
Use QuickZoom to get to the following section
On the k-1 disposition section for sales price use the ordinary income (sometimes you’ll see a column with the “751” or the words ”gain subject to recapture as ordinary income”
Cost is zero
Ordinary income is the sales price.
This info flows to form 4797 line 10 and is taxed as ordinary income.
Now for the 8949.
The broker’s form is probably coded as B or E – sales proceeds but not cost basis reported to the IRS. This is because the broker does not track the tax basis. It used what you paid originally which is not the correct.
The correct tax basis is:
What you paid originally, should be the same as what is on 8949,
Then there is a column on the sales schedule that says cumulative adjustment to basis. If it’s positive add it to the original cost. If it’s negative subtract the amount
Finally add the amount of ordinary income reported above.
The result is your corrected cost basis for form 8949.
Some other things. Look at lines 20Z1. That number should be added to the ordinary income above for reporting the 199A (qualified business income from the PTP). You don’t have to enter this but the you lose out on a tax deduction = 20% of this amount.
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