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It depends. To clarify, what type of a tax return are you working on and what type of a tax form is this payment reported on?
It's a 1099 Misc
Answer 'No' if your Form 1099-MISC reports only your share of the royalty income and you are not transferring any part of that income to someone else.
You can also use depletion as an expense for this royalty income.
Percentage Depletion Allowance
For oil and gas royalty owners, percentage depletion is calculated using a rate of 15% of the gross income based on your average daily production of crude oil or natural gas, up to your depletable oil or natural gas quantity.
This will be entered on your Schedule E - Sign into TurboTax
I have prod/taxes section on my form and theres no place to put that info while filling out the form?
It depends. To clarify, was this reported on a 1099-MISC form or a K-1?
1099- Misc
Yes, this is how to report this income and claim the expenses that are associated with this income. Before we begin this process, delete your 1099-MISC where you entered before. i just want to make sure we have a clean copy before proceeding. To delete, go to tax tools>tools>delete a form>1099-MISC.
On my 1099 Misc for rhe royalties i noticed it did a depletion? Is that a must
Yes, you need to take the tax deduction because you must reduce the basis of your property by the depletion allowed or allowable, whichever is greater, but not below zero.
If you have an economic interest in a mineral property or standing timber, you can take a deduction for depletion. More than one person can have an economic interest in the same mineral deposit or timber. In the case of leased property, the depletion deduction is divided between the lessor and the lessee. You have an economic interest if both the following apply.
You have acquired by investment any interest in mineral deposits or standing timber.
You have a legal right to income from the extraction of the mineral or cutting of the timber to which you must look for a return of your capital investment.
A contractual relationship that allows you an economic or monetary advantage from products of the mineral deposit or standing timber is not, in itself, an economic interest. For more details on depletion deductions, see this IRS publication.
What if I got a Form 1099-MISC with the royalty income for a song and I transferred part of the income to my song writing partner. How would I declare it on Turbo tax?
If the amount reported to you on the 1099-MISC was all yours, and you did not distribute any of it to anyone else entitled to a share of what "you" were paid, then you did not distribute any part of the amount reported on the 1099-MISC to anyone else.
But you are a partial owner, depending on the IRS definition of "partial owner". I would expect the program would need to know that, so that you claim only your share of the expenses and your share of the depletion.
(Whew!)
@Musicman5 wrote:
What if I got a Form 1099-MISC with the royalty income for a song and I transferred part of the income to my song writing partner. How would I declare it on Turbo tax?
It is a simple matter to accomplish that in the program.
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