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Level 2
posted Feb 13, 2021 10:30:36 AM

1099 div with ira

hi, I am drawing social security, & I have traditional  and Roth IRA's I am not drawing any money out. my broker  is preparing  1099's div & int's for them. do i need to report these as income, even tho  i am not drawing anything out of the IRA's?  thx

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1 Best answer
Level 15
Feb 13, 2021 10:37:22 AM

If the income was generated within the retirement accounts and you had no withdrawals you would not have to report that information. 

9 Replies
Level 15
Feb 13, 2021 10:37:22 AM

If the income was generated within the retirement accounts and you had no withdrawals you would not have to report that information. 

Level 15
Feb 13, 2021 11:12:18 AM

If your investments are in retirement accounts, the broker should not be preparing any Forms 1099-DIV and 1099-INT related to those investments.  If you receive any of these, ask the broker for an explanation.  If the broker files them indicating you as the recipient, failing to include these on the tax return would result in the IRS issuing to you a notice of underreported income.

Level 2
Feb 15, 2021 2:55:19 PM

as it turns out, the income was generated in any IRA. it is in a joint account with me & my wife, so it is taxable

Expert Alumni
Feb 15, 2021 3:12:18 PM

I am not sure I completely understand but agree that the end result is a joint account will produce taxable forms.

 

  • You are not allowed to have a joint IRA account.
  • If the money is coming from a joint account, it will not be retirement related and you do need to report the dividends and interest. A brokerage will not create forms you don't need, normally.

 

Level 15
Feb 15, 2021 3:14:44 PM

These forms ended up having nothing to do with an IRA but were instead related to activity in a non-retirement brokerage account.

Level 4
May 18, 2022 1:29:55 PM

Would it be correct to understand that a 1099 or 1099-DIV should not be issued by a corporation if the distribution is being made in a Roth IRA account, and therefore should have no tax consequences? The reason I ask is that a corporation is asking for a W-9 related to a distribution they will make into my self directed Roth IRA account.  I guess they can require the W-9 but don't think they should issue any 1099 or 1099-DIV to that account at year end. True?

Level 15
May 18, 2022 2:05:36 PM

They can require you to fill in the W-9  so they know if a 1099 needs to be issued ...  READ the form to fill it in correctly ...  https://www.irs.gov/forms-pubs/about-form-w-9

 

 

Level 4
May 18, 2022 2:24:13 PM

Thank you for that fast answer pointing that out!!

Level 4
May 18, 2022 6:33:47 PM

Regarding Line 4 on the W-9, it is not 100% clear if the last sentence in that box ("Applies to accounts maintained outside the U.S.") is referring ONLY to the line above it ("Exemption from FATCA reporting code (if any)"), or, if that refers to BOTH items above it in that box for line 4 Exemptions.  ("Exempt payee code (if any)" and "Exemption from FATCA reporting code (if any)")  

One reason I began to question that is in one example of a self directed IRA custodian instructing how to fill out a W-9 they said leave line 4 blank, but another IRA custodian's example said to enter 1 for the exempt payee code.  (This is for a domestic account.)

I guess it couldn't hurt to enter 1 for Exempt payee code and also enter A for Exemption from FATCA reporting code, as a Youtube presentation by a tax attorney explained. (even though this is domestic, not maintained outside the US)