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Returning Member
posted Oct 22, 2025 9:26:32 AM

Dividend Taxation

Dividend taxation can be complex, depending on how the position is structured - ordinary, qualified, combination of both, etc..
What is the best way to check, when I buy a dividend-generating stock or ETF, how it will be taxed (approximately)? The prospectus can be a bit cryptic to read sometimes and I was wondering if TurboTax had a feature that could help me figure out easily, what the taxation will be for a given position, or even better for a list of positions I own or plan to own.
Help appreciated!

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1 Replies
Level 10
Oct 22, 2025 11:24:28 AM

Turbotax can't help with this.

 

For ETFs, CEFs etc you can normally find tax information on the fund website which would show the % of the income which is qualified

 

Generally individual stocks are qualified (provided certain holding period requirements are met) - key exceptions are REITs, Limited Partnerships, BDCs etc.

 

See following for some guidance on holding periods.  There are probably other websites that provide more information

https://www.fidelity.com/tax-information/tax-topics/qualified-dividends

 

This similar question on reddit may be helpful; someone suggests checking payout history on dividend.com which shows whether it's qualified or not, if you can make it thru the ads.

https://www.reddit.com/r/dividends/comments/12brgzm/is_there_any_easy_way_to_figure_out_if_a_stock/