I had the additional 0.9% Medicare tax withheld on one of my W-2's, but our income does not exceed the limits, so we have overpaid Medicare tax for this year. In TurboTax 2018 Premier, I can see our overpayment, correctly calculated, on Line 24 of Form 8959. However, it does not end up being included in Line 16 of my 1040 (federal income tax withheld). Why isn't that amount passing through to the 1040?
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It actually goes on line 72 of Schedule 5, which carries over to line 17 of Form 1040.
To see your 1040:
1. Go to Tax Tools on the left-hand side.
2. Go to Tools.
3. Go to View Tax Summary.
4. Click Preview my 1040 from the left-hand side.
I have run in to the same issue now with the preliminary tax year 2019 version of TurboTax Premier. I spoke with both the tax attorneys at my employer (major corporation), as well as called the IRS directly to talk with their "experts". Both confirm that IRS Form 8959 must be used to reconcile any over withheld Medicare taxes REGARDLESS OF INCOME LEVEL. If IRS Form 8959 Part V Line 24 reflects a value >0 (over withheld Medicare tax), it must flow to the TurboTax Tax Payment Summary form Line 18f, which in turn then flows to the IRS 1040 Form Line 17 as part of total taxes paid. In effect, the over withheld Medicare is credited as part of total taxes paid for the year. Further, IRS Form 8959 must be submitted to the IRS along with the rest of the tax return IF there is any credit in Part V, REGARDLESS OF INCOME LEVEL, which TurboTax does not do.
As mentioned in a another post, the only current workaround with TurboTax software is to override the value on the TurboTax Tax Payment Summary Line 18f, print all of the forms (including IRS Form 8959), and file the return manually. The IRS also advised that the return could be filed electronically without IRS Form 8959 in order to expedite any tax refund, but the taxpayer would have to then file a paper amended return later that includes IRS Form 8959. (This seems a bit messy to me.)
The BEST solution would be for the TurboTax folks to stop claiming the IRS is advising them otherwise, and fix this error!
This is not the “Best Answer”. The “experts” at TurboTax are wrong. The IRS confirmed to me that using Form 8959 IS the correct way to recover overwithheld Medicare taxes, regardless of reported income. Read the instructions from the IRS as printed on the form itself.
So far I have not gotten any response from TurboTax support on this issue. Please correct this bug so I can efile for 2019 taxes!
Time for someone at TurboTax to get this simple bug fixed. Will someone who actually works for TurboTax and has authority to make decisions please post a timeline for getting this fixed? It’s been almost a year since I raised this to your attention.
@classicrockguy wrote:
This is not the “Best Answer”. The “experts” at TurboTax are wrong. The IRS confirmed to me that using Form 8959 IS the correct way to recover overwithheld Medicare taxes, regardless of reported income. Read the instructions from the IRS as printed on the form itself.
So far I have not gotten any response from TurboTax support on this issue. Please correct this bug so I can efile for 2019 taxes!
Nope. If the employer made a mistake and withheld to much Medicare taxes as reported on the W-2 then the employer is required to refund the difference.
Form 8959, Additional Medicare Tax, is only used if - https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/i8959.pdf
You must file Form 8959 if one or more of the following applies to you.
• Your Medicare wages and tips on any single Form W-2 (box 5) are greater than $200,000.
• Your railroad retirement (RRTA) compensation on any single Form W-2 (box 14) is greater than $200,000.
• Your total Medicare wages and tips plus your self-employment income, if any (including the Medicare wages and tips and self-employment income of your spouse, if married filing jointly), are greater than the
threshold amount for your filing status in the chart on this page.
• Your total railroad retirement (RRTA) compensation and tips (Form W-2, box 14) (including the railroad retirement (RRTA) compensation and tips of your spouse, if married filing jointly) is greater than the threshold amount for your filing status in the chart on this page.
Your Medicare wages include your wages and tips from Form W-2, box 5; your tips from Form 4137, line 6; and your wages from Form 8919, line 6.
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