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No. Mississippi exempts all forms of retirement income from taxation, including Social Security benefits, income from an IRA, income from a 401(k) and any pension income as long as your 59 1/2. You can review your Mississippi return in TurboTax. You can review your MS return in the following steps:
when i add my state 1099r to my taxes my state taxes increase almost a thousand dollars. it also shows my retirement income as part of my gross income amount being taxed by the state.
To stop your retirement income from being counted as part of gross income and being taxed by the state, you'll need to first add the income to your Federal Income tax return and then in the State income tax return.
Here are the steps to enter your exempt State employee retirement income:
On the Federal Income Tax portion:
On the State return portion:
This is disappointing. i have filed my taxes this year and for the past 5 years have used turbo tax. for the ant of money i have been paying this should not happen. the employer name and number along with it being 1099 should be enough to identify this automatically.
Doesn’t give me the option to select the source State Employees
Where the pension comes from does not matter. All pensions are excluded from state income if the payments are not early distributions, and no pensions are excluded from state income if the distributions are "early distributions".
The thought that state pensions are never taxable is a misunderstanding of state law.
The state of Mississippi says this,
“Is retirement income taxable?
Generally, retirement income, pensions and annuities are not subject to Mississippi Income tax if the recipient has met the retirement plan requirements. Early distributions are not considered retirement income and may be subject to tax. ”
See this Mississippi FAQ.
On the federal return, an "early" distribution is generally one in which the distribution is made before the taxpayer is 59 1/2 years old.
However, it is not clear that an early distribution on the federal level is also an "early" distribution for the State of Mississippi. But so long as your 1099-R has a distribution code of "2" in box 7, TurboTax will assume that the distribution is an early distribution.
I assume that on your 1099-R, the distribution code is "2". This describes the distribution as an early distribution. Therefore, based on the input, TurboTax is correctly marking the distribution as taxable in Mississippi.
However, the distribution is an "early distribution" for federal purposes, where generally retirement plan distributions made before the taxpayer is 59 1/2 are considered early.
What is not clear is if the state of Mississippi considers a distribution that is prior to age 59 1/2 to be an early distribution if the taxpayer has reached the full retirement age of the retirement plan.
Currently, TurboTax has no way of determining that the taxpayer has met the retirement plan's requirement.
If you are positive that the pension distribution should not be taxable in Mississippi, there are two workarounds:
The first is to change the distribution code to "7" on the W-2. This will cause the distribution to not be taxable in Mississippi. It will not affect your federal return (the distribution will still be taxed on the federal return, as it should be).
The TurboTax "experts" posting on here are incorrect. Many of us have contacted the state department of revenue as well as PERS. TurboTax has it wrong this year. See this thread:
You are correct, retirement income should be excluded on a Mississippi state tax return.
Please try these steps to clear any entries that could be causing your Mississippi retirement income to be included in taxable income:
Here is how to delete forms:
You are correct, retirement income should be excluded on a Mississippi state tax return.
Please try these steps to clear any entries that could be causing your Mississippi retirement income to be included in taxable income:
Here is how to delete forms:
Here is a better way to exclude your Mississippi retirement income in the 1099R. You should be able to edit this without deleting the forms but if you as Dukes909 suggested, that's ok too. If you haven't deleted the form, skip steps 1-4.
In your federal return:
[Edited 02-15-2021|05:18 PM PST]
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