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Level 1
February 18, 2020
Question

Split 1099-R income with ex-spouse

  • February 18, 2020
  • 2 replies
  • 0 views

Ex-spouse received pension payments monthly all of 2019. Jan-May we were married so income is 50/50. June-December the pension plan paid him all as the right paperwork was being processed to split it monthly. Instead, he paid me my 50% portion from his personal checking account.

 

Now he as a 1099-R with the entire amount and I don't have any 1099-R for my 50%.

1) How does the income get report on his tax form income (match 1099-R, take 50% and not match 1099-R)?

2) How does the income get reported on my tax form income (my 50% although no 1099-R, $0)?

 

Thanks.

    2 replies

    Level 12
    February 21, 2020

    1) He would need to report the full amount on his tax return to match the 1099-R he received.

     

     If the amount he paid you is not designated as alimony in your divorce documents he can report it in TurboTax as Less Common Income> Other Reportable Income.  In that section he can put in a description and the amount as a negative amount.

     

    2) You can file the income you received as a substitute 1099-R in the Retirement Plans Section of TurboTax

     

     

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    Level 2
    April 7, 2020

    Have reported this (Military Pension Division--not alimony) as a negative in Miscellaneous Income as "other income not already reported on a W-2 or 1099". TT flags the negative number and will not allow an e-file. 

     

    If instead this amount is moved to "other reportable income" will TT allow the negative income number to pass?

     

    Or will TT choke on it either way, and I get the pleasure of printing and mailing my return?

     

    Thank you.

    Critter
    Level 15
    April 7, 2020

                                                                  

    You can report it as other income on Sch 1  line 8. Here's how to enter it in TurboTax.

    • Click the Federal Taxes tab ( Personal in the Home & Business version)
    • Click Wages & Income. (Personal income in the H & B version)
    • On the screen "Your 2019 Income Summary," scroll all the way down to the last section, "Less Common Income."
    • Click the Start or Update button for the last topic, "Miscellaneous Income, 1099-A, 1099-C."
    • On the next screen, "Let's Work on Any Miscellaneous Income," scroll down and click the Start or Update button for the last topic, "Other reportable income."
    • The next screen asks, "Did you receive any other taxable income." Click Yes.
    • On the next screen, "Other Taxable Income," enter a description and the amount. Click Continue.
    • On the next screen click Done.
    Level 2
    January 10, 2021

    That takes care of the income side. How are the associated taxes handled?

    Level 2
    January 10, 2021

    Associated taxes for whom? Your question is unclear, but my attempt to answer: for my ex-spouse, receiving the income, it's taxed as income (ex-spouse's responsibility to file correctly), for me it ends up acting as a deduction, it's just entered here as negative income. 

    Level 15
    January 10, 2021

    As I understand it, military pension division is not necessarily alimony, but rather a division of community property, no?


    hokietrax, I only see military pensions mentioned in your replies, so it's not clear that any of those asking here are asking in regard to military pensions.  

     

    Military pensions apparently can be problematic because they can be slow to implement payments to an alternate payee.  One could perhaps nominee the income by issuing the ex-spouse a Form 1099-R for the ex-spouse's portion and filing this form and a corresponding Form 1096 with the IRS.  However, I've never been able to find any IRS guidance on how to report the details of this involving a Form 1099-R.  I suspect that one should show the entire original amount on 2020 Form 1040 line 5a and only the amount taxable to the original recipient on line 5b, then include an explanation statement describing being the nominee of the ex-spouse's portion and stating the gross and taxable amounts transferred to the ex-spouse.  Other types of Form 1099 income are generally reported on some form of the tax return other than directly on Form 1040 where the nominee income can be listed as a subtraction, obviating the need for a separate explanation statement.

     

    Still, if the divorce or separation instrument does not specify that the military pension is to be paid directly to the ex-spouse as an alternate payee, the nominee process would probably be inappropriate.

     

    hokietrax, note that the reference you provided in mid 2020 was updated on January 7, 2021.  I don't have any way to know what it said previously, so I don't know if anything relevant to the discussion here changed.  It doesn't seem to have been updated for the current Form 1040 line numbers, though, still referring to Form 1040 line numbers for years prior to 2018.