Hi.
I live in the state of Michigan which I understand does NOT tax social security benefits. I am just beginning to enter my particulars into TurboTax and have only entered spousal W2 forms, which gave a running total of Federal and State taxes owed. Next I entered social security payments received, expecting to see the Federal tax running total increase, but thought that it would not affect the state. However, the state tax went up considerably. Why would this be if my state does not tax social security?
You'll need to sign in or create an account to connect with an expert.
Did you enter the SSA-1099 in the right spot? Does it show up on federal 1040 line 6?
Enter a SSA-1099, SSA-1099-SM or RRB-1099 under
Federal Taxes
Wages and Income
Then scroll down to Retirement Plans and Social Security
Then the second line - Social Security (SSA-1099. RRB-1099) - click the Start or Revisit button
Thanks. Yes, that is exactly how it is entered. It is as though the state is partially taxing that income though it is my understanding that they don't tax it.
You are correct MI does not tax social security benefits. You should see the the taxable social security benefits that are included in federal adjusted gross as a subtraction on your MI form 1040 line 13.
In TurboTax online versions you can view your MI Tax summary using the steps below. You should see a MI subtraction that includes the taxable amount of social security from line 6b on your form 1040. You can see your federal form 1040 also using the steps below.
In desktop versions you can select the "Forms Mode" to view any forms.
In the left hand menu:
Thank you for that. Yes...looking at the actual forms makes it clear that everything is entered and being calculated correctly.
Still have questions?
Questions are answered within a few hours on average.
Post a Question*Must create login to post
Ask questions and learn more about your taxes and finances.
krsanborn75
New Member
mrhackett
New Member
staceyhunt42
New Member
Lhotapa
New Member
tina232910
New Member