I was self-employed last year but received a royalty check from my previous employer because they licensed patented software I worked on from 13 years ago. I own TurboTax Home & Business. I received the royalty payment on a 1099-MISC.
My employer included a note issued by the IRS that said royalty payments for patents are consider by prior case law to be treated as capital gains.
TurboTax allowed me to enter the 1099, then asked a question whether this income came as a royalty on property I own or whether it came from "my business." (Note that it came from my prior employer.) I don't own property so I checked "It came from my business" and then TT put it on my Schedule C and computed that I owe self-employment tax on it. I don't think that's right.
So,
- Is that wrong?
- How can I get TurboTax to not do that?
TurboTax handled the income correctly based on the way you answered the questions. If the royalty had been tied to your business, then it would be taxed as business income subject to self-employment tax.
In your case, since you have information in hand that it should be treated as a capital gain, you will enter the income in the Investment Income section of your return so that it is reported on Schedule D as if you sold stock with a zero cost basis.
You will need to go back to the Form 1099-MISC entry and delete the information that you entered. Then, use the steps below to report the income:
Go through this section of your return as if you are entering a sale of stock. Indicate that you did not receive Form 1099-B for the transaction. You will need to enter a description for the payment, the date sold (date of the payment), the date acquired (date of the patent), proceeds (amount of payment shown on Form 1099-MISC), and the cost basis ($0).
Be sure to keep your Form 1099-MISC and the documentation issued by the IRS in your records in the event that there is ever a question about this item on your tax return.
TurboTax handled the income correctly based on the way you answered the questions. If the royalty had been tied to your business, then it would be taxed as business income subject to self-employment tax.
In your case, since you have information in hand that it should be treated as a capital gain, you will enter the income in the Investment Income section of your return so that it is reported on Schedule D as if you sold stock with a zero cost basis.
You will need to go back to the Form 1099-MISC entry and delete the information that you entered. Then, use the steps below to report the income:
Go through this section of your return as if you are entering a sale of stock. Indicate that you did not receive Form 1099-B for the transaction. You will need to enter a description for the payment, the date sold (date of the payment), the date acquired (date of the patent), proceeds (amount of payment shown on Form 1099-MISC), and the cost basis ($0).
Be sure to keep your Form 1099-MISC and the documentation issued by the IRS in your records in the event that there is ever a question about this item on your tax return.