My brother died without a will in 2021 and I am the "Administrator" of his small (under $estate as well as the sole beneficiary. He lived in MD. I live in WI, and the mailing address for the EIN I created for his Estate is my home address in WI.
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The retirement is taxable to Wisconsin (WI) because it was received after death by a beneficiary who does not live in Maryland (MD). The following income is taxable to Maryland (MD) for nonresidents:
A Form 1041 can be filed however the distribution would go through the K-1 to the beneficiary. It would be a final 1041 and no income should be taxed on this return. You cannot include it on the tax return of the deceased because it was not received before death.
Your last option is best. You can choose to nominee the information to the beneficiary so that the income is reported to the appropriate person, as it should be, exactly as you have mentioned. You can choose the nominee action in the tax return or use the steps below.
The nominee action is normal in your situation. The red copy should go to the IRS, but they won't turn it away if you send a black copy.
There are steps here for you to review if you choose.
Nominee returns.
Generally, if you receive a Form 1099 for amounts that actually belong to another person or entity, you are considered a nominee recipient. You must file a Form 1099 with the IRS (the same type of Form 1099 you received). You must also furnish a Form 1099 to each of the other owners.
File the new Form 1099 with Form 1096 (this is a transmittal for the 1099) by mailing to the Internal Revenue Service Center for your area. (Provided on the Form 1096)
The forms filed with the IRS should be the red copy so if you don't have a color printer, go to the IRS website and order the forms here:
The retirement is taxable to Wisconsin (WI) because it was received after death by a beneficiary who does not live in Maryland (MD). The following income is taxable to Maryland (MD) for nonresidents:
A Form 1041 can be filed however the distribution would go through the K-1 to the beneficiary. It would be a final 1041 and no income should be taxed on this return. You cannot include it on the tax return of the deceased because it was not received before death.
Your last option is best. You can choose to nominee the information to the beneficiary so that the income is reported to the appropriate person, as it should be, exactly as you have mentioned. You can choose the nominee action in the tax return or use the steps below.
The nominee action is normal in your situation. The red copy should go to the IRS, but they won't turn it away if you send a black copy.
There are steps here for you to review if you choose.
Nominee returns.
Generally, if you receive a Form 1099 for amounts that actually belong to another person or entity, you are considered a nominee recipient. You must file a Form 1099 with the IRS (the same type of Form 1099 you received). You must also furnish a Form 1099 to each of the other owners.
File the new Form 1099 with Form 1096 (this is a transmittal for the 1099) by mailing to the Internal Revenue Service Center for your area. (Provided on the Form 1096)
The forms filed with the IRS should be the red copy so if you don't have a color printer, go to the IRS website and order the forms here:
Thank you for your thorough and speedy reply!
To clarify, it seems that in reading the fine print on the 1096 that I must send that in hardcopy with the 1099, but ONLY those nominee income documents (not my entire tax return). Am I correct in understanding that I file the red 1099 and 1096 hardcopies without my 1040., and that I file the rest of my return as a separate step?
If so, it seems that I can then file the 1040 right away, by including a black and white copy of the 1099-R (I do not need to get some sort of response from the IRS that the red 1099/1096 were properly processed before I can file my taxes). And if I include the copy of the 1099R with my 1040, I can still file electronically? Or does the entire return need to be sent as hardcopy?
The only thing that needs to be filed with the IRS is the 1099-R and 1096 showing that you are the nominee. Your return can be submitted electronically separate from the 1099 and 1096.
You can also file the 1096 and 1099 electronically but that involves purchasing TurboTax Self-employed. The link is here.
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