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reuter
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When I exercise options, my co takes out taxes in my W-2. How do I report this in turbotax? Each year I get a letter from gov't that I need to reply to explaining this.

I can import the sale into TT but when I do my tax liability goes up as though I didn't pay taxes, so I delete the transactions.  And the gov't catches that "discrepancy".  There has to be a better way...
thank you!
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2 Replies

When I exercise options, my co takes out taxes in my W-2. How do I report this in turbotax? Each year I get a letter from gov't that I need to reply to explaining this.

the only way for the company to take out taxes is to sell some of the stock bought with the exercise.  that withholding should be on the W-2. your tax basis of 100% of the shares acquired in the exercise is the compensation that was added to your W-2.  your tax basis in the shares sold is the compensation added to W-2 for the exercise divided by the number of shares acquired times the number of shares sold. there should be little or no gain or loss if sold on the same day unless the price varies wildly. don't really know what is being reported. the above is what should happen but sometimes the broker does not report the stock basis. 

When I exercise options, my co takes out taxes in my W-2. How do I report this in turbotax? Each year I get a letter from gov't that I need to reply to explaining this.

@reuter 

 

If you exercise and sell all, TTX has help pages for those...and other NQSO or ISO situations.

 

IF exercised and sold immediately, you keep the 1099-B/8949 entry, BUT you are supposed to update the cost basis of the transaction to reflect that day's price..plus brokerage fees...which result in either a zero gain..or slight loss due to those brokerage fees.  The gain ,is included on your W-2....but the 1099-B/8949 can't be ignored.

____________________________

NQSO Situations:

 

Non-Qualified Stock Options - TurboTax Tax Tips & Videos (intuit.com)

 

__________________________

IF they were ISOs...then there are situation details here:

 

Incentive Stock Options - TurboTax Tax Tips & Videos (intuit.com)

____________*Answers are correct to the best of my knowledge when posted, but should not be considered to be legal or official tax advice.*
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