Even though I stated that HSA distributions (Box 1 of 1099-SA) were used 100% for medical expenses - the main income screen/summary table displays my distribution amount under "1099-SA, HSA, MSA". This amount is being counted toward my total income (which is adversely affecting the Child Tax Credit for me).
Should appropriately used HSA distributions count as income?
No, as you suspect, any HSA distributions that were used for qualified medical expenses do NOT count as income.
If you are seeing this number on the Personal Income menu screen, this number is the total of your distributions, not (necessarily) the amount added to income.
Look at your 1040 preview (Tax Tools->Tools->View Tax Summary and click on "Preview My 1040") and see what is showing on line 21 for Other Income. If you finished the HSA interview after entering all your HSA data and answering all the questions, then you will not see this number on Line 21.
No, as you suspect, any HSA distributions that were used for qualified medical expenses do NOT count as income.
If you are seeing this number on the Personal Income menu screen, this number is the total of your distributions, not (necessarily) the amount added to income.
Look at your 1040 preview (Tax Tools->Tools->View Tax Summary and click on "Preview My 1040") and see what is showing on line 21 for Other Income. If you finished the HSA interview after entering all your HSA data and answering all the questions, then you will not see this number on Line 21.
Nothing on line 21 of 1040. I guess it's just a misleading presentation issue. Seeing the HSA distribution amount in the main summary "Income" table pretty much implies it is counting toward total income. Maybe TT can do a better job next year of conveying what in the income table actually counts toward total income and what doesn't (tooltips or badges or something). Thank you!
I had the exact same question/issue. There is no point in showing this amount in the income table if it is not counted toward income! At the very least indicate that the amount is not included in the total.
I agree it is misleding, I had the same question. I thought it was showing the distribution as income as well. Thanks for asking the question first.
Just spent a long time with an agent trying to figure this out!!!
I see it as a software problem. they should have made 2 categories for hsa distributions.
Income if you spent money on wine and not income if you got meds
I have same problem. I checked Line 21 on Form 1040 and it does show up as taxable income. How do I correct this problem with the software?
The key is when filling out the 1099-SA, go to line B of Additional Distribution Information/Medical Expenses. Check that box to indicate the expenses were for qualified medical expenses.
My tax liability changed when I entered a Normal Distribution, all used for medical, from my HSA account. Is there a bug in Turbo Tax?
I see the full amount of my distributions showing up on like 21 of my 1040. This was not the case a couple weeks ago but I got a software update for 2017 and now it is all out of whack! My refund has changed significantly. Please help. I need to file this electronically. When is the next update planned?
iookpareke, what you are seeing is the result of bug introduced in the current release (R43) of 2017 TurboTax and is unrelated to the previous posts above. The workaround for you is to delete the Form 1099-SA and reenter it.
Thanks @dmertz . Your workaround fixed it for me. But I'm pretty sure my issue is directly related to the post and comments. 😕
All of the previous posts above predate the introduction of the bug that you experienced, so they have some other cause. I made the statement so that others viewing this question would not necessarily think that deleting and reentering the Form 1099-SA is the fix for any of the previously mentioned cases where an HSA-related amount appears on Form 1040 line 21. For the previously mentioned cases, deleting and reentering the Form 1099-SA would only correct the problem if the user originally entered the Form 1099-SA incorrectly or answered the follow-up questions incorrectly.
If you itemize all your medical expenses, doctor’s visits, etc, that you paid (not paid by insurance) also list the ones paid with the HSA account. It is not clear when they ask you to list them, but you should list the ones you paid out of pocket AND that your HSA account paid. However , don’t list the ones paid by insurance. It will account and offset for the ones paid with your HSA account behind the scenes with the 1099-HSA you input.
If you complete the HSA sections correctly you do NOT need to enter anything in the Medical expenses section at all.
The HSA is handled in 3 parts in the TT program :
First the contribution:
https://ttlc.intuit.com/replies/4557768
https://ttlc.intuit.com/replies/4785646
Next the limitations screen to confirm you are eligible to make the contributions:
Until you complete the HSA portion of the TurboTax interview to establish your eligibility for an HSA contribution, TurboTax will treat the amount entered on the W-2 form as an excess HSA contribution.
https://ttlc.intuit.com/replies/4788059
And lastly any distribution:
Hi
Why HSA Distributions are added to taxable income
I see my HSA Distributions are added to
7a Other income from Schedule 1, line 9 |
This should be not taxable right?
- HS71
You have to tell TurboTax that you used the money on qualified medical expenses. There is a question in the HSA distributions interview where you can indicate that so that it is not taxable.
Type HSA into the search bar, use the Jump to HSA link to go back through the interview and change your answer to that question.
Hello, I still find that when I add the distribution amount from the 1099-SA it adds that amount to my taxable income. I have carefully followed each question in the interview, I keep coming up with the same result. I don't see where in the interview I can indicate that this distribution is not taxable. Can you please show me how I can indicate that this is not taxable income?
Thanks
Jon
When entering the form 1099-SA information, the follow on page asks if the distribution was for medical expenses. You would answer "Yes".
I suggest deleting your Form1099-SA and re-entering to get to the applicable question.
@DMarkM1, thanks for your help, deleting the 1099-SA and entering again fixed the problem.
Kind regards,
Jon
@DMarkM1 ,
I spoke too soon. After deleting the 1099-SA and re-entering that seemed to fix the issue. However, after running the smart check it flagged an issue in the 1099-SA. As you seen in the attached, the amount of my distribution was entered in Box 2 instead of Box 1. If I delete the amount in Box 2 and and put in Box 1 it adds to the taxable income...my taxed owed goes up over $2000.
Any ideas what is happening here?