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It depends but you will need to report the sale of this investment property as the sale of a capital asset.
To enter this as a capital asset sale in TurboTax, log into your tax return (for TurboTax Online sign-in, click Here) and type "investment income (gains and losses)" in the search bar then select "jump to investment income (gains and losses)". TurboTax will guide you in entering this information (see step 6 below)
Alternatively, To enter this transaction in TurboTax Online or Desktop, please follow these steps:
Click these links for further information about reporting the sale of a capital asset or Capital Gains and Losses
If you are not able to report this sale under the investment section, you will be able to report it as the sale of a business asset.
To enter this investment property as the sale of a business property in TurboTax Online or Desktop, please follow these steps:
It depends but you will need to report the sale of this investment property as the sale of a capital asset.
To enter this as a capital asset sale in TurboTax, log into your tax return (for TurboTax Online sign-in, click Here) and type "investment income (gains and losses)" in the search bar then select "jump to investment income (gains and losses)". TurboTax will guide you in entering this information (see step 6 below)
Alternatively, To enter this transaction in TurboTax Online or Desktop, please follow these steps:
Click these links for further information about reporting the sale of a capital asset or Capital Gains and Losses
If you are not able to report this sale under the investment section, you will be able to report it as the sale of a business asset.
To enter this investment property as the sale of a business property in TurboTax Online or Desktop, please follow these steps:
I had the same problem and called in a support ticket. Also submitted a bug report. The support reply I received was to go to forms and basically fill out Schedule D where all the 1099-S information flows into.
I hope Intuit/TurboTax fixes this bug, it's a nuisance and more importantly there's other info I need to enter into Schedule D using the walk-me-thru guide so hopefully I won't encounter errors with that over-writing what I apparently need to enter manually (the 1099-S info).
The bug seems to be when the program asks "do you have a 1099-B" and you answer "no", it doesn't take you to the "type of investment sold" question, it basically asks you to fill out 1099-B information which is erroneous.
When I type "No" to receiving a 1099-B, the screen takes me to "Tell us about sale #1" I do not have the option to enter "Other" or describe the sale. I am using Turbotax Premier, so I don't know why. Can you tell me what I should do?
Do you know if TurboTax has been updated with the fix? in the reply you got from Turbo Tax did they provide the steps to manually input data on schedule D? Please share if you have any information on it. I am in a similar situation.
Thanks,
We'll automatically generate and fill out Schedule D when you report 1099-Bs and other capital asset sales:
Please see the links below for more information:
If you need further assistance, please reach out to us.
I updated TurboTax Premier today and started a blank return to see if Intuit has fixed the issue. THEY HAVE NOT. I am disappointed because the program clearly does not behave as the Help/Instructions indicate, and more so since I've called, emailed, and reported this bug directly via the program bug reporting tool. Cass0317's reply does not address the issue, which is WITH REPORTING 1099-S (REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS) AND OTHER NON-1099-B TRANSACTIONS, not with 1099-B's.
I deleted the email reply I received from Turbo Tax - it basically said to navigate to Forms View, Schedule D, and enter the info directly, included the original post from DS30, but lacked sufficient detail to be much help. So, I ended up getting the program to correctly calculate the gain/loss on a real estate transaction (reported on 1099-S) by doing the following:
1) Go to: Federal Taxes/Wages&Income
2) Start (or update) the first item which should be "Stocks, Mutual Funds, Bonds, Other"
3) Choose "yes" when asked if you sold any investments in 2020
4) Choose "no" when asked "Did you get a 1099-B or a brokerage statement for these sales"
5) Choose "I'll enter one sale at a time" on the next screen
6) Enter description, date sold, date acquired, sale proceeds, and cost/other basis. Select the holding period (short or lonog term). Note that date sold and sale proceeds will be shown on your 1099-S. You'll have to rely on your other personal records to get the date acquired and cost/basis.
7) The next couple screens will ask about less-common items for the sale (market discounts, etc.), whether the sale was employee stock, and finally adjustments that may apply. For me, I had some fees/selling expenses to deduct and this is where I entered them.
Fortunately the calculation in my case was pretty straightforward so I could check the math quite easily. Basically take the sales price, subtract the cost/basis, subtract any fees/expenses, and that is the capital gain/loss. I didn't have any depreciation etc.
Oddly, the first time I tried the above steps there were references to 1099-B box numbers which didn't make sense. After I had manually navigating to Forms View/Schedule D, then gave up, when I went back to the steps above in the step-by-step view, I got the data entry boxes as I described in Step 6 above without erroneous references to 1099-B boxes. If you try to follow my steps above, and get something odd, try going to Forms View, Schedule D, then closing and going back to Step-by-Step view and trying my approach again.
Again, very irritating that we have to find workarounds for a minor program bug that should be easily fixed. When I spoke with a TurboTax specialist, she wasn't sure how to report program issues or who in her company to report them to - she was a tax specialist, not a program expert, and didn't know how to contact the program experts.
Same issue. I have the 2020 Premier version. They type selection does not appear at all. Which is very annoying. Don't understand how they wrote step by step instructions without actually confirming the steps by using the software.
Same problem with my partnership return. Sold house that had apartment as rental unit. Cant enter it as single real estate transaction as it calculates the capital gain wrong and I cant correct it manually on form. When I try to do it as two separate transactions as a capital asset sale it just does not feel like an accurate representation of the sale. If I have to I will handle it this way and let the cards fall where they may, I'm still reporting the capital gain which all partners will be taxed on as reported on the K1 accurately so who knows. Agree this should not be an issue with the software as this is not a unique situation.
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