I inherited some stock and do not know when it was purchased or what the purchase price was.
I donated the stock to a charity. Why does TurboTax ask me what the purchase price was and the date it was bought?
That shouldn't matter since I gave it all away to charity, right?
This has stopped me dead in my tracks on preparing my taxes for 2018.
Thanks in advance!
You'll need to sign in or create an account to connect with an expert.
Typically when people are giving away (usually appreciated) stock they are giving stock that they purchased and usually the stock is held long-term. But of course you could be giving away (foolishly) stock that has either gone down in value or stock that you purchased a month before the gift. The tax rules as to the amount of allowable charitable contribution deductions differ depending on the situation and that's why TurboTax is asking those questions.
When you enter the donation there's a page that comes up that asks how you acquired the stock; you click "inherited". (First picture below.) You get a page of instruction that outlines how you're supposed to proceed in this situation. (Second picture below.)
Typically when people are giving away (usually appreciated) stock they are giving stock that they purchased and usually the stock is held long-term. But of course you could be giving away (foolishly) stock that has either gone down in value or stock that you purchased a month before the gift. The tax rules as to the amount of allowable charitable contribution deductions differ depending on the situation and that's why TurboTax is asking those questions.
When you enter the donation there's a page that comes up that asks how you acquired the stock; you click "inherited". (First picture below.) You get a page of instruction that outlines how you're supposed to proceed in this situation. (Second picture below.)
Thank you for this answer. I had a situation where I gave away stock inherited less than a year, and entering Various as the date inherited was the key to getting it to give me the fair market value as a deduction.
Note for anyone else who sees this -- when it asks you if you have owned the stock for more than 1 year, you have to say "Yes", even if you inherited it less than a year ago. All inherited property is long-term regardless of when inherited.
Turbotax I know this probably doesn't affect very many of your users, but it sure threw me for a loop, it sure would be nice to handle this use case better in the interview.
Still have questions?
Questions are answered within a few hours on average.
Post a Question*Must create login to post
Ask questions and learn more about your taxes and finances.
jsgdavidmrg
New Member
raviraju88
New Member
torrescharfauros
New Member
dmertz
Level 15
Robs2
Returning Member