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New Member
posted Jun 6, 2019 1:48:31 AM

Hello. I need help with 1099s from banks and sales of stock. So confused.

I have a 1099b from the sale of 1 share of stock that was acquired when I worked for a company at least 20 years ago.  Your system keeps asking for the date acquired.  It is not on the 1099, and I do not know.  Now what?

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1 Best answer
New Member
Jun 6, 2019 1:48:33 AM

You can estimate the date.  You know it was at least 20 years ago, so you can use a date from 20 years ago.  It really only matters if you held the stock for more or less than a year .  You can google the stock to find a price for that long ago. 

3 Replies
New Member
Jun 6, 2019 1:48:33 AM

You can estimate the date.  You know it was at least 20 years ago, so you can use a date from 20 years ago.  It really only matters if you held the stock for more or less than a year .  You can google the stock to find a price for that long ago. 

New Member
Feb 9, 2022 12:38:19 PM

i need help trying to put in a 1099s form i recieved for the inhertiance of my father house

Expert Alumni
Feb 9, 2022 1:40:52 PM

This will be entered in the 'Wages and Income' section under 'Investment Income' and then 'Stocks, Bonds or Other.'

 

Inherited property is treated as an investment that you made.  You're going to enter the amount you sold the house for directly from your 1099-S.

 

Then you're going to need to enter the date that you acquired the house and what you paid for it (also known as your basis).  In this case the date that you acquired it is the date of your father's death.  What you paid for it is what the house was worth on the day your father died PLUS any costs you had in order to sell it - costs for fixing the house up for sale, costs that you paid at closing that were deducted from that amount on the 1099-S.

 

If you made a profit on the sale of the house - which can happen, especially if your father died a while ago and you've held the house for a while - then you will pay tax on that profit.  If you lost money on the sale - which is more common since most people sell the homes they inherit not too long after they are inherited - then you will get to deduct at least part of the loss on your tax return this year.

 

Here are more detailed steps to enter the home sale.