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Level 3
posted Feb 4, 2023 7:44:34 PM

How to report accrued interest paid on bonds purchased

My combined 1099 form has a page with supplemental information not reported to the IRS, which includes an amount for "accrued interest paid on purchases." I understand that when I buy a bond, I pay the seller for the interest that has accumulated from the last coupon to my purchase date.

 

Do I need to input this amount into Turbotax when I put in my 1099 (in case it adjusts my interest, dividends, capital gains, etc.)? Or would this amount already be factored into the 1099 numbers, and there is nothing else that I need to do with that information? Thanks!

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2 Best answers
Expert Alumni
Feb 6, 2023 9:32:01 AM

No, the seller also receives a 1099. They report the accrued interest. See 2022 Instructions for Schedule B- IRS

Expert Alumni
Feb 22, 2023 9:19:10 AM

You can enter the accrued interest adjustment in the 1099-INT section of TurboTax. 

 

Follow these steps to make an adjustment for the accrued interest paid on your taxable bonds:

  1. Select Federal Taxes
  2. Under Wages & Income select Interest on 1099-INT
  3. Enter your 1099-INT information, select Continue
  4. Select I need to adjust the taxable amount, select Continue
  5. Enter the accrued interest paid in the Adjustment box
  6. Select the Reason for Adjustment as My accrued interest is included in this Form 1099-INT

@jman3 

11 Replies
Expert Alumni
Feb 6, 2023 9:32:01 AM

No, the seller also receives a 1099. They report the accrued interest. See 2022 Instructions for Schedule B- IRS

New Member
Feb 22, 2023 7:56:46 AM

The question was about interest paid, not interest earned.  I think the accrued interest paid on bonds purchased should be an offset against the interest earned on those bonds. Is that not correct?   If I am right, then it appears I need to do a manual override in TurboTax.

Expert Alumni
Feb 22, 2023 9:19:10 AM

You can enter the accrued interest adjustment in the 1099-INT section of TurboTax. 

 

Follow these steps to make an adjustment for the accrued interest paid on your taxable bonds:

  1. Select Federal Taxes
  2. Under Wages & Income select Interest on 1099-INT
  3. Enter your 1099-INT information, select Continue
  4. Select I need to adjust the taxable amount, select Continue
  5. Enter the accrued interest paid in the Adjustment box
  6. Select the Reason for Adjustment as My accrued interest is included in this Form 1099-INT

@jman3 

New Member
May 13, 2023 11:07:52 AM

I followed your instructions, however, the adjustment amount does not appear on schedule. How do I get it to appear?

New Member
May 13, 2023 11:19:23 AM

Never mind it does appear on schedule B.

Level 2
Feb 18, 2024 6:06:28 PM

MarylinG1,

 

Your detailed step-by-step answer to this important question is OUTSTANDING.

The only thing I would add is that it's good to point out that the accrued interest when purchase bond is for the seller to report and for the buyer to deduct from the 1099-INT interests paid.

Level 2
Feb 18, 2024 6:08:51 PM

This is useful but stops short of giving the instructions on how the bond buyer use TurboTax to deduct the accrued interests from the 1099-INT interests

Level 3
Oct 14, 2024 5:21:47 PM

ChacChan - MarilynG1's 6 steps shows exactly what to do. You are adjusting the 1099 amount, lowering it by the amount of accrued interest. That accomplishes exactly what you need/want to do.

Level 1
Mar 14, 2025 10:09:57 PM

Turbo Tax Home and business 2024 is confusing on this point because: suppose you sell a US t-note you bought at discount and report the discount paid to you (line 1f on the 1099-B) using your broker supplied data.. Then on the next TT page you can check the box that "accrued interest ... is reported on a 1099-INT".

On the TT page after that it suggests that you should check your cost basis and maybe make an adjustment. Clearly if I look at my cost basis for the bond reported by the broker on the 1099 B, it will be lower than what I paid because I also had to pay the seller accrued interest. 

So there seem to be two ways to get to the right answer: 1) deduct using a 1099- INT or 2) go back and increase the cost reported on my 1099B to reflect the accrued interest I paid the seller.

It is confusing that TT seems to offer two ways to do the same thing.

Advice, please.  

Which should be used? The second contradicts what the broker says

Level 3
Mar 15, 2025 4:35:15 AM

jksmithpa2, it is going to all be dependent how your broker is reporting the numbers. 

 

The 1099-INT and 1099-B are independent. If your broker included the accrued interest in the year you purchased in the 1099-INT, then utilize the accrued interest adjustment TT offers. If your broker also includes the accrued interest paid at time of purchase in your cost basis on your 1099-B in the year sold/matured, then you should adjust that number.

 

Now, not to complicate things further for you, but, while doing all this, pay close attention that the information is properly flowing to your state tax forms. Don't just assume that it is.

Level 3
Mar 21, 2025 10:36:09 AM

This worked.  It's worth noting that the adjustment entered should be a positive number even though it is reducing your interest income