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I have provided more information below, but, for $1 in dividends, it is not going to be worth the effort to find the information as it will likely not be on your 1099 form itself. You will just want to select "More than One State."
Note: If you are getting an error related to this during error check, you can enter "XX" in the error check. That is the equivalent of the "more than one state" option and will clear the error and allow you to proceed with your filing.
In all likelihood, the dividends truly are from more than one state, so you are going to want to select "More than One State" - see screenshot below. But its possible you can get a tax benefit on your state return if you can identify which state the dividends are from. The tax benefit you would get would be that your home state would not tax the dividends that come from your state, if there even are any. They would still tax the other dividends.
But, this information would only come from your financial institution. If it is not listed right on the 1099DIV (which it often is not), then you would need to contact your broker or financial institution for more information about the funds investments. It might be listed in your year-end reports or a prospectus online.
Also, you can not worry about trying to find the information and just select more than one state and continue if you:
- Live in a state with no income tax (AK, FL, NV, SD, WA, WY)Still have questions?
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