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I received a 1099-G Taxable Grant. Is there any way to link this payment to a Schedule E as it was for rent.
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To clarify, which box is the payment entered in on the 1099-G?
How did a Grant pay for your rental?
Box 6
Box 6. Tenant applied for rent assistance due to the pandemic. The money received was for 3 months of rent that the tenant did not pay.
This is rental income, so yes, it should be reported on your Schedule-E.
As you walk through the income entries, you will just include the amount reported on the 1099-G as part of the rental income instead of listing it under the 1099-G section.
That sounds great and is what I want to do. But, was a copy of this 1099-G sent to the IRS and want they be comparing my tax return and looking for that 1099-G income?
Yes, a copy was sent to the IRS. If you would happen to get a letter asking about the 1099-G, just respond and let them know it was entered with the rental income. This should be no different than a business getting a 1099-Misc, it is expected that the income on that 1099-Misc is already included in the income. If the income is less than the 1099-Misc, then it would raise a flag, if not, then all is well.
If you report it as a taxable grant instead of rental income, your rental income would be lower, which is inaccurate. But, there is no way to directly link the 1099-G to the Schedule -E at this point.
Can the amount of 1099-G income be included as rental income, 1099-G income, and then entered as an adjustment on Line 24 z as other and if so what is the "type"? Would rather not get a letter from the IRS and delay processing of return.
Q. Can the amount of 1099-G income be included as rental income, 1099-G income, and then entered as an adjustment on Line 8z of Schedule 1 (not line 24 z ) as other income and if so what is the "type"?
A. Yes. that's an alternate way to do it. But I wouldn't. Your situation is common enough, these days, that an IRS letter is unlikely.
If you received an erroneous 1099, you have several choices (your 1099-G is probably not erroneous, but the procedure is the same):
Thanks Hal,
I went with number 3. Shows up clean on Schedule 1 with explanation for action.
I ended up selecting "Other 1099-G" under the income section. I entered the grant amount from box 6 there. It went to schedule 3 then on the same line as rental income on my 1040, combined. So, my rental income on Schedule E was less (because I didn't report this grant money there) but the end result was the same. I don't like it because I think rental income should be on Schedule E, but the HOPE contact says they were correct issuing a 1099-G. I have accepted government assisted rent payments many years and always got a 1099 Misc. This time they say I don't know what I am talking about.
I actually have a follow up question. I am a property manager and helped one of my tenants get housing assistance. I sent my client (the property owner) a 1099 for all rent collected (including the money from the assistance program). However i received a 1099-g from the county program. I dont want to be taxed on income that I didnt actually receive. It was for rent paid to the owner of the property. How do I account for this?
To clarify, as a Property Manager, do you file Schedule C?
If yes, report the 1099-G as Schedule C income, and then the same amount as an expense. Name it something like "rent forwarded to owner"
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