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I am getting a head start on 2021 taxes using TurboTax 2021. I noticed that when I entered a deduction for a non-working spousal IRA contribution based on my salary income (we file MFJ), that TurboTax allowed the deduction for the Fed taxes, but disallowed it for the State of California taxes. Is a non-working spousal IRA contribution really not deductible on California taxes if the other spouse has a salary that exceeds their combined contribution and they file married jointly? That doesn't make sense to me. Or is this a bug in TurboTax?
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I figured it out. TurboTax is correct as is. It turns out that California law does not conform to Federal law on deductible IRA contributions for those over 70 1/2 (the SECURE Act repealed that age limit, but California doesn't recognize that change - at least not yet). My spouse is over 70 1/2 -- that is why her contribution is not deductible for California taxes. However it is still deductible for Fed taxes.
Contributions to an individual retirement arrangement, or IRA, that you deduct on your federal income taxes are also deductible on your California state income taxes. However, you don't actually "take" an IRA deduction anywhere on your California tax return. The California return uses your federal adjusted gross income as a starting point for computing your state taxable income -- and your federal AGI already includes your IRA deduction.
Also the CA 2021 program is not available yet and what is will not be fully functional until sometime late January.
When will my forms be ready?
Historically, IRS tax forms start becoming available in January, with a few stragglers (most notably Form 1040X) getting finalized in February.
State tax forms can become available for filing any time between December and late February, depending on the state and the tax form.
For specific forms and dates, refer to the Forms Availability Table for your TurboTax product, see the related information below.
Can I Still Work On My Return Before My Forms are Ready?
Yes, according to the following:
Federal Taxes
You can still work on your return and finish most of it. Once your forms become available, we’ll create the forms and include all of your info.
You’ll only be able to e-file or print your return once the forms are available.
While you’re working on your return, we’ll ask if you want to receive email updates when your forms become available.
State Taxes
If your forms aren’t available, you’ll get a message asking you to return once they become available.
While you’re working on your return, you’ll have a chance to let us know you want to receive email updates when your forms become available.
What is line 19 of Sch 1 showing as an IRA deduction?
I already know that. TurboTax took our full $14,000 IRA contribution from the Fed form but then inserted a "Subtraction" of $7000 on the Adjustments to Income part of the California return with a note saying it is a disallowed IRA deduction. Thus my question as posted.
It's actually line 20 of Schedule 1. That says $14,000.
I think @Critter-3 has your answer. Too early to be sure the program has full functionality and the state program and forms have not yet been finalized.
I figured it out. TurboTax is correct as is. It turns out that California law does not conform to Federal law on deductible IRA contributions for those over 70 1/2 (the SECURE Act repealed that age limit, but California doesn't recognize that change - at least not yet). My spouse is over 70 1/2 -- that is why her contribution is not deductible for California taxes. However it is still deductible for Fed taxes.
Good to know ... many states will need to review this issue and decide on what they will allow or not allow.
If you switch over to the FORMS mode and look at the CA worksheet you should also see the explanation that way.
If you are trying to do some tax planning then use the fully operational 2020 downloaded version instead.
This is my mini version of a tutorial that should be in the downloaded program:
Forms Mode lets you view and make changes to your tax forms "behind the scenes."
If you're adventurous, you can even prepare your return in Forms Mode, but we don't recommend it. You may miss obscure credits and deductions you qualify for, and you may forget to report things that will come back and haunt you later.
Forms Mode is exclusively available in the TurboTax CD/Download software. It is not available in TurboTax Online.
If you want to play around with different figures and tax scenarios without affecting your original return you can ….
Once you have filed shut off the auto updater function and save the return and .taxfile.
It's always a good idea to make a backup copy of your tax data file, in case your original gets lost or corrupted. Here's how:
If you make changes to your original tax return file, repeat these steps to ensure your original and backup copies are in-synch.
AND save it as a PDF so you have access to a copy even if you don’t have the program still installed and operational :
AND protect the files :
*** Other clues to the downloaded program ***
In the forms mode ... double click or right click on a box on a form to data source it ... sadly it doesn't work on all boxes.
When you look at an onscreen tax form using Forms Mode, you might wonder why one figure is blue and the one next to it is red or black.
These colors indicate the source of that data.
Color | Meaning |
Blue | You entered this data, either in the interview or Forms Mode. |
Black | The program entered this data or calculated this amount. |
Red | This data has either been overridden or is invalid (for example, a ZIP code that doesn't exist). |
Red italics | You marked this amount as estimated. |
Black italics | The program calculated this amount from an amount you marked as estimated. |
Purple | This information has supporting details. |
Aquamarine | This data was transferred over from last year. |
Green | This data was imported from Quicken or QuickBooks. |
Yellow fields (Windows) | Yellow fields allow user input. Anything you enter here shows up in blue. |
New Jersey doesn't allow any deduction for an IRA or 401k contribution.
I guess you don't really care about that.
As the NJ gov said before winning re-election, if you don't like the taxes, maybe NJ is not the state for you.
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