2092070
Has anyone else noticed there is an error on Alabama Schedule CR? The form was correct when taxes I filed in February. However, an update since then changed the form and it is now populating Line 2 that reads "Portion of Alabama Adjusted Gross Income Attributable to this State" with the other states taxable income rather than the AGI attributable to the other state. The result causes the tax due to Alabama to be incorrect.
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More clarification is needed to answer your question correctly - was your return rejected? If so, what code was given for the reject?
Furthermore, what states did you earn other income in?
The other state is Georgia. The Alabama tax was successfully filed in February with a balance due of $4.00. That was correct. However, when I went back in mid-March to print copies for my records I noticed the balance due was $569. I had saved a copy to a PDF the day I filed, so I printed that copy and compared the two and found the Turbo Tax error on the Schedule CR. Therefore, at some point between the date I filed in late February and mid-march an update occurred that put the software in error. Today, the software still contains the error and anyone whose return requires the Schedule CR is probably overpaying the Alabama Tax. By the way, I checked my returns for the previous three years which further confirmed the software today is not calculating Alabama taxes correctly. If it is not fixed I will not trust this product anymore..
@dwd4204 I just noticed this exact issue. The line 1 of schedule CR "other state" taxable income is flowing to line 2 "other state" adjusted gross income. Previous years this flowed correctly. Not going to use Turbo Tax anymore unless this issue is resolved, or some clarity is given why the calculation is inconsistent with prior years.
@LenaH There hasn't been a law change related to Alabama credit for taxes paid to other states since the 2018 tax year, so Turbo Tax/Intuit is getting this one wrong.
I have noticed the same thing - form CR is not matching their new form OC (A3) calculation for my GA (Non resident) to AL (resident)
Did you get clarification from TT on this?
There is no AL taxable income only GA and it has the incorrect percentage on line A3.
It is still making this calculation incorrect. Has anyone found a fix? It will not let me manually put the correct number on line 2
Hi dwd4204, Cocotheape, LenaH, kprater08 and bama_88:
There have been changes in tax legislation in 2020, which may have an impact on tax calculations filed early. When the program is updated (next time you update a desktop version or sign back into an online account), you will see these numbers adjusted to reflect new legislation. Without viewing a diagnostic of your individual situation, a clear or complete analysis is pending.
To provide some guidance on how to determine if your schedule CR is properly calculating the credit, here is some guidance, using AL as your resident state and MS as your state of employment.
When you answer the interview series of questions, in sequence, the software will properly calculate your taxes and flow through to your states. You will need to complete your non-resident state, first, in order for your resident state to properly calculate your taxes. If your software has not been updated with the updated tax legislation and you have not cleared cache and cookies, your forms may not properly transfer your values. Your internet speed may also have an impact.
Simple example assuming Married Filing Jointly with only W-2 income
FORM 1040
Federal Return AGI (adjusted gross income), line 11 - $ amount A (W-2 box 1)
Federal Return Taxable Income, line 15 - $ amount B
MS state - Form 80-205 (non-resident)
MS AGI line 16 - $ amount C (this should correlate with income earned in MS state)
MS taxable income, line 19 - $ amount D
MS tax, line 20 - $ amount MIT
AL state - Form 40 (resident)
AL AGI, line 10 - $ amount E (W-2 box 5)
AL Taxable Income, line 16 - $ amount F
AL line 17 - $ amount G relates to calculation from tax table (5% less $80)
AL line 18 - $ amount H relates to net AL state tax due, based on schedule OC calculation, which adjusts AL state tax due from tax paid to MS (schedule CR). Line 29 ($1,363 – amount N) adjusts for state tax paid to AL (in this example, from W-2).
AL Schedule OC
Section A – $ amount G
Section B - Current Year Credits - Part A
A1 - MS line 19, $ amount D
A2 - AL AGI line 10, $ amount E
A3 - amount D / amount E = % J
A4 - % J x amount G = $ amount K
A5 - $ amount MIT
A6 - the lower of A4 and A5 - $ amount K (in this example)
AL Schedule CR - Credit for Taxes Paid to Other States
State 1 - MS
A - MS taxable income - $ amount D
B - Tax imposed by MS - $ amount MIT
C - MS AGI - $ amount C
Part 1 (state 1 - MS)
1 - MS taxable income - $ amount D
2 - Portion of MS taxable income included in AL AGI - $ amount D
(if you are resident of AL state the whole year, 1 and 2 will be the same amount)
3 - AL calculation of tax due to MS - $ amount L
4 - MS tax due - $ amount MIT
5 - smaller of 3 and 4 - $ amount MIT (in this example)
Part 6
26 - AL AGI attributed to (earned in) other states (MS) - $ amount D (in this example)
27 - total credits - $ amount MIT (in this example)
SUMMARY
AL TAX DUE: AL Form 40 line 18 (($H) and line 21, in this example) net tax due should agree to AL Schedule OC, Section E, line E5 ($H).
AL TAX LESS MS CREDITS: AL Schedule OC Section A ($G) has been adjusted for the allowable MS credits in Section B ($K); refer again to Section E ($H).
AL NET TAX DUE: AL Form 40 line 29 tax due ($ N) is the difference between line 21 ($H) and line 28 (AL payments per W-2 box 17).
Based on entering a sample in turbotax desktop home & business version, the taxes are properly calculating.
TurboTax does not review specific calculations without a diagnostic, as each tax situation is unique and some calculations have complex underlying calculations which require additional analysis. Share a diagnostic with Turbo Tax Live, if you need further analysis.
I am still experiencing issues with this. This has not be fixed. It is not correctly calculating what I paid to Georgia. It is only giving me credit for a portion although I paid the full amount, more than the full amount. How can I speak with someone on the phone to get this cleared up?
Perhaps the information here will be helpful and included will be your contact link should you still need it.
In general the credit for taxes paid to a nonresident state, on the same income that is being taxed to your resident state works as follows.
Credit for taxes paid to another state is allowed by a resident state when the same income is being taxed to another state. Your resident state does not want you to pay tax twice on the same income. The credit that is allowed will be the lesser of:
If you would like to speak with someone use the information and link provided to begin the conversation.
For the 2023 Tax Return, Schedule CR, Column C , still shows the taxable income attributable to other states and not the Adjustable Gross Income attributable to other states. When the total is carried over to Schedule OC, the percentage calculated on Line A3 is less than it should be and the amount on Line A4 is too low, resulting in a smaller allowable credit.
AL only allows a credit based on the taxable income to both states. Each state has different rules for calculating income. Usually taxable income is used as a good starting point. Notice for A1, it is not the other states income or taxable income used. It is the AL version of the income.
We don't know of any issues with the AL credits form. All states have the same credit method. You get credit for the lower state tax on the lowest taxable amount.
See page 22 of the AL instructions for an example.
Here are the AL rules from page 1 instructions for sch OC:
Part A – Credit for Taxes Paid to Other States (Form 40 Only)
This credit is provided to prevent the double taxation of income and is only available to legal residents of Alabama filing Form 40 who have income from sources outside of Alabama that is being taxed by Alabama and another state (or territory of the United States) in the same tax year. Residents of Alabama for only a part of the tax year can claim this credit only if the returns filed with Alabama and the other state cover the same periods. In order to claim this credit, you must complete the Schedule CR, this section and attach a copy of other state’s return or W-2G’s if the taxing state does not allow a return to be filed for gambling winnings. (For more instruction see Form 40 Tax Booklet)
NOTE: Residents that worked and received income/wages from a state that doesn’t have income tax will not be eligible for the credit for taxes paid to another state.
A1. Sum of Alabama Adjusted Gross Income Attributable to all other States
from Schedule CR, line 26.
A2. Alabama Adjusted Gross Income from Form 40, page 1, line 10.
A3. Total Other States' % of Alabama AGI (Divide line A1 by line A2).
A4. Multiply the current tax liability (Section A) by line A3.
A5. Enter line 27 from Schedule CR.
A6. Credit Allowable (Enter smaller of lines A4 or A5). Enter here and on Section C, Part A, Column 3.
Amy, thanks for your response. Here is some additional information.
All earned income was from the other, non-resident state.
No Alabama earned income. Only some dividend income.
Below are Schedules CR and OC after entering all information into TurboTax Premier.
RESULT
A1 is the other state’s Taxable Income.
A2 is AL Adjusted Gross Income
A3 results in a smaller percentage
A4 results in a smaller credit
SCHEDULE CR
Double-Taxed Income Smart Worksheet
A NY
B New York
C Other state’s taxable Income: 22,535
D Amount of tax imposed by other state: 1,081
E Other state’s income included in Alabama AGI: 30,281
Col A NY
Col B Taxable income on other state’s return: 22,535
Col C Portion of AL AGI attributable to other state: 22,535
Col D Tax due other state using AL tax rates: 1,088
Col E Tax due shown on other state’s return: 1,081
Col F Smaller of D and E: 1,081
Line 26 Sum of Col C: 22,535
Line 27 Sum of Col F: 1,081
SCHEDULE OC
Section A
Current Tax Period liability: 1,273
Section B
A1. From Schedule CR, line 26: 22,535
A2. AL AGI from Form 40, page 1, line 10: 31,273
A3. Other States' % of AL AGI (line A1/A2): 72.06%
A4. Multiply Current tax liability (Section A) by A3: 917
A5. Enter line 27 from Schedule CR: 1,081
A6. Credit Allowable (smaller of lines A4 or A5): 917
I see, the liability for the state of AL must be $1273. Since 72.06% of the income is earned out of state, you are receiving credit for the actual AL tax liability of the NY income., $917 is the AL tax on the NY income.
The $1081 was based on just the NY income and NY tax liability.
You get credit for the lower state tax on the lowest taxable amount.
The numbers are correct in their calculations.
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