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Like what? Refunds you gave? It depends.
Not unless you already included it as income first. You can't deduct income you never received. You will just have less income to be taxed on. You take the loss by still deducting all your actual expenses.
There is line 2 on schedule C for returns and allowances.
So I got a bunch of 1099-K from Stripe - they don't deduct processing fees, chargebacks, etc. Can I just go through my Stripe account and use the net volume as reported income since that does deduct the fees? The 1099-K they send is gross volume.
Ok ... then you will report the gross income and then enter all the expenses in the correct categories as you run across them in the interview.
Got it. My next question is filed for an extension and sent in an estimated amount - does that amount goes towards what I actually owe?
Yes. If your extension payment did not automatically show up on 1040 Schedule 5 line 71 which goes to 1040 line 17 you need to enter it. So make sure it's not already there before you enter it!
You can type estimates paid in the search box at the top of your return and click Find and it will give you a link to Jump To the screen where you enter Extension Payments.
To enter the amount you paid with an extension (including state extension) go to
Federal Taxes (or Personal for desktop H&B version)
Deductions and Credits
Then scroll way down to Estimates and Other Taxes Paid
Other Income Taxes - Click the Start or Update button
Next page second section Payments with Extension
Either Visit All or Click Start or Update by the extension you paid
Found it. I did pay estimated taxes but it's not showing in there - I might have used a different account on accident.
Another question - since I sent in estimates earlier this year. Now that I'm about to pay what TurboTax says I owe - will I get refunded if i'm sending in too much? Or since im self employed getting 1099-K's they keep the money?
The tax return is your final accounting to the IRS ... if you over paid the tax bill the excess is either refunded ( no matter what you do for a living ) OR you can choose to apply the refund to the next tax year's estimated payments.
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