I received a 1099-MISC from our company stock I sold back to them. When I enter the 1099-misc in turbo tax there is no choice for stock sale to enter the cost basis and I get taxed on the full amount. How to I enter this form to get taxed properly. Thank you
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Usually, these types of stock transactions are reported on a 1099-B. However, if the company will not correct it, you could enter your 1099-MISC and then enter a separate line in Other Income with a negative reflecting the cost basis of the stock. The net of these two numbers will be the amount you are taxed on.
First, follow the instructions below to add your 1099-MISC:
Then, deduct the cost basis in Other Income:
Next, preview your 1040 to ensure both the 1099-MISC and the negative stock basis are both reported in Part I, Line 8.
so how would this work in a situation where
- I joined a company and received 100 shares with a cost of $0.i filed form 83b the year i joined for these shares.
- I left the company and a few years later, Sold my shares back to the company for a total of $10000
- Employer issued me a 1099-MISC instead of 1099-B and has become unresponsive
- Will the steps you have outlined above lead to this amount being taxed as capital gains (which is i think is the right thing to do) ?
- When following steps for deduct the cost basis in other income. What is the amount that i will list as negative?
Does your provided solution ensure that this amount is taxed as capital gains vs income
You can report the stock sale as an investment sale even though it was incorrectly reported on a 1099-MISC. The IRS matches income and will see that the amount on the 1099-MISC has been entered in your tax return. Keep your records about the shares that you received and the sale back to the company if ever needed. The buyback will be correctly added to your tax return by reporting this as though you received a 1099-B.
To enter the information without a 1099-B:
Thank you @PattiF . Do i also need to do positive and reversal entry of the 1099 misc?
No, it is not necessary at all to enter the 1099-MISC in the return.
Here is the same solution from another expert (IreneS) that does not mention adding and subtracting the 1099-MISC:
You can enter the sale of stock reported on a 1099-MISC using these steps:
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