All of what I'm assuming are "old" navigational help articles indicate that the product will ask if I received a 1099-B for a sale and give me the opportunity to hit "no," but this is no longer the case as far as I can tell.
EDIT:
There's navigation for this. I posted it, but it had feedback critical of Intuit, and was marked as spam and removed. I'm not going to re-post it in full here, because they've not earned my work if they're not going to accept my criticism.
To summarize the navigation; just assume Intuit doesn't actually mean you need a 1099-B at any point in the process, and just pretend you do have one, leaving any field that asks for non-financial details (Payer name, Payer EIN, etc) blank. When you reach the page where you can pick if it's short term, long term, etc, the drop down has a "not reported on 1099-B" for each of those terms.
You'll need to sign in or create an account to connect with an expert.
I've discovered the answer, and I'm going to leave it here for future folks. It's terribly unintuitive navigation.
Note: Intuit has changed this navigation a LOT on the online version (I haven't verified for Desktop); it looks like this change occurred for the 2019 tax year version, and no help articles or navigation appear to exist for the new navigation. Where the product previously functioned using navigation like that described in this post, which indicates that you will be asked "Did you get a 1099-B or a brokerage statement for these sales," it no longer does so.
Instead, the navigation to input sales for which a 1099-B was NOT received is as follows:
I'm going to leave my customer feedback on this issue here; this wasted multiple hours of my life. I hunted high and low before just navigating my way through everything to find this answer. I thoroughly dislike Intuit's product design team right now for their choices which lead to this navigation configuration.
It's unreasonable to expect users of your product to somehow know that, at the very end of a navigation chain that constantly reinforces that it is for "inputting information received on a 1099-B," there will be an option indicating that no, a 1099-B was not in fact received. This is further reinforced by the inclusion of several "optional" fields like "Payer EIN" in tandem with fields NOT marked optional like "Payer Name." Traditionally, if you show optional fields, then the remainder are mandatory fields, and this is a big flashing red light that says "hey, if you didn't receive a 1099-B, this isn't the right navigation for it!"
I've discovered the answer, and I'm going to leave it here for future folks. It's terribly unintuitive navigation.
Note: Intuit has changed this navigation a LOT on the online version (I haven't verified for Desktop); it looks like this change occurred for the 2019 tax year version, and no help articles or navigation appear to exist for the new navigation. Where the product previously functioned using navigation like that described in this post, which indicates that you will be asked "Did you get a 1099-B or a brokerage statement for these sales," it no longer does so.
Instead, the navigation to input sales for which a 1099-B was NOT received is as follows:
I'm going to leave my customer feedback on this issue here; this wasted multiple hours of my life. I hunted high and low before just navigating my way through everything to find this answer. I thoroughly dislike Intuit's product design team right now for their choices which lead to this navigation configuration.
It's unreasonable to expect users of your product to somehow know that, at the very end of a navigation chain that constantly reinforces that it is for "inputting information received on a 1099-B," there will be an option indicating that no, a 1099-B was not in fact received. This is further reinforced by the inclusion of several "optional" fields like "Payer EIN" in tandem with fields NOT marked optional like "Payer Name." Traditionally, if you show optional fields, then the remainder are mandatory fields, and this is a big flashing red light that says "hey, if you didn't receive a 1099-B, this isn't the right navigation for it!"
I posted an answer to this, which included navigation.
It included feedback that was critical of Intuit, and was marked as spam and removed by the platform moderators.
Sorry, future users with this query. No navigation for you. I edited the gist of the navigation into the post, though.
This no longer works, they require you enter a bank or brokerage.
In the brokerage box, enter "None" Or " No 1099".
In this case your sales category must be C or F.
This way still requires a 1099B attached, which I cannot provide.
When I try to upload my broker statement it uploads, but afterwards the section is still listed as "needs review" and when reviewing the upload is not listed and asks for a new upload.
When there is no 1099-B, your details will be on Form 8949.
When you include Form 8949, there is nothing to attach or mail.
If you get a needs review on that transaction , it probably means you clicked on some option like, "I have other details". Continue on.
If you still need review, e-File anyway. It will probably go through.
OTHERWISE, try a different tax software provider whose software works correctly.
loading a broker 1099-B is a separate issue from not having a 1099-B which I assume is what you posted about, since you are on this thread.
When I try to click continue without putting in a name for the bank or brokerage, it just says "Please provide a name."
Enter the name of the stock in place of the bank or brokerage.
To enter the stock sale without a 1099-B:
Select to 'Type it myself' and do not choose any upload option.
@fvck_you_tvrbotax
Still have questions?
Questions are answered within a few hours on average.
Post a Question*Must create login to post