I'm trying to access a 1099s for sale of inherited land in 2020. I'm using the CD/download Deluxe 2020 version of TurboTax. I've tried a few different methods discussed on the forums, but nothing works? Do I have to have the Premier version for this?
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For sale of inherited land, TurboTax Deluxe is the version to use. TurboTax Premier is for people who are renting real estate or selling stocks and bonds.
Any profit you gain from the sale of the inherited home becomes capital gains. You need to figure your basis for the home. That is normally the value of the property on the day that the owner of the home died.
Your total basis will be the inherited basis plus the cost of repairs & improvements.
Here are the steps to enter the sale of the inherited home into TurboTax
Mary,
Thanks for the response, but that's not the way it is working for me. Everything is the same up until number 8 in your response. After I select "no" to the 1099-B question, TT takes me to screen that says "Tell us about this sale". Then I have to select ".. enter one sale at time" or ".. enter a summary for each sales category". I don't ever see numbers 8-13 in your answer. Ideas? Should I start clean instead of importing last year's?
You can continuing entering the information starting with the screen Tell us about this sale
That should record the sell reported on the 1099-S.
I tried that and TT generates a 1099-B Worksheet, a Capital Gain (loss) Adjustments Worksheet, and a Form 8949 (Sales and Other Dispositions of Capital Assets) -- but it does not generate a 1099-S
The program does not generate a 1099-S. It would generate all of the items that you mentioned: the sale on the worksheet, the capitals gains and a Form 8949.
A 1099-S is a form used to report the sale of land, timber or a house to the person who received the proceeds. The information on that is entered in the program. but not the actual form.
Ok - that makes sense, sort of. I would have thought I could see a 1099-S after I enter the info, just like I see a W-2, 1099-R, 1099-DIV, 1099-INT, etc. after the info from those is entered.
Nope. There is not a 1099-S entry screen like there is for all of those other forms you mentioned. To calculate the gain or loss on land, you need the same information (proceeds, basis, and holding period) you would need for stocks, bonds, and other investments. So instead of a separate entry field, all of those types of investments use the same generic form. Any investment not on a 1099-B is entered in that spot.
@DavidRR I am including 2 FAQ's for your reference; one is the Turbo Tax 2020 product guide which outlines the various tax situations that each version supports; the other lists the steps for reporting 1099-S information.
Turbo Tax Online Product Guide
You keep talking about an inherited home and how to show it in Turbo Tax, well my 1099 S is for the sale of raw farm land that was inherited and did not have a home on it. Seems that reporting a home sale would be illogical and wrong. Solutions?
Yes, you are correct, The farm land would be sold as farm land, not a house.
The question is whether or not the farm land was an active farm and being farmed by the decedent before death and after death by the executor of the estate?
If so, then it is the sale of farm land, business property, not the sale of an inherited house.
The farm land was inherited and I as the executor and majority owner of the land, leased it to a neighbor for cultivation and raising of cattle for a fixed yearly cost. Lease cost was $1,000 per year, which was far below the normal rate.
The sale of farm land and the sale of an inherited home are reported in the same way in TurboTax - in the Stocks, Mutual Funds, Bonds and Other interview of Invewstment Income.
See Where do I enter the sale of a second home, an inherited home, or land on my 2019 taxes? for detailed instructions based on the type of TurboTax program you are using (Online or CD/Download).
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