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My wife and I are both over 65, filing a joint return. On the 2019 Turbotax Premier What-if Worksheet, the standard deduction of $27000 is correctly shown in column 1 (copied from our 1040). However, when I enter the identical information (ages = 70 and 73, "MFJ" filing status, all numerical values the same) manually into column 2, Turbotax computes the standard deduction as $24,400. That is, the calculation seems to ignore the fact that we are both over 65. Is this an error in the What-If calculator?
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You may want to go back and make sure your personal information were entered correctly.
If you are using TurboTax online, click on My Info on the left and renter your information and make sure you indicate you are filing (MFJ) married filing joint.
I believe Turbotax online doesn't have a "what-if" function to compare with. In any case, I'm using the Windows download version. And the personal info is correctly entered -- it's only a matter of the ages and MFJ status (and not being blind or deceased); nothing else should matter for computing the standard deduction.
I've resolved my question: I hadn't seen that "what-if" line 39a requires that I manually enter the number of people over 65. I had assumed that entering the ages at the top of the column would suffice. Thanks.
So, is your itemized deduction higher than the standard even after taking into account the over 65 standard amount? If you are using itemized deduction instead of standard then it should't matter. But if you are forcing TurboTax to use standard instead of the higher itemized amount, then you may likely end up with some issues.
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