My federal tax return (single) has itemized deductions. In reviewing the SC state addback worksheet, TurboTax is adding back the difference between my itemized deduction and the standard federal deduction (which is correct and appears on line 1a on my SC1040 form), but also appears to be adding "State and local tax addback" on line 1e "Other additions to income" which appears to be the difference between my itemized deduction amount in my federal return and $10,000. I don't know why it is doing this and I think it is wrong.
If I change my federal return to the standard deduction, on my SC1040 form, line 1a goes to zero, which is correct, but line 1e now populates as $750. I don't know where this number comes from. I can not change what TurboTax puts on line 1e in either situation.
I think this is an error and needs to be corrected. I filed with the standard deduction in 2024 and my SC state return had nothing populated on line 1a or 1e.
You'll need to sign in or create an account to connect with an expert.
South Carolina generally conforms to federal tax law and uses federal taxable income as the starting point for state tax calculations. However, provisions within the "One, Big, Beautiful, Bill Act," enacted federally in mid-2025, were finalized after the South Carolina legislative session had concluded. Consequently, these changes have not yet been incorporated into state law.
Until the legislature votes to conform to this Act, specific federal deductions are not recognized by the state and must be added back to your taxable income.
This currently impacts your return in two ways:
Taxpayers claiming deductions for overtime, tips, and the additional deduction for taxpayers over age 65 will also see add-backs for these amounts.
A comprehensive list of affected items can be found in this recent SC Information Letter.
It is currently unknown if or when the legislature will address conformity. Given this uncertainty, you have two options:
While there is a possibility that the South Carolina Department of Revenue (DOR) could automatically adjust returns filed prior to conformity, the timing and mechanics of such a resolution are currently unknown.
South Carolina generally conforms to federal tax law and uses federal taxable income as the starting point for state tax calculations. However, provisions within the "One, Big, Beautiful, Bill Act," enacted federally in mid-2025, were finalized after the South Carolina legislative session had concluded. Consequently, these changes have not yet been incorporated into state law.
Until the legislature votes to conform to this Act, specific federal deductions are not recognized by the state and must be added back to your taxable income.
This currently impacts your return in two ways:
Taxpayers claiming deductions for overtime, tips, and the additional deduction for taxpayers over age 65 will also see add-backs for these amounts.
A comprehensive list of affected items can be found in this recent SC Information Letter.
It is currently unknown if or when the legislature will address conformity. Given this uncertainty, you have two options:
While there is a possibility that the South Carolina Department of Revenue (DOR) could automatically adjust returns filed prior to conformity, the timing and mechanics of such a resolution are currently unknown.
@SusanY1 Thank you for the quick reply and explanation Susan. I now understand the $750 addback for standard deduction.
What I don’t understand is with an itemized deduction ($18,550, which is compromised of SC income tax, and property tax on my home and cars) why turbo tax is adding back both:
1- the difference between my itemized deduction and the standard deduction, $2800
and
2- the difference between my itemized deduction and the $10,000 SALT cap, $8500
Shouldn’t it either be:
1- $2800 plus the $750 deduction increase for a total of $3550
or
2- $8500
and not both?
It's hard to say for certain just by those numbers, but it sounds like there is some other itemized deduction that is not conforming.
If you'd like, you can share with us a redacted secure copy of the numbers in your return and I can take a closer look.
In TurboTax online you do this by going to the menu on the left from any page in your return and selecting "Tax Tools" and then "Tools". In the pop up box that comes up select "Share my file with an agent".
This will produce a token/code. Return here and paste that token so I can then pull up the data.
If you're in TurboTax desktop this option will be under the "Online" menu.
Still have questions?
Questions are answered within a few hours on average.
Post a Question*Must create login to post
Ask questions and learn more about your taxes and finances.
user17700787501
New Member
jwkied
New Member
Reserved_Parking_01
New Member
OldCarGuy
Level 5
JMark218
Returning Member