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Level 2
posted Apr 3, 2025 4:11:27 PM

TurboTax Premier Incorrectly Calculated Underpayment Penalty Using Annualized Method

I received a large chunk of my AGI in December 2024 from Required Minimum Distributions from tax free accounts (another thing that sucks about being in your 70's).  As a result I was under withheld and was being charged an underpayment penalty of over $1,000.    I figured this was exactly the situation that was meant to be addressed by using the annualized method (actually inputting when you received income as opposed to assuming it was equally spread throughout the year), so I went back to segment of the interview when the tax underpayment penalty was calculated and elected to use the annualized method.  The interview then required me to allocate my received income into three periods--1/1-3/31/24; 1/1/-5/31/24 and 1/1-8/3124.  I had to do this not only for ordinary income but also for Short Term Cap Gains, Long Term Cap Gains and Qualified Dividends.  I also had to allocate certain taxes paid (Medicare Taxes, Foreign Taxes) among these periods.  Assembling all this data was a fair amount of work--but at the end of the process, TurboTax was telling me there was no difference in my underpayment penalty--still over $1,000.  I said this cannot be and decided to delve into the forms.  

When I looked at the Form for calculating the underpayment penalty (Form 2210) on the first page of the Form in Part II there is a box to be checked "If your income varied during the year and your penalty is reduced or eliminated when figured using the annualized income method.  You must figure the penalty using Schedule A1...".   This box was not checked.  I then navigated to Schedule A1 to Form 2210 and observed that none of the information on actual payment dates of income and taxes that I laboriously entered into the interview had been carried to the schedule.  So I proceeded to manually re-enter the information in the appropriate boxes on the Schedule.  Voila, my underpayment penalty was reduced by over $500.

It would appear to me that this is a programming glitch which is failing to transfer the information I entered in the interview to the Schedule.  This is a fault in the program which was going to cost me real money.

Of course, there is no one to talk to at TurboTax to point this fault out to--so Buyer Beware.

0 22 6592
22 Replies
Level 5
Apr 3, 2025 4:31:30 PM

I am very interested in hearing TT response to this problem.

 

I am wondering if you had withholdings equal to 100% of last year's tax obligation if it would have avoided the penalty. That assumes the IRA custodian allows you to specify sufficient withholdings.

Expert Alumni
Apr 4, 2025 7:35:04 AM

Generally, if you had withholdings equal to 100% of last year's tax obligation, you might have avoided the underpayment penalty, provided your adjusted gross income (AGI) was $150,000 or less. The IRS allows taxpayers to avoid penalties if they pay either 90% of the current year's tax or 100% of the prior year's tax, whichever is smaller.

 

However, if your AGI exceeded $150,000, the threshold increases to 110% of the prior year's tax. Additionally, the IRS requires estimated tax payments to be made quarterly, so even if you met the withholding requirement, timing could still impact whether a penalty applies.

 

Your IRA custodian's rules on withholding are important here. Some custodians let you set withholding amounts, while others may have limits. You need to contact them to find out what their policy is in regards to setting your withholding amounts. 

 

Underpayment of estimated tax by individuals penalty

 

@crash345u 

Level 2
Apr 4, 2025 9:06:09 AM

Thanks.  Yes, I am aware of the IRS's requirements on withholding.  Believe it or not, I am 74 years old and have never filed estimated tax returns.  When I was working all my income was W-2 and was withheld by my employers.   Since I have been retired I have continued not to file quarterly estimated tax payments and was mostly happy to pay underpayment penalties of a couple of hundred dollars at the end of the year to avoid having to file multiple tax returns.  But this year the penalty was over $1,000 because of the December RMD's.  

 

The reason for my posting was to point out that the TurboTax program was not working property.  When I went back to my return and re-did the part that dealt with the underpayment penalty and went to all the trouble of annualizing capital gains (long and short term), qualified dividends and my ordinary income into the three mandated periods. I was dismayed to learn that TurboTax was still showing the same penalty.  As I said in my original post, this was apparently because the new data that I input to annualize my income was not being carried from the interview onto the tax forms.  When I did this manually, I got a quite different result and saved myself about $600.  THE PROGRAM IS NOT WORKING PROPERLY AND SOMEONE AT TURBOTAX SHOULD LOOK INTO THIS.

Returning Member
Apr 4, 2025 8:10:58 PM

I'm having the same problem.  When I change the taxes paid in a quarter sometimes the penalty changes and sometimes it doesn't.  Seems to be a bug in the program.  I'm using deluxe on the desktop. 

 

Anyone know what to change that might trigger an update?

 

Level 15
Apr 4, 2025 8:16:52 PM

If you get a penalty on 1040 line 38, you might be able to eliminate it or at least reduce it. You can go to Federal Taxes tab or Personal tab, under Other Tax Situations and select Start by the Underpayment Penalties. You will answer a series of questions that may reduce or eliminate the penalty. Or you can elect to have the IRS figure the penalty for you. It's form 2210.


How to add form 2210 for Underpayment Penalty
https://ttlc.intuit.com/community/tax-payments/help/how-do-i-add-form-2210/00/25703

 

It's under

Federal or Personal (for Home & Business Desktop)

Other Tax Situations

Additional Tax Payments

Underpayment Penalties - Click the Start or update button

 

Level 8
Apr 5, 2025 6:49:12 AM

@royper tbh it's unlikely to be a bug, TT is very solid on it's core tax calcs.

 

Penalty is calculated quarterly and if you had uneven payments then you can get underpayments or overpayments so it depends how those quarterly payments line up with the safe harbor threshold.

 

If you are on desktop then go to Forms mode, if you don't see Form 2210 in the list of forms then double-click on the penalty line on Form 1040 and double-click again on the penalty line in the 1040 worksheet to bring up Form 2210 which will show you how the penalty is being calculated.

 

If still stuck if you can provide more specifics then someone here may be able to explain further.

Level 2
Apr 5, 2025 9:48:21 AM

I truly appreciate anyone with expertise who tries to offer help in a Community Forum such as this.  However, it sometimes seems as if people posting help never read the initial post. (Except maybe the one person who noted that he was having the same problem with a different version of the software.)

 

My issue was not that I had to pay an underpayment penalty (I think at some level I understand how that works), but that the using the interview interface with the software, the calculated penalty did not change when I went back to the part of the interview where the underpayment penalty is calculated and elected to use the annualized income approach to calculating the penalty (entering all the data requested by the interview for 4 different types of income and portioning those four types into the four periods specified (1/1-3/31/24, 1/1-5/31/25 and 1/1-8/31/24).  I was surprised that this did not result in a reduction of the underpayment penalty since I received over 1/2 of my annual income in the last month of the year.

 

This led me to look at the forms which were created with the data that I entered via the interview process and I noted that form 2210 had not selected the option to attempt to reduce the penalty by annualizing income and that none of the data that I entered during the interview process annualizing my income had been carried to to Schedule A1 to Form 2210.  In other words, the interview process was not properly interfacing with the forms.

 

I then proceeded to manually enter the required income annualization data directly onto the Tax forms and Voila my penalty was reduced by more than 1/2,

 

So, I don't need help in calculating my penalty (I believe that by entering the data directly into the forms the software has done this), but I do believe that there is a bug in the software that is failing to post data entered via the interview process onto Form 2210 and its Schedule.  Apparently, at least one other responder to my post has experienced a similar issue.

New Member
Apr 6, 2025 6:44:30 AM

Essentially the same scenario for us, including taking a lump sum RMD in December.  Our annual income ended up higher than I had expected so we owed more tax, and therefore had to pay the "failure for proper estimated tax" penalty that TurboTax Deluxe calculated to be $332.  Okay, whatever, but then last week we were refunded $297.10 by the IRS because they said that our penalty should have only been $24.90.

 

We have Federal tax withheld monthly from pensions, and also have a chunk of money taken out of the December RMD for Federal tax.

Level 2
Apr 6, 2025 12:10:11 PM

So, to clarify, did you use the "Interview" interface to enter the relevant information for calculation of the under withholding penalty or did you input your data directly into the appropriate forms (Form 2210 and its Schedule A1)?  Did you ask the interview to see if your penalty could be lowered by annualizing your income?

Level 5
Apr 8, 2025 6:14:12 AM

@DaveF1006 

 

Can you please clarify your statement below "so even if you met the withholding requirement, timing could still impact whether a penalty applies" I can't find this language anywhere. My understanding was withholdings were always considered even payments. 

 

However, if your AGI exceeded $150,000, the threshold increases to 110% of the prior year's tax. Additionally, the IRS requires estimated tax payments to be made quarterly, so even if you met the withholding requirement, timing could still impact whether a penalty applies.

 

 

 

New Member
Apr 8, 2025 9:58:54 AM

Interview style only. 

 

I did not interrogate the software.  I just followed the interview path. 

New Member
Apr 9, 2025 6:47:12 PM

100%.  my income is largely Q4, and I annualized every year.  The software follows until the end of my entries, and then the system reverts to previous calcs with a full penalty.  This is a bug.   Stay tuned... 

 

Level 2
Apr 9, 2025 7:25:46 PM

Well, as they say, when it happens once--**bleep** happens.  When happens twice, a coincidence; a third time and it's enemy action.  So, we have three users posting in this thread who used the interview approach and tried to get the software to properly calculate an under payment penalty using the annualized income approach and the software fails to calculate the penalty properly.  In my case, I used the interview approach and when it appeared to be incorrectly calculating the penalty (the indicated penalty did not change from the non-annualized approach), I checked the actual forms and found that none of the data that I had entered in the interview process had been carried to the forms.

 

TurboTax--are you listening??!!!  There is a bug in your program.

New Member
Apr 9, 2025 8:39:27 PM

I have the same issue. My income is uneven throughout the year, and I received a major chunk of income in August 2024. After entering all the numbers TurboTax asks, the underpayment penalty stays the same. 

 

Does anyone know how to fix this issue?

Expert Alumni
Apr 9, 2025 9:06:59 PM

Try deleting Form 2210 and/or 2210AI and then go back through the penalty interview.  @jstroebel   @ct8889 

 

How to delete forms in TurboTax Online

 

How to delete forms in TurboTax Desktop

New Member
Apr 9, 2025 9:09:52 PM

I am using TurboTax online. Do you know how to fix it there?

Level 2
Apr 10, 2025 5:58:30 AM

At the moment (until TurboTax fixes the glitch between the interview interface and the actual IRS forms for calculation of the underpayment penalty), the only way I know around this is to go to the Forms themselves and enter the data manually.  Then the calculation seems to work (at least the answer changes and the penalty is lower--mine was cut by half.

 

So, go to the banner line at the top of the screen and select Forms.  Then you will see a list of the IRS forms in the left-hand column of the page.  Scroll down to Form 2210 (the Underpayment of Estimated Tax Form).  If your experience is like mine, you will find that a lot of the form has already been filled in from information you entered in the Interview process.  What wasn't filled in in my cases was Part II on the first page of the Form.  I was surprised to see that box C ("Your income varied during the year and your penalty is reduced or eliminated when figured using the annualized income installment method...:"  Check this Box.  You will note at the end of this statement it tells you to go to Schedule A1 to Form 2210.  Then either "Quick Zoom" (whatever that is) to Schedule A1 or just select that Schedule from the left hand column listing all the forms.  Once you get to this form, you will again find that all the information you painfully calculated and entered in the Interview process, has not carried to the form.  Enter this information in the appropriate places on the Schedule (I think the only information that you will have to enter are your annualized AGI (line 1) and annualizing your capital gains in the Capital Gain Computation Smart Worksheet.  The rest of the information on the Form will be filled in for you.  Toward the end of the Schedule  (line 27) you will see the calculations which you need to carry over to Form 2210, Part III, line 10.  I believe again you will find that once you have completed Schedule A1, most of the required information is already carried over to Form 2210.  Again, this resulted in my calculated penalty being reduced by half.

 

Level 8
Apr 10, 2025 6:20:53 AM

I'm not saying there isn't some issue in TT if multiple people are experiencing a problem.  But for folks going through this process, one thing to beware of having gone thru the interview process there is a question at the end whether you want to adopt the AI method which defaults to NO by checking the box and you have to uncheck that box to apply the method.  It's very confusing and seems easy to undo all the work that was done.  Personally I had no issues with the AI method via the interview screens, using Mac Desktop / Premier version.

Returning Member
Apr 10, 2025 7:47:39 AM

The method below can also help to clarify how to use the annualized method for 2024.  Just ignore anything about 2025 and you should be fine.

 

I have found a way to use 2024 (previous year as we are in 2025) Turbotax to get a rough idea of the estimated tax payments I need to make in 2025 (current year) to minimize my tax penalty when my 2025 income is expected to be UNEVEN.  I’m not sure, but I think that the 2025 estimated tax payments generated by ttax 2024 is based on the assumption that your total expected income in evenly distributed throughout the year, as does the IRA. This can lead to a large penalties if your income is significantly larger in certain quarters.  You can use also this when you expect to get 2025 W2 income together with uneven 1099 or other income.  This method presumes that tax rates will not drastically change from 2024 to 2025.  You are only looking for an estimate of possible penalties of +/- ~$100 in penalty.

If there is a simpler way, let me know and I’ll kick myself :).  If there is an issue with this method let me and others know.  As I finished this, I realize it’s too long and no one will likely read it!  I wanted to explain this to myself.

I do this because my projected (current year) 2025 income is a result of quarterly ROTH conversions that change depending on how my investments and market is doing.  I’m retired and need to convert as much of my IRA to ROTHs before 73 to minimize taxes from RMDs. 

There are three key steps:

  1.  Using the step-by-step mode REPLACE ALL 2024 income in 2024 turbotax (previous year) with your EXPRECTED income for 2025 (current year).  I start with this as it has all my info but you can start a new 2024 return if you prefer. You can do this in the step-by-step mode by just replacing the 2024 income in the “wages and income section”.  You can use this method if you have W2, 1099 or interest and div income.  You are basically creating a MOCK 2025 tax return using the 2024 ttax program.

  2. Add any 2025 data to the “Deductions and Credits”

  3. After you do this the next key step is to use the step by step mode and go to the “other Tax situations”  -> “Additional Tax Payments” -> Underpayment penalties and hit update. At some point it will ask “Do you want to annualize your income?”

  4. Answer yes.   When you go through this you MUST enter your total previous year 2024 tax, in the “2023 (previous year) Tax Liability” box. The 2023 year was entered automatically imported by TTax because you are using the 2024 ttax you filled out in 2025.   You want to use PREVIOUS year (2024) because you are faking the 2024 ttax program to estimate the penalties for the current year (2025) based on projected income.
  5. I know, this can be confusing!   At least it was to me.

  6. Next add your (previous year) 2024 adjusted year gross income in the “2023 AGI” box.  These two, total tax and AGI of from previous year (2024) is needed for the annualization calculations to determine the (current year) 2025 estimated tax payments to avoid penalties.

  7. Answer yes to “do you want to annualize your income”

  8. Next add your CUMULATIVE 2025 (not 2024) income for Q1, Q1+Q2, Q1+Q2+Q3 in the three input boxes under “Annualized AGI”.  The fourth box will already be filled in from the total 2025 PROJECTED income you added earlier.  The last box will automatically be Q1+Q2+Q3+Q4 income if you had added ALL PROJECTED 2025 income in the income section.  Note that IF you have steady w2, and interest income, etc., these also need to be cumulatively added in these boxes as they are generated PER QUARTER along with any 1099-misc income in each quarter.  THIS IS KEY. 

  9. IMPORTANTLY, before you start determining your estimated taxes needed to avoid penalties in 2025, IF you have significant tax that you expect to be WITHHELD in the current (2025) year (e.g. from a W2) (BUT NOT PAID AS ESTIMATED PAYMENTS) then you will need to go directly to Form 2210 to add that. This HAS to be done in the form 2210 itself, using “view Forms” as I could not find a way to do this in step-by-step.

  10. You may see forms 2210, 2210 Penalty and 2210AI forms listed under “forms in my return” in view form.  Form 2210AI will have the cumaltive income you added in the step-by-step and form “2210 penalty” will show any expected penalty.

  11. Determine the projected CUMULATIVE quarterly tax you expect to be WITHHELD from any W2 income (you need to estimate these) AND check box D in Part II of the form 2210 in view forms.  You add this cumulative (WITHHELD only) tax to the boxes under “Part II, Line D - “Tax withheld Smart Worksheet”.  Any significant interest income from savings accounts and div, I typically estimate by dividing the expected totals by 4 (for 4 quarters) and add that those cumulatively to the boxes in this section.  This not 100% accurate but you are trying the get estimates for 2025 so it is OK.  I actually used this w2 and interest income estimation method in my actual 2024 ttax to determine my tax penalty using the  “annualization of income” method as I didn’t want to go through each quarter reports for the int and div.  Those were small anyway but we will see what the IRS thinks.

  12. Continue and at “Conclusions” UNCHECK that box that says “Do not use the Annualize your income”  Not sure why this box is checked by default.

  13. Add the date you expect to pay the your balance of taxes due (.e.g, 4/14/2025)

  14. NOW FINALLY you are ready to determine your 2025 estimated taxes to pay in order to avoid or minimize penalties.  Note that your PROJECTED ESTIMATED (NOT withheld from e.g, W2) tax payments for 2025 that you guess need to be made are added in the “Tax Payments Worksheet” that you access via “View Forms” => “Tax Payments.”

  15.   At this point, you will go through an iterative process whereby you enter various 2025 estimated tax payments AMOUNTS as well as WHEN you pay these with the objective of minimizing any penalty for late tax payments in 2025. Note that when you add your estimated tax payments, you will use dates using the dates 4/14/2024, 6/15,24,  9/14,2024 and 1/15/2025, even though you will actually be making these payments in 2025 and 2026.  I know it can be confusing!.   Note that I pay as late as possible but you can any dates before the quarterly deadlines.  The reason for these 2024 and 2025 dates are that s you using the 2024 program.  If you use the actual 2025 and 2026 payments you will be making the program will not know what to do.  Remember you are using the 2024 program!

  16. Under “view forms” =>  “tax payments” enter any test estimated payments for 4/14/2024,  /14/2024, 6/15,24,  9/14,2024 and 1/15/2025 and look at the penalty in Form 2210, line 19 as you change the amounts and when you pay.  If the program is propagating properly, then as you play around with the possible projected payments on the various dates, the 2210 penalty Form will appear in the “Forms in My Return” column if there is a penalty and disappear when there is none.  If this is not happening, then you can look at line 19 in Form 2210.

  17. That’s it!!!!   You will see that both the amounts AND when you make them matters in whether you will be assessed a penalty.  I look to minimize AND delay payments while keep the penalty below $100.  I’m expecting to make large estimated tax payments.  I figure delaying and getting a small penalty is better than paying upfront.  Remember, none of this illegal, you are just trying avoid a penalty and minimizing and delaying payments as much as possible.

  18. You can also shoot for zero penalty.  Remember, these are estimates with an accuracy of +/- ~$100 as you are using 2024 Ttax to guess at 2025 penalties.  I found that if you are making large uneven quarterly ROTH conversions that this annualized method can save you hundreds or thousands of $ relative to using the default, non-annualized method the IRA uses. 

  19. Good hunting!

Returning Member
May 5, 2025 8:53:27 AM

Used 2024 Turbotax Deluxe. My income is primarily RMD and Capital Gains and Dividends, applied at the end of the calendar year. I responded to the Easy Chat and Turbotx determined no Penalty Due (this was the first year where the program said no penalty). Just received CP30 from IRS that Penalty Tax Due!! There is something wrong with the current Program. The last thing that I wanted was to hear from the IRS and be on their radar. Will prpbably consider an accountant for 2025 and stop using TT after decades of use.

Level 8
May 7, 2025 8:47:50 AM

TT calculates penalty based on the information it's been given, the calculation on Form 2210 is straightforward especially if not adopting Annualized Income method.  But IRS calculates the penalty independently, based on what they know for safe harbor amount based on 2023/2024 AGI/Tax, ES payment dates etc.  Suggest looking further into why IRS vs. TT was different to avoid same in 2025.  Also, if you usually get a penalty every year you may need to adjust withholding or pay some estimated tax.

Level 2
May 15, 2025 12:10:48 PM

So, I guess this will be my final post on this topic.

 

Just got a letter from the IRS.  I am getting a refund of $52.14 because my under withholding penalty was improperly calculated on my return.  To get the full story you will have to read my other posts on this topic, but TurboTax initially calculated my underpayment penalty at over $1,000.  I went back to the portion of the Interview where data was input to enable the software to calculate the underpayment penalty and elected to use the annualized method, hoping that this would reduce the penalty since over half of my annual income came in the form of RMD's which were received in December.  Amazingly, even after annualizing my income, this produced no reduction in the calculated underpayment penalty.  I left the questionnaire and looked at the actual forms and noted that on the penalty worksheet, my new election to annualize my income had not been selected.  I proceeded to manually complete the relevant forms and this time the penalty was reduced to $534.  A sigh of relief.  

Now in my mailbox I received a dreaded letter from the IRS.  Good new! (I guess).  TurboTax had overcalculated the under payment penalty and I am getting a refund of $52.14.  I am not going to look this gift horse in the mouth, but there is a problem with the TT software in this area.