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Level 2
posted Feb 22, 2023 11:31:25 PM

US Treasury Int reported on K-1

I am using TurboTax Business for a Trust tax return. I entered US Treasury Int (Box 3) in TurboTax step by step. However, the K-1 does not state US Treasury Int anywhere including Box 14 Other Information. I can't believe the tax preparer needs to separately provide this information to a beneficiary.  A post in another thread stated that US Treasury Int was included in a received K-1 (https://ttlc.intuit.com/community/taxes/discussion/us-bond-interest-on-schedule-k-1-1041-federal-and-state-forms-deducted-twice-from-state-income/00/2098743) Is there a way that  US Treasury Int is reported on the K-1 in TurboTax Business? Thanks.

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1 Best answer
Level 15
Feb 24, 2023 10:19:21 AM

@TD2023 @TD20231 

 

Note that you can enter the amount of US Treasury interest on your K-1s in TurboTax Business by entering Forms Mode and inputting a Z code with a corresponding notation.

 

22 Replies
Expert Alumni
Feb 23, 2023 9:04:25 AM

US Treasury Interest is exempt from State and Local income taxes. Double-check that you are not looking at the State K-1.

 

Yes, US treasury Interest is taxable on the federal side, so you should see it on the Federal K-1

Returning Member
Feb 23, 2023 2:56:54 PM

SantinoD, I do not understand your reply. as follows:

SantinoD: US Treasury Interest is exempt from State and Local income taxes. 

TD: I know

SantinoD: Double-check that you are not looking at the State K-1.

TD: There is no state K-1.

SantinoD: Yes, US treasury Interest is taxable on the federal side, so you should see it on the Federal K-1

TD: I agree. However, I would think the Trust Federal 1041 K-1 should state its Treasury interest in section 14 Other Information. The Federal 1099 states its Interest on US Savings Bonds and Treasury Obligations. (Box3).

 

Level 15
Feb 24, 2023 9:42:19 AM


@TD20231 wrote:

TD: There is no state K-1.


The state K-1 is where you would report US Treasury interest.

 

The federal K-1 (1041) does not contain an entry for US Treasury interest because the interest is not federally tax-exempt. 

Expert Alumni
Feb 24, 2023 9:42:55 AM

I agree that the K-1 schedule should make reference to the interest income being from US obligations, since it has special treatment on your state tax return. You can contact the issuer of the schedule, but mostly likely they won't be willing to correct it. You need to enter the income as interest from US obligations in order to get the correct treatment on your tax return.

Level 15
Feb 24, 2023 10:17:51 AM


@ThomasM125 wrote:

You can contact the issuer of the schedule....


The original poster (who I suspect is the same as @TD20231) is the issue of the schedule, but it trying, apparently, to provide information concerning the amount of US Treasury interest to the beneficiaries on their K-1s (or a statement).

Level 15
Feb 24, 2023 10:19:21 AM

@TD2023 @TD20231 

 

Note that you can enter the amount of US Treasury interest on your K-1s in TurboTax Business by entering Forms Mode and inputting a Z code with a corresponding notation.

 

Level 2
Feb 25, 2023 1:07:45 AM

tagteam, thank you very much. That was the solution. Have a great weekend.

 

Yes, TD2023 and TD20231 are the same. I seem to have some technical difficulties with the login.

Level 3
May 14, 2024 11:56:18 PM

@Anonymous_ @ThomasM125  I'm having this same exact issue, but Turbotax Business isn't letting me type in the explanation statement box as shown.  It's non-editable.  How do you solve this?  Thanks.

Level 15
May 15, 2024 6:19:56 AM

@mlpinvestor 

 

Use the K-1 Worksheet, not the actual K-1.

Level 3
May 16, 2024 8:59:53 AM

@Anonymous_ Thanks!  That worked.

 

One other thing.  I have summary entries for 1099B transactions, and Turbotax says I should send in my 1099B with my return for the details.  But there's no way in Turbotax to attach it for e-filing.  In another thread, someone said they just use acrobat to attach it to the Form 8453-FE that you sign and scan and send in with the e-filed return.  Sounds like a pretty backdoor method, but would be more convenient for sure if the IRS would be okay with it.  Does that work?  Or should I just print it all out and send them a book, basically?

Level 15
May 16, 2024 9:03:31 AM

@mlpinvestor 

 

I'd recommend just printing and mailing the return. I suggested the method you mentioned (initially) but I really don't believe it will get to the IRS; the attachment process appears to be strictly for the transmittal (8453-FE).

 

Note that if all of the transactions on the 1099-B are covered, you really do not need to send in your 1099-B at all (the IRS will request it after you e-file if they need it for some reason).

Level 3
May 16, 2024 9:20:18 AM

@Anonymous_ Thanks, I'll just do that.  Do I have to send in the entire thing, though?  Half of the length is just "Details for Dividends and Distributions."

 

Maybe you could help out with a question I posted elsewhere, too?  No one seems to have noticed it yet.

 

https://ttlc.intuit.com/community/taxes/discussion/unsure-about-net-investment-income-adjustments-in-beneficiary-k-1-cre[product key removed]tax-business/00/3360901

Level 15
May 16, 2024 9:30:40 AM

The figure on Line 14H gets transferred to the beneficiary's Form 8960 (if needed).

 

See https://accountants.intuit.com/support/en-us/help-article/schedule-k-1/form-1041-schedule-k-1-box-14h-shows-adjustment/L1lcqDel0_US_en_US

Level 15
May 16, 2024 9:31:40 AM

You'll get varying responses but I'd send in the entire 1099-B since the pages are almost certainly numbered.

Level 3
May 19, 2024 10:59:57 AM

@Anonymous_ Thanks for all your help.

 

All right, one last question.  Since I’ll be paper filing, do I need to send in everything Turbotax includes in the “return only” file?  That is, should I include copies of the beneficiary K-1s, Statement A’s, additional information statements, etc.?  Thanks again.

Level 15
May 19, 2024 11:13:37 AM

Yes, all official forms required for filing.

Level 3
May 20, 2024 11:00:12 AM

@Anonymous_ Will do.

 

Well, maybe just one more question.  This trust owns a few MLPs.  On the beneficiaries’ individual returns, is it really necessary to break these out separately as their own k-1s?  Turbotax says so, but if every item of ptp income is categorized appropriately on the beneficiary k-1 already, I don’t see why it matters.  It asks if any of the 199A dividends are from ptps as opposed to reits, then it yells at you if you say yes.  Does this actually make a difference?

 

Thanks again, again.

Level 15
May 20, 2024 11:16:06 AM

Yeah, I'd break those down and enter them separately if the trust owns several MLPs.

Level 3
May 20, 2024 2:15:28 PM

@Anonymous_ Okay.  The reason I ask is because I can’t really tell where a couple of the ptp items on statement A come from within the beneficiary K-1.  Ordinary business income is straightforward enough to disaggregate, since it appears in both places, but then it also shows a category of “other” on statement A that I can’t decipher.  I can’t tell what that is coming from, so I can subtract it from the right box on the beneficiary K-1 to avoid double reporting.

Level 2
Jul 25, 2024 10:33:08 PM

Champ, thanks again. However, the US Treasury interest is in a Money Market Fund that pays it out as a dividend. Stating US Treasury Interest makes it sound like it is part of interest income, but it is included in dividend income. How would you state this on the K-1? 

Level 15
Jul 26, 2024 6:25:59 AM

The interest would still be taxable at the federal level.

Level 15
Jul 26, 2024 9:09:18 AM

right beneath the line for dividend income on the k-1 is a line for US interest included.