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Why is turbo tax putting qualified and ordinary dividends together?

I imported 1099 div from vanguard and Turbo Tax bunched them together.  I thought they would be separate as they are taxed at a different rate. I could not find where to input the qualified dividends.
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Why is turbo tax putting qualified and ordinary dividends together?

Perhaps this will help.  Perhaps not.

 

Correct: The total $$ from box 1a on the 1099-DIV go directly to line 3b on the 1040.

This is the way it is handled for everyone....and all brokerages.

 That total is required to be there on line 3b by the IRS, and the total amount does add into your full AGI.

______

The $$ from box 1b on the 1099-DIV, go to line 3a on the form 1040.

That tells the software, to treat that sub-portion of the total ordinary dividends in a special way on a separate tax calculation worksheet.  So it all works out properly the way the IRS wants it to be done.

______________________

Calling the box 1a $$ "Ordinary" dividends confuses a lot of folks.

But that's up to the IRS.

 

____________*Answers are correct to the best of my knowledge when posted, but should not be considered to be legal or official tax advice.*

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11 Replies

Why is turbo tax putting qualified and ordinary dividends together?

Qualified dividends are in 1099Div box 1b.  

Even though the full amount shows up as income on the 1040,  if you have capital gains or qualified dividends the tax on line 16 is not taken from the tax table but is calculated separately from schedule D.  The tax will be calculated on the Qualified Dividends and Capital Gain Tax Worksheet.  It does not get filed with your return.  In the online version you need to save your return as a pdf file and include all worksheets to see it.

Why is turbo tax putting qualified and ordinary dividends together?

Thanks for the answer,

I do not have schedule D on turbo tax deluxe. These aren't capital gains, just qualified dividends.  Vanguard bunches all dividends in one line and then in other lines specifies how much is qualified and how much is reits. I l looked at the 1040 and on line 3b lists the bunched ordinary dividends (including both qualified and reits ), while on line 3a lists just the qualified div. Now, when adding all income, it adds only whatever is on line 3b (the combined amount for all dividends). So, what happened to line 3a amount? How is it considered or will it be considered? It seems to be ignored as part of the total income, when it should be taxed at a lower rate. I am confused indeed.

 

Why is turbo tax putting qualified and ordinary dividends together?

I explained that.  The tax is calculated a different way.  There are over 7 ways to calculate the tax.  It does use Schedule D even if it is not required for filing.  

You can probably tell because the tax on 1040 will be less than the Tax Table

https://ttlc.intuit.com/community/forms/help/form-1040-line-11-amount-is-less-than-standard-irs-tax-...

Why is turbo tax putting qualified and ordinary dividends together?

Perhaps this will help.  Perhaps not.

 

Correct: The total $$ from box 1a on the 1099-DIV go directly to line 3b on the 1040.

This is the way it is handled for everyone....and all brokerages.

 That total is required to be there on line 3b by the IRS, and the total amount does add into your full AGI.

______

The $$ from box 1b on the 1099-DIV, go to line 3a on the form 1040.

That tells the software, to treat that sub-portion of the total ordinary dividends in a special way on a separate tax calculation worksheet.  So it all works out properly the way the IRS wants it to be done.

______________________

Calling the box 1a $$ "Ordinary" dividends confuses a lot of folks.

But that's up to the IRS.

 

____________*Answers are correct to the best of my knowledge when posted, but should not be considered to be legal or official tax advice.*

Why is turbo tax putting qualified and ordinary dividends together?

Hello,

Thanks for the answer. Is there a way to take a look at the special worksheet? No one seemed to know about it, including the IRS (I called them and explained what I explained here... well that person could not understand my question). 

Thank you very much again.

Why is turbo tax putting qualified and ordinary dividends together?

Well, yeah, but it's easier when using the desktop software, because those folks have a "Forms Mode" tha lets them look at all their worksheets at any time.

 

Online users can get copies of all their forms and worksheets by going to the left side TaxTools menu, then selecting Print Center, and downloading a PDF of all their forms and worksheets to their own computer and looking at the worksheets there.  OF course, if using a pay-for-it version of TTX, you will be prompted to pay for the software first (if you haven't already done so)

 

The tax worksheet you are "probably" looking for, would be the "Qualified Dividends and Capital Gain Tax Worksheet"...But we can't know for sure it will be that one, as we can't know exactly what is in your tax file.

 

You'll have fun figuring out how that worksheet ...works.

____________*Answers are correct to the best of my knowledge when posted, but should not be considered to be legal or official tax advice.*
Hal_Al
Level 15

Why is turbo tax putting qualified and ordinary dividends together?

Q. So, what happened to line 3a amount? How is it considered or will it be considered?

A. It goes to line 2 of the Qualified Dividends and Capital Gain Tax Worksheet, where is used to calculate your income tax based on long term capital gains rate. 

 

You seem to be expecting to see the qualified dividends somehow broken away from your total and adjusted gross income on form 1040. It doesn't work that way. 

Bette5
New Member

Why is turbo tax putting qualified and ordinary dividends together?

I have the same problem.  Seems like a software problem and no where to contact a technician.

 

BillM223
Expert Alumni

Why is turbo tax putting qualified and ordinary dividends together?

"I have the same problem." You have what problem? The champs above explained why dividends are handled the way they are - it's because TurboTax is following the IRS rules.

 

What would you want us to do differently?

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Why is turbo tax putting qualified and ordinary dividends together?

There isn't a problem.  Turbo Tax is doing it right.  What is  your specific question?

 

IRS Qualified Dividends and Capital Gain Tax Worksheet—Line 16 on 1040 instructions page 36
https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/i1040gi.pdf

 

And you might need IRS Tax Table page 15 to calculate the tax and to compare to Turbo Tax.   That isn't shown in Turbo Tax.

https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/i1040tt.pdf 

Why is turbo tax putting qualified and ordinary dividends together?

@BillM223  Can you ask TT if they can provide the IRS  Tax Table Worksheet to show the actual tax calculations?  That's been bugging me.  Seems like it would be a simple thing to fill out the chart with the return's figures.

 

IRS Tax Table page 15 to calculate the tax and to compare to Turbo Tax. That isn't shown in Turbo Tax.
https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/i1040tt.pdf

 

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