Please forgive the imposition but I have a relatively common and not overly complex scenario that I would like to get feedback on.
I am quite surprised that I cannot get consensus from the software vendors. I am labeling this a "simple question" because I first encountered this topic while taking a Basic Income Tax course at H&R Block in 1979. It was not considered something you spend a lot of time on. I am looking for thoughts on this since there is apparently a wider divergence of opinion on this than I expected.
During the 2010 tax season, I had given up on Drake and had decided to move on because of their stubbornness regarding their handling of this simple computation, but I have gotten very frustrated trying to find software that computes this correctly. I am now at the point where I no longer think there is a correct way to compute it, or at least that I don't know what that correct way is. I use New York in my example because it is the state I am most familiar with.
Here is the scenario:
My simple question is, "How much is the taxable state refund and how much of the $500 in estimated taxes should be deducted on Schedule A in 2010?"
First of all, my initial expectation is to see $519 as the amount of the 1099-G amount. New York State computes the 1099-G as the net amount of the tax liability for the tax year minus the amounts withheld and any estimates paid during the tax year. Thus this would be computed as $4,481 (the tax liability from IT-201, Line 46) minus the taxes paid and withheld or $5,000 (Withholding of $3,000 plus the four $500 payments)
Then, as described on pages 22-23 of Publication 525, this $519 would then be allocated betwee 2009 and 2010 such that 90% of it is treated as a refund and 10% would be an offset against the deduction for the NY Estimated Tax Payment for 2009 paid in January as follows:
My Expectation:
Apparently the experts do not agree with me.
What do the experts say?
Their answers (from the actual 2009 and 2010 software) are below (in no particular order). [Note regarding the 1099-G amounts: When a worksheet was presented showing the 1099-G amount used, I took it from the worksheet. In other situations, it was obvious that no computations were made and the number reported was the number the vendor expected to see on the 1099-G.]
Expert: Drake
Expert: TaxWare
Expert: TaxWorks
Expert: ProSeries
Expert: TaxSlayer Pro
Obviously, there is more room for interpretation here than I was led to believe when I took the Basic Tax course. Do I have the theory wrong on this?
Lots have people have told me that I got stuck on Line 6 of the tax return a few years ago and never moved on. Well, here I am stuck again on Line 10.
Any thoughts on this? Does it really matter what we put on Form 1040, Line 10 and Schedule A, Line 5 as long as we can explain how it was calculated? Are the rest of you checking what your software carries forward in this scenario?
Also, since I do not have all software products, I am wondering what some of the other vendors compute for this fairly straightforward example. If anyone has time, I would appreciate knowing what other variations of this computation exist and what you would need to do to adjust the computation if they get somthing different from what you expect.
I am quite surprised that I cannot get consensus from the software vendors. I am labeling this a "simple question" because I first encountered this topic while taking a Basic Income Tax course at H&R Block in 1979. It was not considered something you spend a lot of time on. I am looking for thoughts on this since there is apparently a wider divergence of opinion on this than I expected.
During the 2010 tax season, I had given up on Drake and had decided to move on because of their stubbornness regarding their handling of this simple computation, but I have gotten very frustrated trying to find software that computes this correctly. I am now at the point where I no longer think there is a correct way to compute it, or at least that I don't know what that correct way is. I use New York in my example because it is the state I am most familiar with.
Here is the scenario:
2009 Tax Return
A snapshot of some figures from this return is attached in case you are trying to see if you have replicated these results in your 2009 software.- Taxpayer and Spouse are New York State Full Year Residents who do not live or work in New York City or Yonkers.
- Taxpayer has the following W-2:
- Wages, tips, other compensation: $100,000
- Federal income tax withheld: $7,000
- Scial Security Wages: $100,000
- Social Security Tax Withheld: $6,200
- Medicare Wages and tips: $100,000
- Medicare tax withheld: $1,450
- NY State income tax withheld: $3,000
- No State Disability Tax or any other codes are present on this W-2.
- They paid four New York State Estimates of $500 each on 4/15/2009, 6/15/2009, 9/15/2009 and 1/15/2010.
- There were no estimates for 2008 which were paid during 2009.
- The taxpayer is married and filing jointly with spouse. Both were born on 1/1/75.
- They have a child born on 1/1/99 who is eligible for the Federal Child Tax Credit and the Empire State Child Credit.
- They have a home where they lived all year and paid $15,000 in qualified mortgage interest reported on Form 1098 and $7,000 in real estate property taxes.
- On their New York State return, the couple pays a use tax to New York State (IT-201, Line 59) of $44 and contribute $100 as a "Return a Gift to Wildlife" (IT-201, Line 60a).
My simple question is, "How much is the taxable state refund and how much of the $500 in estimated taxes should be deducted on Schedule A in 2010?"
First of all, my initial expectation is to see $519 as the amount of the 1099-G amount. New York State computes the 1099-G as the net amount of the tax liability for the tax year minus the amounts withheld and any estimates paid during the tax year. Thus this would be computed as $4,481 (the tax liability from IT-201, Line 46) minus the taxes paid and withheld or $5,000 (Withholding of $3,000 plus the four $500 payments)
Then, as described on pages 22-23 of Publication 525, this $519 would then be allocated betwee 2009 and 2010 such that 90% of it is treated as a refund and 10% would be an offset against the deduction for the NY Estimated Tax Payment for 2009 paid in January as follows:
My Expectation:
NY State Liability: 4,481
Actual NY State Refund: 705
Predicted 1099-G Amount: 519
Amount to Line 10: 467 (90% of 519)
Amount to Schedule A: 448; i.e., 500 - (519 - 467)
Actual NY State Refund: 705
Predicted 1099-G Amount: 519
Amount to Line 10: 467 (90% of 519)
Amount to Schedule A: 448; i.e., 500 - (519 - 467)
Apparently the experts do not agree with me.
What do the experts say?
Their answers (from the actual 2009 and 2010 software) are below (in no particular order). [Note regarding the 1099-G amounts: When a worksheet was presented showing the 1099-G amount used, I took it from the worksheet. In other situations, it was obvious that no computations were made and the number reported was the number the vendor expected to see on the 1099-G.]
Expert: Drake
NY State Liability: 4,481
Actual NY State Refund: 705
Predicted 1099-G Amount: 849 (assumes refundable credits decrease state income tax liability)
Amount to Line 10: 764 (90% of 849)
Amount to Schedule A: 415; i.e., 500 - (849 - 764)
Fix: Recompute amount of deduction by hand and input into program with 1099-G amount and 8 other items from the prior year's return.
Actual NY State Refund: 705
Predicted 1099-G Amount: 849 (assumes refundable credits decrease state income tax liability)
Amount to Line 10: 764 (90% of 849)
Amount to Schedule A: 415; i.e., 500 - (849 - 764)
Fix: Recompute amount of deduction by hand and input into program with 1099-G amount and 8 other items from the prior year's return.
Expert: TaxWare
NY State Liability: 4,480 (don't ask)
Actual NY State Refund: 706
Predicted 1099-G Amount: 706 (treats everything as affecting tax liability)
Amount to Line 10: 706 (no proration)
Amount to Schedule A: 0; i.e., nothing is populated there automatically.
Fix: Recompute all amounts by hand and correct the entries.
Actual NY State Refund: 706
Predicted 1099-G Amount: 706 (treats everything as affecting tax liability)
Amount to Line 10: 706 (no proration)
Amount to Schedule A: 0; i.e., nothing is populated there automatically.
Fix: Recompute all amounts by hand and correct the entries.
Expert: TaxWorks
NY State Liability: 4,481
Actual NY State Refund: 705
Predicted 1099-G Amount: 475 (assumes Sales Tax increases state Income Tax Liability)
Amount to Line 10: 427 (90% of 475)
Amount to Schedule A: 452; i.e., 500 - (475 - 427)
Fix: Override the predicted 1099-G amount with the correct amount on the worksheet on Line 1 to correct the amount carried to Schedule A, Line 5. Override the "Itemized deductions based on net state and local tax deducted: on Line 31 of their worksheet to correct the amount carried to Form 1040, Line 10.
Actual NY State Refund: 705
Predicted 1099-G Amount: 475 (assumes Sales Tax increases state Income Tax Liability)
Amount to Line 10: 427 (90% of 475)
Amount to Schedule A: 452; i.e., 500 - (475 - 427)
Fix: Override the predicted 1099-G amount with the correct amount on the worksheet on Line 1 to correct the amount carried to Schedule A, Line 5. Override the "Itemized deductions based on net state and local tax deducted: on Line 31 of their worksheet to correct the amount carried to Form 1040, Line 10.
Expert: ProSeries
NY State Liability: 4,481
Actual NY State Refund: 705
Predicted 1099-G Amount: 519
Amount to Line 10: 467 (90% of 519)
Amount to Schedule A: 448; i.e., 500 - (519 - 467)
Fix: None needed.
Actual NY State Refund: 705
Predicted 1099-G Amount: 519
Amount to Line 10: 467 (90% of 519)
Amount to Schedule A: 448; i.e., 500 - (519 - 467)
Fix: None needed.
Expert: TaxSlayer Pro
NY State Liability: 4,481
Actual NY State Refund: 705
Predicted 1099-G Amount: 475 (assumes Sales Tax increases state Income Tax Liability)
Amount to Line 10: 475 (no proration)
Amount to Schedule A: 500; i.e., no adjustment is made
Fix: Recompute all amounts by hand and correct the entries.
Actual NY State Refund: 705
Predicted 1099-G Amount: 475 (assumes Sales Tax increases state Income Tax Liability)
Amount to Line 10: 475 (no proration)
Amount to Schedule A: 500; i.e., no adjustment is made
Fix: Recompute all amounts by hand and correct the entries.
Obviously, there is more room for interpretation here than I was led to believe when I took the Basic Tax course. Do I have the theory wrong on this?
Lots have people have told me that I got stuck on Line 6 of the tax return a few years ago and never moved on. Well, here I am stuck again on Line 10.
Any thoughts on this? Does it really matter what we put on Form 1040, Line 10 and Schedule A, Line 5 as long as we can explain how it was calculated? Are the rest of you checking what your software carries forward in this scenario?
Also, since I do not have all software products, I am wondering what some of the other vendors compute for this fairly straightforward example. If anyone has time, I would appreciate knowing what other variations of this computation exist and what you would need to do to adjust the computation if they get somthing different from what you expect.
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