I recently fielded a telephone call from a friend who is going the TurboTax route.
Apparently their Q&A is asking something about "Bailey benefits" included on a Form W2.
For the life of me, I cannot figure out how such a scenario could exist. Everything I have ever seen that is truly "Bailey" (State of NC retirement/401k or local government retirement or military/civil service retirement) is reported on a Form 1099-R.
There is a scenario where certain retired NC law enforcement officers can receive a Special Separation Allowance (function of total wages received prior to retirement) up to age 62, and those "wages" are reported on a W2. The actual "NC retirement income" still comes from a separate agency and is reported on a Form 1099-R. But several years ago the NCDOR stated in no uncertain terms that the SSA cannot be excluded under the Bailey rules, although they did toss a small bone out and said the supplement could be deemed "government retirement" and thus subject to having a taxpayer exclude up to a total of $4k funds. Of course, that dollar amount would be the top to include any other allowable "retirement" exclusion the state (currently) offers. That all goes away starting with 2014 tax year, when only "true" Bailey retirement income will remain as an excludable amount.
Anyway....back to my original question. Has anyone seen a W2 where there was legitimately any amount on it that could be excluded under Bailey??
Maybe the Intuit folks are just confused?
Thanks!
FE
Apparently their Q&A is asking something about "Bailey benefits" included on a Form W2.
For the life of me, I cannot figure out how such a scenario could exist. Everything I have ever seen that is truly "Bailey" (State of NC retirement/401k or local government retirement or military/civil service retirement) is reported on a Form 1099-R.
There is a scenario where certain retired NC law enforcement officers can receive a Special Separation Allowance (function of total wages received prior to retirement) up to age 62, and those "wages" are reported on a W2. The actual "NC retirement income" still comes from a separate agency and is reported on a Form 1099-R. But several years ago the NCDOR stated in no uncertain terms that the SSA cannot be excluded under the Bailey rules, although they did toss a small bone out and said the supplement could be deemed "government retirement" and thus subject to having a taxpayer exclude up to a total of $4k funds. Of course, that dollar amount would be the top to include any other allowable "retirement" exclusion the state (currently) offers. That all goes away starting with 2014 tax year, when only "true" Bailey retirement income will remain as an excludable amount.
Anyway....back to my original question. Has anyone seen a W2 where there was legitimately any amount on it that could be excluded under Bailey??
Maybe the Intuit folks are just confused?
Thanks!
FE
Comment