Originally posted by erchess
View Post
Schedule D instructions, page 6:
You must enter the details of each trans-
action on a separate line of Schedule D. If
you have more than five transactions to
report on line 1 or line 8, you can report the
additional transactions on Schedule D-1.
Instead of reporting your transactions on
Schedules D and D-1, you can report them
on an attached statement containing all the
same information as Schedules D and D-1
and in a similar format. Use as many
Schedules D-1 or attached statements as
you need. Enter on Schedule D, lines 2 and
9, the combined totals from all your Sched-
ules D-1 or the attached statements. Do not
enter “available upon request” and sum-
mary totals in lieu of reporting the details of
each transaction on Schedules D and D-1 or
attached statements.
action on a separate line of Schedule D. If
you have more than five transactions to
report on line 1 or line 8, you can report the
additional transactions on Schedule D-1.
Instead of reporting your transactions on
Schedules D and D-1, you can report them
on an attached statement containing all the
same information as Schedules D and D-1
and in a similar format. Use as many
Schedules D-1 or attached statements as
you need. Enter on Schedule D, lines 2 and
9, the combined totals from all your Sched-
ules D-1 or the attached statements. Do not
enter “available upon request” and sum-
mary totals in lieu of reporting the details of
each transaction on Schedules D and D-1 or
attached statements.
1) The substitute statement must contain all the same information as a Schedule D
2) The substitute statement must be in a similar format.
The Schedule D has a set number of items that need to be reported, such as the description of the stock, date acquired, date sold, cost basis and sales price. The substitute statement must also contain all of this information.
The Schedule D also has a set order and format for reporting these items. The Schedule D-1, for example, has the same format as the Schedule D. The instructions say your substitute statement must be in a similar format. If the substitute reports all of the items required, but mixes up the order in which they appear on the statement, the substitute will have met the “same information” requirement but not the “similar format” requirement.
Why does the IRS instructions say your substitute statement must contain the same information AND be in a similar format, when any format containing the same information will do?
As to the penalty for failing to comply with IRS instructions, I don’t know what it is. I don’t want to find out the hard way. I would simply say to the client: “These are the rules. If you want me to prepare the return the correct way, your broker either has to provide you with a new statement that is formatted similar to the Schedule D, or you have to pay me to enter each transaction separately.”
No need to argue or say anything further. Those are the rules.
Comment