2001 Tax Help Archives  

Capital Gains/ Losses/ Sale of Home

This is archived information that pertains only to the 2001 Tax Year. If you
are looking for information for the current tax year, go to the Tax Prep Help Area.

Property (Basis, Sale of Home, etc.)  |   Stocks (Options, Splits, Traders)
Mutual Funds (Costs, Distributions, etc.)  |   Losses (Homes, Stocks, Other Property)


Property (Basis, Sale of Home, etc.)


What is the basis of property received as a gift?

To figure the basis of property you get as a gift, you must know its adjusted basis to the donor just before it was given to you.You also must know its fair market value (FMV) at the time it was given to you. If the FMV of the property at the time of the gift is less than the donor's adjusted basis your basis depends whether you have a gain or loss when you dispose of the property. Your basis for figuring gain is the same as the donor's adjusted basis, plus or minus any required adjustments to basis while you held the property. Your basis for figuring a loss is the FMV of the property when you received the gift, plus or minus any required adjustments to basis while you held the property. See adjustment to Basis in Publication 551, Basis of Assets.

If you use the donor's adjusted basis for figuring a gain and get a loss, and then use the FMV for figuring a loss and get a gain, you have neither a gain or loss on the sale or disposition of the property.

If the FMV is equal to or greater than the donor's adjusted basis, your basis is the donor's adjusted basis at the time you received the gift. Increase your basis by all or part of any gift tax paid, depending on the date of the gift. Also for figuring basis, you must increase or decrease your basis by any required adjustments to basis while you held the property. See Adjustments to Basis in Publication 551, Basis of Assets.

If you received a gift before 1977, increase your basis in the gift (the donor's basis) by any gift tax paid on it. However do not increase your basis above the FMV of the gift at the time it was given to you.

If you received a gift after 1976, you increase your basis by the part of the gift tax paid on it that is due to the net increase in value of the gift. Figure the increase to basis by multiplying the gift tax paid by the following fraction. The numerator is the net increase in value of the gift and the denominator is the amount of the gift.

The net increase in value of the gift is the FMV of the gift less the donor's adjusted basis. The amount of the gift is its value for gift tax purposes, after reduction by any annual exclusion and any marital or charitable deduction that applies to the gift. For information on gift tax, please see Publication 950, Introduction to Estate and Gift taxes.

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I have investment property. Can you explain the term basis of assets?

Basis is your investment in property for tax purposes. Before you can figure any gain or loss on a sale, exchange, or other disposition of property, or figure allowable depreciation, you must determine the adjusted basis. Adjusted basis is the result of increasing or decreasing your original basis according to certain events. Your original basis is usually your cost to acquire the asset.

Increases to basis include but are not limited to:

  • Improvements
  • Assessments for local improvements
  • Sales tax
  • The cost of extending utilities lines to the property
  • Legal fees such as the cost of defending or perfecting title
  • Zoning costs

Decreases to basis include but are not limited to:

  • Depreciation
  • Nontaxable corporate distributions
  • Casualty and theft losses
  • Easements
  • Rebates from the manufacturer or seller

Additional information on basis can be found in Publication 551, Basis of Assets, or Tax Topic 703, Basis of Assets.

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I sold my home last year. Do I have to report the sale?

Report the sale of your main home on your tax return only if you have a gain and at least part of it is taxable. Report any taxable gain on Form 1040, Schedule D, Capital Gains and Losses. Form 2119, Sale of Your Home is obsolete beginning in 1998. For more information, refer to Publication 523, Selling Your Home.

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I sold my principal residence this year. What form do I need to file?

If you meet the ownership and use tests, you will generally only need to report the sale of your home if your gain is more than $250,000 ($500,000 if married filing a joint return). This means that during the 5-year period ending on the date of the sale, you must have:

  • Owned the home for at least 2 years (the ownership test), and
  • Lived in the home as your main home for at least 2 years (the use test).

If you owned and lived in the property as your main home for less than 2 years, you may still be able to claim an exclusion in some cases. The maximum amount you can exclude will be reduced. If you are required to report a gain, it is reported on Form 1040, Schedule D, Capital Gains and Losses.

For additional information on selling your home, refer to Publication 523, Selling Your Home.

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If I sell my home and use the money I receive to pay off the mortgage, do I have to pay taxes on that money?

It is not the money you receive for the sale of your home, but the amount of gain on the sale over your cost, or basis, that determines whether you will have to include any proceeds as taxable income on your return. You may be able to exclude any gain from income up to a limit of $250,000 ($500,000 on a joint return in most cases). If you can exclude all of the gain, you do not need to report the sale on your tax return.

For additional information on selling your home, refer to Publication 523, Selling Your Home.

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If I take the exclusion of capital gain tax on the sale of my old home this year, can I also take the exclusion again if I sell my new home in the future?

There is no limit on the number of times you can exclude the gain on the sale of your principle residence so long as you meet the ownership and use tests.

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What is the amount of capital gains from the sale of a home that can be excluded if sold in less than the two year waiting period?

If you owned and lived in the property as your main home for less than 2 years, you may still be able to claim an exclusion in some cases. The maximum amount you can exclude will be reduced.

You can claim this reduced exclusion if either of the following is true.

(1) You did not meet the ownership and use tests on a home you sold due to:

  • a change in health
  • a change in place of employment
  • to the extent provided by regulations, other unforeseen circumstances. (see below)

(2) Your exclusion would have been disallowed because of the rule on selling more than one home in a two year period, except you sold the home due to:

  • a change in health
  • a change in place of employment
  • to the extent provided by regulations, other unforeseen circumstances. (see below)

Use the worksheet in Publication 523, Selling Your Home, to figure your reduced exclusion.

The IRS has not as yet issued regulations defining unforseen circumstances. You cannot claim an exclusion based on unforeseen circumstances until the IRS issues final regulations or appropriate guidelines.

Refer to Reduced Maximum Exclusion and Special Situations in Publication 523, Selling Your Home.

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I lived in a home as my principal residence for the first 2 of the last 5 years. For the last 3 years, the home was a rental property before selling it. Can I still avoid the capital gains tax and, if so, how should I deal with the depreciation I took while it was rented out?

If, during the 5-year period ending on the date of sale, you owned the home for at least 2 years and lived in it for at least 2 years, you can exclude up to $250,000 of the gain ($500,000 on a joint return in most cases). However, you cannot exclude the portion of the gain equal to depreciation allowed or allowable for periods after May 6, 1997. Since you cannot exclude all of the gain, report the entire gain realized on Form 1040, Schedule D line 8. Report the amount of exclusion you qualify for on the line directly below the line on which you report the gain. Write Section 121 exclusion in column (a) of that line and show the amount of the exclusion in column (f) as a loss (in parentheses).

For additional information on selling your home, refer to Publication 523, Selling Your Home.

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How do you report the sale of a second residence?

Your second home is considered a capital asset. Use Form 1040, Schedule D to report sales, exchanges, and other dispositions of capital assets.

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Stocks (Options, Splits, Traders)


I received stock as a gift from my grandparents. I am selling the stock this year. How can I figure the basis of the gifted stock?

To figure the basis of property you receive as a gift, you must know its adjusted basis to the donor just before it was given to you, its fair market value (FMV) at the time it was given to you, and any gift tax paid on it.

If the FMV of the property was less than the donor's adjusted basis, your basis for gain on its sale or other disposition is the same as the donor's adjusted basis plus or minus any required adjustment to basis during the period you held the property. Your basis for loss on its sale or other disposition is its FMV at the time you received the gift plus or minus any required adjustment to basis during the period you held the property.

If the FMV of the property was equal to or greater than the donor's adjusted basis, your basis for gain or loss on its sale or other disposition is the same as the donor's adjusted basis at the time you received the gift. Increase your basis by all or part of the gift tax paid, depending on the date of the gift.

For complete information, refer to Publication 17, chapter 14.

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When I sell shares of stock in a company that merged with the company I originally invested in, do I use the basis and holding periods based on the purchase of shares in the original company?

Usually, when you trade stock in one corporation for stock in another as part of a merger or other qualifying reorganization, you have a nontaxable exchange. The basis of the stock you received is generally the same as the basis of the old stock, increased by any gain recognized on the exchange and decreased by the value of property or money received.

You may receive cash or something of value instead of a fractional share if the number of shares of new stock doesn't divide evenly into the number of shares of the old stock. You treat this as a sale of the fractional share.

Your basis in the new stock is determined, in whole or in part, by your basis in the old stock. Your holding period for the new stock will include the holding period for the old stock, provided that the old stock was held as a capital asset at the time of the exchange.

Refer to Publication 550, Investment Income and Expenses.

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How do I figure the cost basis of stock that has split, giving me more of the same stock, so I can figure my capital gain (or loss) on the sale of the stock?

The basis of the old shares must be allocated to the old and new shares in proportion to the fair market value of each on the date of the split. Thus, you generally divide the adjusted basis of the old stock by the number of shares of old and new stock. The result is your new basis per share of stock. If the old shares were purchased in separate lots for differing amounts of money, the adjusted basis of the old stock must be allocated between the old and new stock on a lot by lot basis.

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When my stock split, the stock distributed to me was different than my original shares. How do I figure the basis of the shares of the two different kinds of stock?

Usually, the company issuing the new type of stock will send you a letter explaining the tax consequences of the stock distribution, including how to calculate the basis in the two different types of stock.

If you did not get such a letter or would like further assistance, call IRS customer service at 800-829-1040 or refer to Publication 550, Investment Income and Expense: Stock dividends under Basis of Investment Property.

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How do I calculate the cost basis of the shares that have split and are later sold from my employee stock purchase plan?

You need to determine what your basis is in the company stock on the date of the split. The new shares assume part of your basis in the company stock on that date. You must divide the adjusted basis in the old stock by the number of shares of old and new stock. The result is your basis for each share of stock.

For example, if you owned shares of stock. Your basis income is $30; the other is $45. The company declares a three for one stock split. You now have six shares of stock. Three of the shares have a basis of $10 and three have a basis of $15.

Under certain circumstances, you may have to report some or all of the gain on the sale of this stock as ordinary income (wages).

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Do I report the buying of stock?

Ordinarily, you do not have to report the purchase of stock, only the sale of stock.

However, if you exercise a nonstatutory stock option, a type of stock option granted by an employer, you may have income to report in the year of exercise (the purchase of the stock at the option price) if your rights in the stock are substantially vested at that time, see Publication 525, Taxable and Nontaxable Income, for further information.

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How do I prepare Schedule D for various stocks when records as to the original purchase price have been lost?

If you purchased the stocks or acquired the stocks by gift (other than through inheritance), you need to be able to determine the purchase price to establish your basis when you sell them. If you cannot establish the basis of stocks sold, the basis of that stock is zero. Except for certain mutual fund shares, you cannot use an average price per share to figure the gain or loss on the sale of stock.

Refer to Stocks and Bonds under Basis of Investment Property in Chapter 4 of Publication 550, Investment Income and Expenses. For information on the basis of inherited stock, refer to Inherited Property in the same section of Chapter 4, Publication 550, Investment Income and Expenses.

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How do I figure the cost basis when the stocks I'm selling were purchased at various times and at different prices?

If you can identify which shares of stock you sold, your basis is what you paid for the shares sold (plus sales commissions). If you sell a block of the same kind of stock, you can report all the shares sold at the same time as one sale, writing VARIOUS in the "date acquired" column of Schedule D. However, what you enter into the "cost or other basis" column is the total of all the acquisition costs of the shares sold.

If you cannot adequately identify the shares you sold and you bought the shares at various times for different prices, the basis of the stock sold is the basis of the shares you acquired first (first-in first-out). Except for certain mutual fund shares, you cannot use the average price per share to figure gain or loss on the sale of stock.

For more information, refer to Publication 550, Investment Income and Expenses.

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Can the cost averaging method be used for calculating the cost basis of stocks, or is it limited only to mutual fund shares?

The average basis method may be used only for mutual fund shares that were purchased at various times for various prices if the shares are left in the custody of a custodian or agent in an account maintained for the acquisition or redemption of the shares.

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How do we show on our tax form where dividends are reinvested?

Some corporations allow investors to choose to use their dividends to buy more shares of stock in the corporation instead of receiving the dividends in cash. If you are a member of this type of plan, you must report the fair market value on the dividend payment date of the dividends that are reinvested as income on your tax return. You do not actually show that the dividends were reinvested on your return. Keep good records of the dollar amount of the reinvested dividends, the number of additional shares purchased, and the purchase dates. You will need this information when you sell the shares.

Report the dividends that were reinvested with your other dividends, if any, on line 9 of Form 1040 or Form 1040A. If your total income from ordinary dividends is over $400, you also must file either Schedule B (Form 1040) or Schedule 1 (Form 1040A).

For more information on this and other types of dividend reinvestment plans, refer to Ordinary Dividends in Chapter 1 of Publication 550, Investment Income and Expenses.

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How do I compute the basis for stock I sold, when I received the stock over several years through a dividend reinvestment plan?

The basis of the stock you sold is the cost of the shares plus any adjustments, such as sales commissions. If you have not kept detailed records of your dividend reinvestments, you may be able to reconstruct those records with the help of public records from sources such as the media, your broker, or the company that issued the dividends.

If you cannot specifically identify which shares were sold, you must use the first-in first-out rule. This means that you deem that you sold the oldest shares first, then the next oldest, then the next-to-the-next oldest, until you have accounted for the number of shares in the sale. In order to establish the basis of these shares, you need to have kept adequate documentation of all your purchases, including those that were through the dividend reinvestment plan. You may not use an average cost basis. Only mutual fund shares may have an average cost basis.

Refer to Publication 550, Investment Income and Expenses, and Publication 551, Basis of Assets.

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I know the basis of stock includes the cost of the original purchase, but does it also include the value of stock acquired through a dividend reinvestment plan?

Unless you sell all of your shares at one time, your total basis, which includes both your original purchase and any purchases through a dividend reinvestment, is not the figure used to report the sale of shares. If you sell less than all of your shares at one time, you need to have kept adequate documentation of all your purchases, including those that were through the dividend reinvestment plan in order to establish the basis of the shares sold. You may not use an average cost basis. Only mutual fund shares may have an average cost basis.

When reporting the sale of shares of stocks, the basis for the calculation of gain or loss is the actual cost (plus adjustments, such as sales commissions) of those shares. If you cannot specifically identify which of your shares were sold, you must use the first-in first-out rule.

For more information, refer to Publication 550, Investment Income and Expenses, and Publication 551, Basis of Assets.

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Do I have to pay taxes again on the stock acquired through a dividend reinvestment plan when I sell them?

After you report the dividends as income, you have basis in the shares acquired through dividend reinvestment. When you report the sale of the shares, you will be taxed only on the amount that the sales proceeds (minus commissions) exceed your cost basis (in this case, the amount of the dividends reinvested).

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Would the shares acquired by stock dividends have a shorter holding period than the original shares purchased?

Yes, if they were taxable stock dividends, the holding period begins on the date the new shares were distributed by the corporation. For nontaxable stock dividends, the holding period is the same as the underlying stock.

When you purchase additional mutual shares with reinvested dividends, the dividends are generally taxable. You thus have a holding period starting on the date of the transaction, as reported in your statements, just as you do for shares that you purchase outright.


Would shares in mutual fund acquired through dividend reinvestment in prior years be long-term capital gains while shares acquired through dividend reinvestment in the year of sale be treated as short-term capital gains?

Any shares or fractional shares purchased and sold during the current tax year are short-term capital assets. For shares purchased in the year previous to the tax year to be considered long-term, the holding period must be more than one year.

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How do I report incentive stock options on my tax return?

If your option is an incentive stock option, you do not include any amount in your gross income at the time the option is granted, or at the time you exercise it. However, you may have income for Alternative Minimum Tax in the year you exercise. If the special holding periods are met, any income or loss from the sale of the stock is treated as a capital gain or loss. However, if you do not meet the special holding period tests, you may have compensation income when you sell the stock. For further information, refer to Publication 525, Taxable and Nontaxable Income and Form 6251, Alternative Minimum Tax-Individuals.

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How do I report a nonstatutory stock option on my tax return?

If you are granted a nonstatutory stock option, the amount of income to include and the time to include it depend on whether the fair market value (FMV) of the option on the grant date can be readily dertermined. For Specific information and reporting requirements, refer to Publication 525, Taxable and Nontaxable Income.

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How do I report an employee stock purchase plan on my tax return?

If your stock option is granted under a qualified employee stock purchase plan, you do not include any amount in your gross income as a result of the grant or exercise of your option. When you sell the stock that you purchased by exercising the option, you may have to report either compensation or capital gain or loss. For additional information on tax treatment and holding period requirements, refer to Publication 525, Taxable and Nontaxable Income.

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How do I determine the cost basis of stock bought through an employee stock purchase plan (ESPP)?

Your starting basis is what you paid to buy the shares. This amount is increased by the ordinary income amount, if any, you must declare as wages on your income tax return when the stock is sold. Sales commissions can also increase the basis in your stock.

Under the employee stock purchase plan rules, if you had an option to purchase the stock at a discount, the amount of compensation income realized when you sell the stock depends on whether holding periods are met and whether you purchased the stock at a discount.

To satisfy holding periods, you must hold on to the stock for at least one year after its transfer to you upon purchase and for two years after the option is granted. If either of these are not true, then you have not met the required holding periods.

If the holding periods are met, the compensation income is the lesser of:

  1. the amount by which the fair market value of the stock at the time you are granted the option exceeds the option price, or
  2. The amount by which the fair market value of the stock at the time you sell it exceeds what you paid for it.

If they are not met, the compensation income is the amount by which the fair market value of the stock, when vested, exceeds what you paid for it. The compensation income should be included as wages on your Form W-2.

For more information, refer to Publication 525, Taxable and Non-Taxable Income.

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I received an incentive stock option from my company, is this taxable?

If your option is a qualified incentive stock option, you do not include any amount in your gross income at the time the option is granted, or at the time you exercise it. However, you may have income for Alternative Minumum Tax in the year you exercise. If the special holding periods are met, income or loss from the sale of the stock is treated as a capital gain or loss. However, if you do not meet the special holding period tests, you may have compensation income. For further information, refer to Publication 525, Taxable and Nontaxable Income

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I purchased stock from my employer under an employee stock purchase plan. Now I have received a From 1099-B from selling it. How do I report this?

If the special holding periods are met, generally treat gain or loss from the sale of the stock as capital gain or loss. However, you may have compensation income if:

  1. The option price of the stock was below the stock's fair market value at the time the option was granted, or
  2. You did not meet the holding period requirement, explained next.

You must hold the stock for more than 2 years from the time the stock option is granted to you and for more than 1 year from when the stock was transferred to you. If you meet the holding period requirement and the option price was below the fair market value of the stock at the time the option was granted, you report the difference as compensation income (wages) when you sell the stock. Generally, this compensation income cannot be more than your gain on the sale. If your gain is more than the amount you report as compensation income, the remainder is a capital gain reported on Form 1040, Schedule D. If you sell the stock for less than the amount you paid for it, your loss is a capital loss.

For more information, refer to Publication 525, Taxable and Nontaxable Income, and Publication 551, Basis of Assets.

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Where on the tax return do I enter the compensation income I had from the sale of stock that I purchased under my employer's stock purchase program?

The compensation income is reported on line 7 (wages, salaries, tips, etc.) of Form 1040. It is added to the stock's basis used when determining capital gain or loss on the sale of the stock. Any capital gain or loss on the stock sale is reported on Form 1040, Schedule D, Capital Gains and Losses.

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Is the Internal Revenue Code limit of $25,000 per calendar year for stock bought through an employee stock purchase program (ESPP) based on the discounted purchase price or the higher stock value?

Under the terms of an employee stock purchase plan, you cannot accrue the right to purchase more than $25,000 of stock, valued at market value on the day the option is granted, in any one calendar year. The limit is not based on the purchase price.

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Are incentive stock options subject to alternative minimum tax, and if so, how do I determine the basis for the stock?

A taxpayer generally must include in alternative minimum taxable income the amount by which the price he paid for stock received pursuant to the exercise of an incentive stock option is exceeded by the stock's fair market value at the time his rights to the stock are freely transferable or are not subject to a substantial risk of forfeiture.

Increase your alternative minimum tax basis by the amount of the adjustment. Your basis for regular tax is not affected by the adjustment.

If a taxpayer acquires stock pursuant to the exercise of an ISO and disposes of the stock in a disqualifying disposition in the same taxable year, the transaction is subject to regular tax, and the alternative minimum tax does not apply. Refer to Internal Revenue Code 83, Internal Revenue Code 56(b)(3), and Internal Revenue Code 422(c)(2). For more information, refer to Instructions for Form 6251, Alternative Minimum Tax- Individuals.

References:

  • Instructions for Form 6251, Alternative Minimum Tax- Individuals
  • Internal Revenue Code 83
  • Internal Revenue Code 56(b)(3)
  • Internal Revenue Code 422(c)(2)


Can I take a long-term capital loss (up to the $3,000 limit) against my ordinary income without any long-term capital gain?

Yes. The $3,000 capital loss limitation refers to how much net capital loss can offset ordinary income on your tax return.

For more information on capital gains and losses and capital loss carryovers, refer to Chapter 4 of Publication 550, Investment Income and Expenses.

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Can I use a long-term capital loss carried over from a prior year to offset a short-term capital gain?

A loss carryover maintains its character as long-term or short-term and must first be used against gains, if any, in its own category, but can then offset net gains from the other category, as well as up to $3,000 of ordinary income. If, for example, your only long-term gain or loss is the long -term capital loss carryover, then 17 of Form 1040, Schedule D, which nets the net short-term gain or loss against the net long-term gain or loss, will apply your loss carryover against your short-term gain. After that, any remaining net loss will be allowable as a deduction against up to $3,000 of your ordinary income. The remainer will be available to be carried over to the following year as long-term loss.

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Can I use a long-term capital loss to offset a short-term capital gain before using it to offset a long-term gain?

No, long-term capital gains and losses must first be combined to arrive at net long-term gain or loss before the result can be netted against the net short-term gain or loss. If you follow the Form 1040, Schedule D, Capital Gains and Losses, Parts 1 and 2, line-by-line, the form will perform the netting for you in this order.

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Can short-term capital gains be offset with long-term capital losses?

Before a loss from one category, short or long term, can offset gain from the other category, the losses and gains from each category must be combined to arrive at a net gain or loss from that category. Then, the net gain or loss from each category is combined.

When you carry a capital loss over to the following year, it retains its character as long-term or short-term and must be first combined with the other entries in its category.

Refer to Reporting Capital Gains and Losses in Publication 550, Investment Income and Expenses.

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If a stock was sold short prior to the end of the year but was purchased in the next year to cover the short sale, when should it be included on Schedule D?

Generally, gain or loss is realized on a short sale when you deliver the stock that "covers" the short sale, not at the time you sell short. However, there is an exception. If you own stock or securities identical to those that you sold short when you entered the contract ("selling short against the box") and they had appreciated in value since you bought them, you recognize gain or loss when you sell short.

Refer to Constructive Sales of Appreciated Financial Positions in either the Instructions for Form 1040, Schedule D or Chapter 4 of Publication 550, Investment Income and Expenses for more details and exceptions.

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Since the date acquired is after the date sold, how should I report a short sale on Schedule D?

This can be confusing with a short sale since it is really a two-step process. The date sold is the date that the transaction closes, which is the date you deliver to the lender the stocks or (other assets) that cover the short sale. The date acquired is the date you purchased the stocks (or other assets) delivered to the lender.

Normally, the short sale of a capital asset is considered to result in short-term gain or loss since the stocks (or other assets) that are delivered to "cover" the short sale are purchased the same time as the delivery.

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I held stocks substantially identical to the ones I sold short, but covered the short sale with different shares of that same stock that I purchased later. How does that affect the way I report the short sale?

If you also held substantially identical stock at the time of the short sale, but you acquired new stock to close the transaction, gain would still be short-term. You may have an adjustment to make on the gain on the closing transaction of the short sale because you will have normally had to recognize gain on the short sale under the constructive sale rules. Any loss on the short sale, however, would be long-term if you held the substantially identical property more than one year at the time of the short sale, regardless of what stock was delivered to close the transaction.

For more information on constructive sales, refer to Constructive Sale treatment for Certain Appreciated Positions in Chapter 4 of Publication 550, Investment Income and Expenses.

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Should I advise IRS why amounts reported on Form 1099-B do not agree with my Schedule D for proceeds from short sales of stocks not closed by end of year that I did not include?

The constructive sale rules put into effect by the Tax Reform Act of 1997 virtually eliminate the ability to lock in your gain on stocks that you own but do not yet want to sell. If you owned stock at the time of the short sale that was later delivered to close the short sale, or was substantially identical to the stock delivered, you must recognize gain at the time you entered into the short sale. It is considered a constructive sale.

If you are able to defer the reporting of gain or loss until the year the short sale closes, the following will allow you to reconcile your Forms 1099-B to your Schedule D and still not recognize the gain or loss from the short sale:

  • Your total of lines 3 and 10, column (d), on your Schedule D should equal your total gross proceeds reported to you on all Forms 1099-B.
  • In columns (b) and (c) write "SHORT SALE," and
  • in column (f) write "See attached statement."
  • In your statement, explain the details of your short sale and that it has not closed as of the end of the year. Include your name as it appears on the return and your social security number.

For more on these rules and exceptions that may apply, refer to Chapter 4 of Publication 550, Investment Income and Expenses.

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How do I determine my gain or loss on the proceeds reported on Form 1099-B from a short sale entered into last year if I have not yet bought the stock to deliver back to my broker?

If you did not hold substantially identical stock at the time you entered into the short sale, you cannot determine your gain or loss until you purchase the stock that you are going to deliver to close the short sale. You still need to report the gross proceeds on Schedule D so that the total of lines 3 and 10, column (d), reconciles with all of your Forms 1099-B.

Also, in columns b and c write "short sale." In column f, write "see attached statement." In the statement explained the details of the short sale and that it is not closed. Include your name as it appears on your return and your social security number.

For more information on rules and exceptions that may apply, refer to Chapter 4 of Publication 550, Investment Income and Expenses.

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How will the IRS know my stock split?

The IRS is not notified of a stock split.

It is your responsibility to accurately report your income on your return in the year you sell shares of stock and to fully disclose details of the sale on Schedule D. Part of that disclosure is to state the per share basis of the stock sold, which should take into account a stock split.

The broker of the sale reports the proceeds of the sale to the IRS on Form 1099-B The 1099-B also shows the recipient's identity, the payer's identity, and the CUSIP Number that identifies the securities sold.

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Does the holding period for new shares I received as a result of a stock split start on the purchase date of the original stock or on the date of the stock split?

The holding period of the stock you received as a result of the stock split begins on the same day as the holding period of the original stock.

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I purchased stock through an employee stock purchase plan at my work which split three months later. Three months after that, I sold the stock at a gain. How does the split affect how I report the stock sale on my tax return?

With either of the two types of statutory employee stock option plans, there is no income as a result of the granting of the option or the exercising of the option (purchasing stock). These two types of plans are the employee stock purchase plan and the incentive stock option plan. However, if you don't hold the stock long enough to meet the holding requirements, when the stock is sold. You may have to report compensation income (wages). The split will affect the computation of capital gain and compensation income, if any.

For the stock purchased under an employee stock purchase plan, to receive favorable tax treatment, it must be held for at least two years after the option is granted and at least one year after the option is exercised. Since in this case, the holding periods were not met, the lesser of the fair market value of the stock on the grant date minus the option price or the fair market value on the sale date minus the amount you paid for it is compensation income (wages). To the extent that the gain is being taxed as wages on your return, it becomes part of your adjusted basis in the stock sold. When determining basis, the amount you paid for the stock is divided equally among the shares sold.

For information on incentive stock option plans and nonstatutory stock options, or more information on employee stock purchase plans, refer to Publication 525, Taxable and Nontaxable Income

References:


How do I calculate the sale of a stock that had a reverse split?

Reverse splits are where your number of shares in a company's stock decreases. Your total basis remains the same; it is your per share basis that increases. You must divide your basis in the old shares by the number of new shares. For example, you own 4 shares of stock. Two of these shares have a basis of $15 each the other two have a basis of $20 each. There is now a one for two reverse split. Now you have two shares. One has a basis of $30 the other has a basis of $40. If your receive cash because of the sale of a fractional share you have a capital gain or loss that is reported on Form 1040 Schedul D, Capital Gains and Losses. Please see Fractional Shares in Publication 550, Investment Income and Expenses, for further information on the sale of a fractional share.

References:


Do I need to pay taxes on that portion of stock I gained as a result of a split?

No, you generally do not need to pay tax on the additional shares of stock you received due to the stock split. You will need to adjust your per share cost of the stock. You overall cost basis has not changed, but your per share cost has changed.

You will have to pay taxes if you have gain when you sell the stock. Gain is the amount of the proceeds from the sale, minus sales commissions, that exceeds the adjusted basis of the stock sold.

References:


I buy and sell stocks as a day trader using an online brokerage firm. Can I treat this as a business and report my gains and losses on Schedule C?

A business is generally an activity carried on for a livelihood or in good faith to make a profit. Rather than being defined in the tax code, exactly what activities are considered business activities has long been the subject of court cases. The facts and circumstances of each case determine whether or not an activity is a trade or business. Basically, if your day trading activity goal is to profit from short-term swings in the market rather than from long-term capital appreciation of investments, and is expected to be your primary income for meeting your personal living expenses, i.e. you do not have another regular job, your trading activity might be a business.

If your trading activity is a business, your trading expenses would be reported on Form 1040, Schedule C, Profit or Loss from Business (Sole Proprietorship) instead of Form 1040, Schedule A, Itemized Deductions. Your gains or losses, however, would be reported on Form 1040, Schedule D, Capital Gains and Losses, unless you file an election to change your method of accounting.

If your trading activity is a business and you elect to change to the mark-to-market method of accounting, you would report both your gains or losses on Part II of Form 4797, Sales of Business Property.

A change in your method of accounting requires the consent of the Commissioner and can not be revoked without the consent of the Commissioner. Though there is no publication specific to day traders, the details for traders information forsecurities and commodities is covered in Internal Revenue Code Section 475(f) and Revenue Procedure 99-17 and Rev. Proc. 99-49.

References:


Is there any publication that explains the proper way to file a Schedule C as a day trader?

Publication 550, Investment Income and Expenses, which is specific to traders, includes a section titled Special Rules for Traders in Securities.

Internal Revenue Code section 475(f) and Revenue Procedure 99-17 apply only to traders who elect mark-to-market.

References:

  • Publication 550, Investment Income and Expenses
  • Publication 535, Business Expenses
  • Form 3115, Application for Change in Accounting Method
  • Internal Revenue Code section 475(f)
  • Revenue Procedure 99-17


I am a stock day trader. I understand I have the option of electing mark-to-market accounting which would eliminate the wash sale rule. What forms and publications do I need?

If your trading activity is a business, your trading expenses would be reported on Form 1040, Schedule C, Profit or Loss from Business (Sole Proprietorship) instead of Form 1040, Schedule A, Itemized Deductions. Your gains or losses, however, would be reported on Form 1040, Schedule D, Capital Gains and Losses, unless you file an election to change your method of accounting to the mark-to-market method of accounting.

A change in your method of accounting requires the consent of the Commissioner and can not be revoked without the consent of the Secretary. You need Form 3115, Application for Change in Accounting Method, to change your method of accounting. See Publication 550, Investment Income and Expenses (p. 64) for further guidance on how to make the mark-to-market election.

If your trading activity is a business and you elect to change to the mark-to-market method of accounting, you would report your gains or losses on Part II of Form 4797, Sales of Business Property.

References:


I have expenses associated with my day trading business, but am unsure about how to report my gains and losses. How do I file as a day trader and how do I use the mark-to-market accounting method?

A business is generally an activity carried on for a livelihood or in good faith to make a profit. Rather than defined in the tax code, exactly what activities are considered business activities has long been the subject of court cases. The facts and circumstances of each case determine whether or not an activity is a trade or business. Basically, if your day trading activity goal is to profit from short-term swings in the market rather than from long-term capital appreciation of investments, and is expected to be your primary income for meeting your personal living expenses, i.e. you do not have another regular job, your trading activity might be a business.

If your trading activity is a business, your trading expenses would be reported on Form 1040, Schedule C, Profit or Loss from Business (Sole Proprietorship) instead of Form 1040, Schedule A, Itemized Deductions. Your gains or losses, however, would be reported on Form 1040, Schedule D, Capital Gains and Losses, unless you file an election to change your method of accounting.

If your trading activity is a business and you elect to change to the mark-to-market method of accounting, you would report both your gains or losses on Part II of Form 4797, Sales of Business Property.

A change in your method of accounting requires the consent of the Commissioner and can not be revoked without the consent of the Secretary. Though there is no publication specific to day traders, the details for traders in securities and commodities are covered in Internal Revenue Code Section 475(f) and Revenue Procedure 99-17.

If you elect to use the mark-to-market method of accounting, a trading security that you hold at the end of the tax year will generally be treated as sold at its fair market value on the last business day of the tax year. Any loss or gain must be recognized. That gain or loss is taken into account in figuring your gain and loss when you later dispose of the security. See Publication 550, Investment Income and Expenses, for general information on mark-to-market accounting rules.

References:


I am a day trader. How do I go about paying tax on the gain as a business and not on Schedule D?

A business is generally an activity carried on for a livelihood or in good faith to make a profit. Rather than defined in the tax code, exactly what activities are considered business activities has long been the subject of court cases. The facts and circumstances of each case determine whether or not an activity is a trade or business. Basically, if your day trading activity goal is to profit from short-term swings in the market rather than from long-term capital appreciation of investments, and is expected to be your primary income for meeting your personal living expenses, i.e. you do not have another regular job, your trading activity might be a business.

If your trading activity is a business, your trading expenses would be reported on Form 1040, Schedule C, Profit or Loss from Business (Sole Proprietorship) instead of Form 1040, Schedule A, Itemized Deductions. Your gains or losses, however, would be reported on Form 1040, Schedule D, Capital Gains and Losses, unless you file an election to change you method of accounting.

If your trading activity is a business and you elect to change to the mark-to-market method of accounting, you would report both your gains or losses on Part II of Form 4797, Sales of Business Property.

A change in your method of accounting requires the consent of the Commissioner and can not be revoked without the consent of the Secretary. Though there is no publication specific to day traders, information for traders in securities and commodities is in Internal Revenue Code Section 475(f) and Revenue Procedure 99-17 and Rev. Proc. 99-49.

For details about not-for-profit activities, refer to Chapter 1 in Publication 535, Business Expenses. That chapter explains how to determine whether your activity is carried on to make a profit and how to figure the amount of loss you can deduct.

Regardless of whether your day trading activities are reported on Schedule D or on Form 4797, you may need to pay tax on your gains by following the requirements for making estimated tax payments on Form 1040ES, Estimated Tax for Individuals.

References:


Mutual Funds (Costs, Distributions, etc.)


If I sell one mutual fund and use the proceeds to buy another, do I have to report the capital gains or can I wait until I sell and don't buy another fund? Does it matter if I stay within the same family of funds?

You would have to report any capital gains realized on the sale. Even assuming this transaction meets the requirements of an exchange, rather than a sale, the exchange of shares of one fund for those of another is a taxable exchange. This is true even if both funds are within the same family of funds.

References:


If my children have mutual funds, how are the dividends and capital gains reported?

If a child is 14 years old or older and has a requirement to file an income tax return, he or she would report dividends and capital gains no differently than any other taxpayer. If the child is under age 14 and his or her only income is from interest and dividends (including capital gain distributions), the child's parents can make an election to include the income on the parent's return. If the parents make this election, then the child does not have to file a return. The election is made on Form 8814, Parent's Election To Report Child's Interest and Dividends.

In order to make the election under Form 8814,

  1. the child must be required to file a return,
  2. the dividend and interest income cannot exceed $7,500
  3. there must be no estimated tax payment made for the year and no prior overpayment applied to the tax year under the child's name and social security number,
  4. there must be no federal tax taken out of the child's income under the backup withholding rules, and
  5. the parent must be the parent whose return is used for the special tax rules for children under 14.

If a child under the age of 14 has investment income and the parents do not make the above election, the child reports the income as any other taxpayer would. Special rules on how the investment income is taxed, however, may apply. A child under the age of 14 with investment income (interest, dividends, capital gains, etc.) of more than $1,500 may be subject to the parents' tax rate. The special tax computation is figured on Form 8615, Tax for Children Under Age 14 Who Have Investment Income of More Than $1,500.

For more information, refer to Publication 929, Tax Rules for Children and Dependents

References:

  • Form 8814, Parent's Election To Report Child's Interest and Dividends
  • Form 8615, Tax for Children Under Age 14 Who Have Investment Income of More Than $1,400
  • Publication 929, Tax Rules for Children and Dependents


I have both purchased and sold shares in a money-market mutual fund. The fund is managed so the share price is constant. All gain is reported as dividends. Do I have to report the sale of these shares?

Yes, you should report the sale of your shares on Form 1040, Schedule D, Capital Gains and Losses. Generally, whenever you sell, exchange, or otherwise dispose of a capital asset, you must report it on Schedule D.

If the share price were constant, you would obviously have neither a gain nor a loss when you sell shares because you are selling the shares for the same price you purchased them.

If you actually owned shares that were later sold, the fund or the broker should have issued a Form 1099-B There is no requirement with that form that there be gain or loss on the sale, only a sale or exchange of an investment asset and sales proceeds.

References:


How do I find out my cost basis for mutual funds if I do not have all of the records?

You need to reconstruct your records the best that you can. Contact your broker or the mutual fund company for assistance.

Another source of information is your prior year tax returns. If your mutual fund has been reinvesting dividends, those reinvested dividends (which have been used to purchase additional shares in the fund) should have been reported as dividend income on your tax return each year. To compute your total basis, add to the cost of the original shares purchased the amount of all dividends automatically reinvested that were previously reported as income on your prior tax returns and any shares you subsequently purchased.

You can usually also add acquisition fees and load charges you've paid to your basis in your mutual fund shares. If you sell your shares and the sales commission is not subtracted from the sales proceeds on Form 1099-B, Broker and Barter Exchanges, you can add the commission to the basis of the shares sold. If you receive a distribution that is identified as a return of capital, you must reduce your total basis by that amount.

Refer to Keeping Track of Your Basis in Publication 564, Mutual Fund Distributions.

References:


If I do not have the records showing each dividend reinvestment, how do I calculate the basis of my shares in a mutual fund that I acquired years ago?

Unless you have acquired shares through gifts or inheritances, your basis is what the shares cost you. Your mutual fund company can often provide you with this information upon request. Another source of information is your broker, if the fund was purchased through a broker. You cannot calculate your basis in your mutual fund shares accurately without this information. You can only claim the amount of basis that you can establish and substantiate with records. You may lose a large part of your basis if you cannot establish the amount of dividends that were reinvested. This is why keeping records is so important.

Another source of information on reinvested dividends is your prior year tax returns. If your mutual fund has been reinvesting dividends, those reinvested dividends should have been reported as dividend income on your tax return each year.

For more information, refer to Publication 564, Mutual Fund Distributions.

References:


Do the dividends and/or capital gains I report affect my cost basis of the individual shares I own?

They would affect your total basis and total number of shares if they were reinvested in the mutual fund. Add the reinvested dividends and capital gains that you have reported as income on your tax return to your total basis. You will also own additional shares in the fund because the dividends and capital gains have been used to purchase shares. Keep good records. If you are going to be using an average-cost method to determine per-share basis on sales, be sure and keep records of all your mutual fund activity until you no longer own any shares in that fund.

There is a worksheet to help you keep track of your number of shares and your basis in Publication 564, Mutual Fund Distributions.

References:


How do return of principal payments affect my cost basis when I sell mutual funds?

A return of principal (or return of capital) reduces your basis in your mutual fund shares. Unlike a dividend or a capital gain distribution, a return of capital is a return of part of your investment (cost). However, basis cannot be reduced below zero. Once your basis reaches zero, any return of principlel is capital gain and must be reported on Form 1040, Schedule D, Capital Gains and Losses.

References:


How do I show a return of principal payment from my Form 1099-DIV on my tax return?

You do not normally have to report a return of principal (or return of capital) on your tax return. You must reduce your basis in the fund, which should be recorded in your records. However, basis cannot be reduced below zero. Once your basis reaches zero, any return of principal is capital gain and must be reported on Form 1040, Schedule D, Capital Gains and Losses.

References:


Do I have to specify to my broker which specific shares to sell in order to use the Specific Lot method to determine cost basis for mutual funds? Do I need confirmation from my broker?

You are referring to meeting the requirement for "adequate identification." If you can definitively identify the stocks sold, you do not need to use the adequate identification rules. You can use the adjusted basis of those particular shares to figure your gain or loss.

The "adequate identification" rules allow you to control which shares are considered sold, even though you may not control which shares are actually sold. If you specify to your broker which shares you want sold prior to or at the time of the sale and they confirm within a reasonable time in writing, then you are considered to be able to "adequately identify" the shares sold, even if the broker actually sells different shares. The confirmation by the mutual fund must be given to you within a reasonable period of time and state that you instructed the broker to sell particular shares of stock.

If you cannot identify the specific shares and you do not want to use an average basis, then you must use the first-in first-out method (FIFO). These two methods are both cost basis methods. You may not use either cost basis methods if you nave previously used an average basis method for that mutual fund on a tax return. Refer to Publication 564, Mutual Fund Distributions.

References:


I have used the FIFO method to determine the cost basis for a sale of a portion of a mutual fund holding. Must I continue to use this method for all future sales of this fund?

No. If you subsequently sell some shares in that mutual fund and can identify the shares sold, you can switch to the specific share identification method. Both of these methods are cost basis methods.

To switch to an average basis method, you must have acquired the shares at various times and prices, and left the shares on deposit in an account handled by a custodian or agent who acquires or redeems those shares. Once you elect to use an average basis, you must continue to use it for all accounts in the same fund. However, you may use a different method for shares in other funds, even those within the same family of funds.

Before using an average basis, be sure your records reflect the disposition of the shares that were reported using the cost basis method (FIFO).

References:


If I previously sold shares of a mutual fund and reported the gains or losses using the FIFO method, can I switch to the average cost method?

Yes, you can. The only requirement for using an average basis is that you acquired the shares at various times and prices, and you left the shares on deposit in an account handled by a custodian or agent who acquires or redeems those shares. The average-basis method, once adopted, must be disclosed on your tax return and the method cannot be changed back without permission from the Commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service.

Before computing the basis of shares sold using an average basis, ensure that you have reduced your previous total basis by the cost of the shares accounted for using the FIFO method.

References:


If I previously reported my mutual fund sales using the FIFO method and switched to the average cost method, do I include only those shares remaining after the previous sales to determine the average cost?

Yes. You would include in your average basis calculations only those shares that were still held at the time of the sale you are reporting.

References:


How do I calculate the average basis for the sale of mutual fund shares?

In order to figure your gain or loss using an average basis, you must have acquired the shares at various times and prices and have left them on deposit in a managed account.

There are two average basis methods:

  • Single-category method, and
  • Double category method.

Single-category method. First, add up the cost of all the shares you own in the mutual fund. Divide that result by the total number of shares you own. This gives you your average per share basis. Multiply that number by the number of shares sold.

Double-category method. First, divide your shares into two categories, long-term and short-term. Then use the steps above to get an average basis for each category. The average basis for that category is then the basis of each share in the sale from that category.

Once you elect to use an average basis method, you must continue to use it for all accounts in the same fund. You must clearly identify on your tax return the average basis method that you have elected to use.

Refer to Publication 564, Mutual Fund Distributions, Sales, Exchanges and Redemptions.

References:


If I own some mutual fund shares less than a year and other shares more than a year, do I need to do two separate computations for the average cost basis?

If you are electing or have previously elected to use the double-category method for that mutual fund, you need to do two separate computations; one for long-term and one for short-term-only. The single-category method requires only one computation of average basis.

For more information, refer to Publication 564, Mutual Fund Distributions, Sales, Exchanges, and Redemptions.

References:


How do I tell the IRS I used the average cost basis method in reporting the gain or loss from my mutual funds?

Either write the name of the average basis method used as a notation on Form 1040, Schedule D, Capital Gains and Losses, or attach a sheet to the Schedule D showing in detail how you computed the basis of the stock sold. Whenever you attach a statement to your return, include your name(s) and social security number(s).

References:


If I use the average cost basis for one mutual fund I sold, do I have to use it for all mutual funds I sell?

No, you may use one of the cost basis methods for the sale of shares from a different fund, as long as you have not used an average basis method for that fund previously. Once you have elected to use an average basis method to compute the gain or loss on shares in a mutual fund, you must use that same method for the sale of shares from any account in that same fund.

References:


If I use the average cost method for computing basis of mutual fund shares upon sale, how do I determine the holding period for those shares?

How you determine the holding period of mutual fund shares you sold depends on which of the two average basis methods you are electing to use. Once you have elected a method, you must use that method for determining the basis of any shares sold in the future from that fund.

For the purpose of determining your holding period using the single-category method, the shares disposed of are considered the shares that you acquired first. When using the double-category method, you need to determine the holding period for each share based on the trade date the share was acquired, then assign the share to either the short-term category (held one year or less) or the long-term category (held more than one year).

References:


After the first partial sale of mutual fund shares, are the sold shares no longer used when updating the average cost basis for future sales?

If you used the single-category method, the average per-share basis is the same for the shares you still hold as the ones you sold. The next time you sell shares, the per-share basis will remain the same unless you acquired additional shares in the meantime.

If you subsequently sell some shares and have acquired additional shares since the last sale, you recompute the average basis. Divide the total cost of the shares that you hold at the time of sale by the number of shares you hold at the time of sale.

If you used the double-category method to compute an average basis previously, you need to transfer from the short-term category to the long-term category any shares that have been held longer than one year at the time of a subsequent sale. Transfer the shares at the per-share basis for the short-term category computed at the time of the last sale, then recompute the average basis for the two categories. Use the new total cost and total number of shares for each category.

For more information, refer to Publication 564, Mutual Funds.

References:


How do I calculate the average cost method of a mutual fund if the fund price split?

If your mutual fund split, or adjusted its price, it would be treated just like a stock split. Your total basis doesn't change after the split, but since you now own more shares without paying any more money, your per-share basis will decrease. To calculate your per-share basis, divide the total cost that you have invested in the fund (minus any shares previously sold) by the current number of shares that you hold.

References:


What affect does a stock split for a stock in my mutual fund have on my cost basis when I am using the average share?

If a stock within your mutual fund splits, it has no affect on your basis because the shares you own are shares in the mutual fund, not in the stock that split.

References:


How do I receive permission to change my cost basis calculation to adopt the average cost basis and to whom should I send the letter?

You do not need permission to elect an average cost basis method for a particular mutual fund when you have used a cost basis previously to report the sale of shares in the fund. If you meet the conditions to use an average basis, then you just need to clearly indicate on the return for which you want the election to be in effect that you are making the election. You also need to indicate which average basis method you are using and that none of the shares are gift shares. If there are gift shares in the account, you must include a statement that the basis for gift shares when figuring the average basis is the fair market value at the time of the gift.

If you have already reported the sale using a cost basis, you cannot make this election unless you can do it on an amended return before the due date of the tax return being amended.

However, you do need the consent of the IRS to use a cost basis or change your average basis method once you have made this election to use an average basis method. This would be considered a change in an accounting method. You would need to request consent to change your method on Form 3115, Application for Change in Accounting Method.

For more information, refer to Publication 564, Mutual Fund Distributions, Publication 538, Accounting Periods and Methods, Instructions for Form 3115, Application for Change in Accounting Method, Revenue Procedure 97-27, and Section 9.03 of Revenue Procedure 97-1.

References:


I received a 1099-DIV showing a capital gain. Why do I have to report capital gains from my mutual funds if I never sold any shares?

A mutual is a regulated investment company that pools funds of investors allowing them to take advantage of a diversity of investments and professional asset management. You own shares in the fund, but the fund owns assets such as shares of stock, corporate bonds, government obligations, etc. One of the ways the fund makes money for its investors is to sell these assets at a gain. When this happens, the nature of the income is capital gain, which gets passed on to you. These are called capital gain distributions, which are distinguished on Form 1099-DIV from income that is from profits, called ordinary dividends.

References:


Where are mutual fund short-term capital gain distributions reported?

Capital gain distributions from a mutual fund are by definition long-term. That's why they appear only in Part II of Form 1040, Schedule D, Capital Gains and Losses. The annual statement you receive from your mutual fund may list short-term capital gains, but your Form 1099-DIV will show those amounts as ordinary dividends.

Ordinary dividends (which include the mutual fund's profits from short term capital gains) are reported on Form 1040, Schedule B, Interest & Dividend Income, or Form 1040A, Schedule 1, Interest and Ordinary Dividends, if the total is over $400. If not, you enter the total ordinary dividends on line 9 of Form 1040 or line 9 of Form 1040A.

Refer to the line 13 instructions of Form 1040 for exceptions when you can enter capital gain distributions directly on line 13 of Form 1040 without having to file Schedule D.

References:


My end-of-year statement from a mutual fund company showed amounts in 3 categories: (1) capital gains, (2) short-term capital gains, and (3) ordinary dividends. When Form 1099-DIV came, the short-term capital gains were lumped in with ordinary dividends. Which is correct and where do I list the short-term capital gains?

Your Form 1099-DIV is correct, but so is your annual statement. For the purpose of reporting taxable income on your tax return, capital gain distributions are defined as long-term capital gains only. Short-term capital gains are taxed as ordinary income and are therefore treated as ordinary dividends on Form 1099-DIV.

Report the fund's short-term capital gains as part of your total ordinary dividends on line 9 of your Form 1040 or 1040A. (You may have to also report them on Form 1040, Schedule B, Interest & Dividend Income or Form 1040A, Schedule 1, Interest and Ordinary Dividends. Refer to the instructions to the schedule.)

References:


How can I use mutual fund short-term capital gains, which are reported on Form 1099-DIV in Box 1 as "Ordinary Dividends," to help offset short-term capital losses?

You cannot. You did not sell the assets that produced this income, the mutual fund did. All income that is taxed as ordinary income flows through to you as ordinary dividends, whether the income is from interest, dividends, or the sales of short-term capital assets by the fund.

In the same manner, you report capital gain distributions as long-term capital gains on your return regardless of how long you have owned the shares in the mutual fund. This is because the asset was held and then sold by the mutual fund, not by you.

Report your total ordinary dividends (including the short-term gains in your mutual fund) on Form 1040, line 9, or Form 1040A, line 9, with your other dividends, if any. You may also have to file Form 1040, Schedule B, Interest & Dividend Income or Form 1040A, Schedule 1, Interest and Ordinary Dividends.

References:


How do you list gains from mutual funds on Schedule D and Form 1040 when some mutual funds list short-term capital gains separately and others lump short-term capital gains and taxable dividends together as dividends?

Only the capital gain distributions are reported on Form 1040, Schedule D, Capital Gains and Losses. They are reported in Part II as long-term capital gains. Short-term capital gains are taxed as ordinary income and are therefore treated as ordinary dividends on Form 1099-DIV. They are reported on line 9 of Form 1040 or Form 1040A.

That many mutual fund companies send out annual fund statements as well as Forms 1099-DIV, or "consolidated statements," has lead to some confusion regarding short-term capital gains. The purpose of Form 1099-DIV is to provide you with information to report income correctly on your tax return.

The annual report often breaks down the income from fund activity as dividends, tax-exempt dividends, short-term capital gains, long-term capital gains, returns of capital, and undistributed capital gains. Form 1099-DIV, on the other hand, will show only ordinary dividends (which includes the fund's short-term capital gains), capital gain distributions, and returns of capital (nontaxable distributions).

Mutual fund companies may combine the annual fund information with the Form 1099-DIV information into a consolidated statement. If this is what you receive, look for the part of the statement identified as the Form 1099-DIV or that contains language such as "in lieu of Form 1099-DIV."

References:


If a mutual fund is tax-free for dividends, are the capital gains tax free when the fund is sold?

No. The kind of income the assets in the fund earn is tax-free. When you sell your shares in the fund, a taxable gain or deductible loss is realized on the sale. This is the true also for the sale of tax-exempt securities such as municipal bonds.

References:


On December 20, I received a large mutual fund distribution. Due to the large distribution I'm going to owe $7000 when I file my return. Is it okay to just pay the $7000 when I file my return?

If the $7,000 in tax is a result of a distribution not covered by prepayments of tax, either through income tax withholding or estimated tax payments, you should make an estimated tax payment by January 15th of the next year. If you wait to pay the $7,000 with your return, you may be penalized for an underpayment of estimated taxes. Even if you make an adequate payment of tax by January 15th, you may be assessed an estimated tax penalty by the IRS service center when your return is processed. This is because estimated tax payments are normally made in four equal installments and the IRS will not know your liability occurred in the fourth quarter unless you file Form 2210, Underpayment of Estimated Tax by Individuals, Estates and Trusts.

You may be subject to the penalty if you owe at least $1,000 in tax after subtracting your withholding from your estimated tax liability, and you did not prepay at least 90% of your current year's tax or 100% of your previous year's tax. (The latter percentage is higher for higher-income taxpayers with adjusted gross incomes from the previous year of more than $150,000.)

If you make an adequate payment by January 15th but made no earlier estimated tax payments, use Form 2210, Underpayment of Estimated Tax by Individuals, Estates and Trusts, to compute your penalty. Check the box on the front page selecting the Annualized Income Installment method, and then complete Schedule AI on page 3. When you compute the penalty on page 2 of that form using the numbers from Schedule AI, your penalty will be $0. Even if you did not make the January 15th payment, the annualized income method on Form 2210 may significantly reduce the estimated tax penalty if the income for which there was no prepayment of tax was earned in the third or fourth quarters of the year.

For more information on estimated tax payments and the underpayment of estimated tax penalty, refer to Publication 505, Tax Withholding and Estimated Tax.

References:

  • Publication 505, Tax Withholding and Estimated Tax
  • Form 2210, Underpayment of Estimated Tax by Individuals, Estates and Trusts


Losses (Homes, Stocks, Other Property)


How much am I allowed to deduct as a capital loss this year?

Your allowable capital loss deduction for any tax year, figured on Form 1040, Schedule D, is limited to the lesser of:

  1. $3,000 ($1,500 if you are married and file a separate return), or
  2. Your capital loss as shown on line 17 of Schedule D.

If you have a capital loss on line 17 of Schedule D that is more than the yearly limit on capital loss deductions, you can carry over the unused part to later years until it is completely used up. Refer to Publication 17, Your Federal Income Tax, or Tax Topic 409, Capital Gains and Losses, for additional information.

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I have capital losses of $4,000. How much may I deduct this year?

Your allowable capital loss deduction for any tax year, figured on Form 1040, Schedule D, is limited to the lesser of:

  1. $3,000 ($1,500 if you are married and file a separate return), or
  2. Your total net loss as shown on line 17 of Schedule D

If you have a total net loss on line 17 of Schedule D that is more than the yearly limit on capital loss deductions, you can carry over the unused part to later years until it is completely used up.

For more information about capital gains and losses, refer to Publication 544, Sales and Other Dispositions of Assets.

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Is the loss on the sale of your home deductible?

The loss on the sale of a personal residence is a nondeductible personal loss.

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As a result of a bankruptcy, the bank foreclosed on my house. Can you tell me where and how to report this loss on my taxes?

The foreclosure or repossession is treated as a sale or exchange from which you, the borrower, may realize gain or loss. However, if you realize a loss on personal use property, such as your residence, the loss is not deductible. Refer to Publication 544, Sales and other Dispositions of Assets, and Publication 908, Bankruptcy Tax Guide, for more information.

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I own stock which became worthless last year. Can I take a bad debt deduction on my tax return?

If you own securities and they become totally worthless, you can take a deduction for a loss, but not for a bad debt.

The worthless securities are treated as though they were capital assets sold on the last day of the tax year if they were capital assets in your hands. Report worthless securities on line 1 or line 8 of Form 1040, Schedule D, whichever applies. In columns (c) and (d), write "Worthless." For additional information, refer to Publication 550, Investment Income and Expenses (Including Capital Gains and Losses). For more information on bad debts, refer to Tax Topic 453, Bad Debt Deduction.

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