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Hello, I’m Jill from Turbo Tax, with important news for
taxpayers who earn interest or dividend income.
Did you receive a 1099-DIV
or 1099-INT form this year?
If so, you may need to file a Schedule B with your tax return.
The Internal Revenue Service requires a Schedule B form
in a number of situations, but for the average taxpayer,
the two most common reasons are earning more than $1,500 of
interest or dividend income (from savings accounts or stocks, for example)
and to exclude the interest you earn on
certain U.S. savings bonds from your tax return.
The Schedule B has three sections:
interest, ordinary dividends and foreign accounts and trusts.
To complete the interest section, you need to separately report
the name of each institution that sends you a 1099-INT form
and the amount of interest it reports.
For example, if you have a savings account,
your bank will send you a 1099-INT
by January 31 with your annual interest earnings reported in box 1.
And if you cash in any type of U.S. savings bond,
you will receive an additional 1099- INT
that reports the bond interest in box 3.
If you use the proceeds of a series EE or I
U.S. savings bond to finance your education
or the education of a spouse or dependent,
you may be eligible to exclude some of the interest
from your taxable income. However,
you will need to calculate the amount of interest you can exclude
on Form 8815 before reporting the
excluded interest on Schedule B.
You report dividends on Schedule B in the same way as interest,
but instead, you transfer the payor information
and the total ordinary dividend payments
reported in box 1a from each 1099-DIV you receive.
Although you must prepare a Schedule B
when the combined total of interest and ordinary dividend income you earn
is greater than $1,500;
reporting more than $1,500
in either the dividend or interest sections of Schedule B
requires you to complete the foreign accounts and trusts section—
which asks a number of questions about the foreign
financial accounts you have an interest in, if any.
Not sure which forms to use?
When you file with TurboTax, you don’t need to know a thing about tax forms.
We’ll ask you in simple, plain-English questions,
fill in all the right forms and do all the math behind the scenes.
For more information about income taxes visit TurboTax.com.