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You need to report it as other income, iirc
You need to report it as other income, iirc
I report everything regardless of how small it is, if I get a form I report it. Less chance of an audit
I received my 1099 from the online broker and saw this:
View attachment 4176
This was a dividend paid by an ETF called PICK which holds foreign investments.
It looks like the tax has been withheld and paid.
What do I do with it?
You are required to report all your gross income (as defined in the IRC), not just what third parties report to the IRS. If you are only reporting income reported on a W-2 or 1099 and leaving off other income, you are subject to civil and/or criminal penalties. If what you meant is that you don't report that dime you found on the sidewalk as income because it's just too small to make any difference, then I see no problem with that. But if you mean avoiding reporting any income regardless of amount if it's not reported to the IRS, I do see a big problem with that.
RIF.Okay, Kojak. You do not have to report most personal injury settlements, sale of vehicles when it is used to purchase another vehicle or in most cases church income is not taxable so evidently you do not have to report it all.
Are you planning to claim the foreign tax credit for that, or deduct the foreign tax withheld, or just forget about the few bucks that would save and not bother with pursuing the foreign tax issue? The answer to that would affect how I would answer how to report it.
You do not have to report sale of vehicles when it is used to purchase another vehicle
Citation please.
Cause I think you are wrong.
Citation please.
Cause I think you are wrong.
most vehicles depreciate and don't appreciate so if you sold it for a lost then you do not have to report it, if you sold it for a profit then it is capital gains. Most everyone will sell a vehicle for less money than they paid for it.
I guess I needed to qualify the statement.
Yes.
I did sell a car for a profit last year and I'm declaring my capital gains on my return.
It's a pity you can't take a capital loss deduction when you sell a car for less than you paid for it.
Yes.
I did sell a car for a profit last year and I'm declaring my capital gains on my return.
It's a pity you can't take a capital loss deduction when you sell a car for less than you paid for it.
I'll include the dividend in my taxable income but I would prefer to ignore the foreign tax credit as my taxable income for 2022 is less than the standard deduction. The $14 isn't going to make any difference.
Yes.
I did sell a car for a profit last year and I'm declaring my capital gains on my return.
Then in that case just report it like any other dividend. You won't need to do anything about the foreign tax that was paid if you aren't going to claim any deduction or credit for it. Dividends paid by a foreign corporation are taxed to U.S. citizens/residents the same way they are taxed on dividends from U.S. corporations.