RunningBum
Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
- Joined
- Jun 18, 2007
- Messages
- 13,564
I had been doing my son's taxes for years, and this year we decided he should do them on his own. I offered to look it over before he filed. He took me up on it, and I noticed he had not accounted for government interest in some Vanguard mutual funds to reduce his state income.
I walked him through it over text. There was a long pause and he said he had trouble deciphering total dividends per fund with monthly/quarterly dividends on the VG 1099-CONS. It was a little more unclear on his form because he had only held one of the funds for one dividend, so it did not have a bold total under a line. Then he said he really didn't see how he could've recognized this at all without my help.
I walked through it a little more closely on my own and after entering the 1099-DIV numbers the next page said "Tell us if any of these uncommon [emphasis mine] situations apply to you", the first one being "A portion of these dividends is US Government interest". TT has a lot of these type of dialogs, and they are almost "None of these apply to me" for fairly simple returns. This one, however, is not so uncommon, IMO. People who don't have dividends n a taxable account won't encounter this at all, but if you do have dividends, there is a fairly reasonable chance that some are from mutual funds, which very often have at least a little bit of govt interest. In his case one of them was 100%.
Then I looked at his 1099-CONS. The only way to know would be to recognize that the page with heading "Mutual Fund and UIT Supplemental Information" would tell you. On that page is a heading for each fund, and under that in smaller type is "PERCENTAGE OF INCOME FROM US GOVERNMENT SECURITIES". The 1099-CONS information is dense enough and I really can't fault him for missing this.
The mailed 1099s used to have a separate document with the % for each fund, so that was an extra hint. But VG discourages mailed documents, and I'm pretty certain he doesn't get them.
The net reduction of his state taxes was $29. Not a game changer but still something.
I totally understand how he missed this. I wonder how many other people also miss it?
I walked him through it over text. There was a long pause and he said he had trouble deciphering total dividends per fund with monthly/quarterly dividends on the VG 1099-CONS. It was a little more unclear on his form because he had only held one of the funds for one dividend, so it did not have a bold total under a line. Then he said he really didn't see how he could've recognized this at all without my help.
I walked through it a little more closely on my own and after entering the 1099-DIV numbers the next page said "Tell us if any of these uncommon [emphasis mine] situations apply to you", the first one being "A portion of these dividends is US Government interest". TT has a lot of these type of dialogs, and they are almost "None of these apply to me" for fairly simple returns. This one, however, is not so uncommon, IMO. People who don't have dividends n a taxable account won't encounter this at all, but if you do have dividends, there is a fairly reasonable chance that some are from mutual funds, which very often have at least a little bit of govt interest. In his case one of them was 100%.
Then I looked at his 1099-CONS. The only way to know would be to recognize that the page with heading "Mutual Fund and UIT Supplemental Information" would tell you. On that page is a heading for each fund, and under that in smaller type is "PERCENTAGE OF INCOME FROM US GOVERNMENT SECURITIES". The 1099-CONS information is dense enough and I really can't fault him for missing this.
The mailed 1099s used to have a separate document with the % for each fund, so that was an extra hint. But VG discourages mailed documents, and I'm pretty certain he doesn't get them.
The net reduction of his state taxes was $29. Not a game changer but still something.
I totally understand how he missed this. I wonder how many other people also miss it?