Burke Posted February 17, 2008 Report Posted February 17, 2008 To Virginia Preparers: (gailtaxed, etc?) Read Subtraction #24 in Form 760 and tell me what it means. Do you get to exclude first $600 of all winnings? Sum of all winnings individually under $600, even if aggregate for year is over $600? Nada if one-time winnings of $1,000? I am confused. I understand if total winnings for year were UNDER $600, you can exclude. Quote
Gail in Virginia Posted February 18, 2008 Report Posted February 18, 2008 I think you have it right, and no it is not logical. I never have understood the reasoning for this one. Quote
Burke Posted February 18, 2008 Author Report Posted February 18, 2008 I ran it by MM and she thinks its the first $600. Have a question into the state tax dept, but no one is there until Tues. Will let you know what I find out. Quote
Gail in Virginia Posted February 18, 2008 Report Posted February 18, 2008 G Sawyer, this is from the Virginia Tax Administrative Code, and I think it answers your question. The sentence that I put in bold and underlined tells you that you do not get the subtraction if the total prize is $600 or more. Hope this helps. Link is http://www.policylibrary.tax.virginia.gov/OTP/Policy.nsf (if it works right.) Code Section: 23VAC10-140-281 Tax Type: Employer Income Tax Withholding Brief Description: Income taxation of lottery prizes Topics: Persons Subject to Tax 23 VAC 10-140-281 Income taxation of lottery prizes A. Lottery prizes subject to taxation. Any lottery prize of $600 or more shall be subject to Virginia income tax. To the extent included in federal adjusted gross income, any lottery prize of less than $600 shall be subtracted from federal adjusted gross income in determining Virginia taxable income. No subtraction is allowed for the first $599 of a prize of $600 or more. B. Persons subject to taxation. The following persons shall be subject to Virginia income taxation at the current applicable rate as determined in Chapter 3 of Title 58.1 of the Code of Virginia on lottery prizes subject to taxation under subsection A above: 1. Residents; 2. Nonresidents; and 3. Part-year residents. C. Multiple winners. When a lottery prize is claimed by a group, family unit, club or other organization, the multiple winners will be required to (i) file an Internal Revenue Service Form 5754, "Statement by Person(s) Receiving Gambling Winnings" with the Lottery Department, or (ii) attach a statement to their federal income tax return. The statement should include the following information for each individual, person, or entity who receives a portion of the lottery prize: 1. The name; 2. Social security number, or employer's federal identification number; and 3. Amount of the winnings each individual person or entity received from the lottery prize. The amount of the lottery prize included in federal adjusted gross income for each individual person or entity shall be subject to state income taxation. Each individual person's or entity's share of $599 or less shall be subject to state income taxation if the aggregate amount of the prize prior to distribution among the group, family unit, club or organization is $600 or more. D. Estimated tax. Taxpayers may be required to pay estimated taxes in the event that a lottery prize is not subject to withholding or if withholding is insufficient. In accordance with §§ 58.1-490 through 58.1-496 of the Code of Virginia, estimated tax is due if the estimated tax liability on all income subject to state taxation exceeds a taxpayer's total withholding and other credits by more than $150. Statutory Authority: §§ 58.1-203 and 58.1-4006(B )(1) of the Code of Virginia. Historical Notes: Derived from VR 630-6-4006 § 2; eff. November 21, 1990. Quote
Burke Posted February 18, 2008 Author Report Posted February 18, 2008 Thanks for the info and cite. Would have sent you a PM but don't know how. I know it is somewhere but I can't find it. Quote
kcjenkins Posted February 19, 2008 Report Posted February 19, 2008 To send someone a Personal Message, click on their name next to their post, it's the third line down. Quote
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