giogis245 Posted March 24, 2021 Report Posted March 24, 2021 Client brought in his Robinhood securities, do I only enter 1099DIV info which includes the ordinary dividends? Do I need to enter summary of proceeds, gains and losses? Quote
Lion EA Posted March 24, 2021 Report Posted March 24, 2021 Enter the 1099DIV information for Schedule B and the 1099B information for Schedule D via Form 8949. Do you understand those sources of income, how the information flows on the return, etc. Will you be able to proofread/review the return for reasonableness and accuracy? The IRS instructions for Schedule D are helpful and thorough: https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/i1040sd.pdf Quote
giogis245 Posted March 24, 2021 Author Report Posted March 24, 2021 Basis $469,183 Cost: $505,785 Wash sale loss disallowed: $48,268 Net gain: $11,673 do these numbers make sense Quote
JRS Posted March 24, 2021 Report Posted March 24, 2021 15 minutes ago, Lion EA said: Enter the 1099DIV information for Schedule B and the 1099B information for Schedule D via Form 8949. Do you understand those sources of income, how the information flows on the return, etc. Will you be able to proofread/review the return for reasonableness and accuracy? The IRS instructions for Schedule D are helpful and thorough: https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/i1040sd.pdf Please read the IRS instructions. You have basis in a security when you buy and proceeds when you sell. 1 Quote
giogis245 Posted March 24, 2021 Author Report Posted March 24, 2021 Ok looks like I have to do some reading tonight. Thanks much! Quote
Lion EA Posted March 24, 2021 Report Posted March 24, 2021 Yes, read about Cost, Adjusted Basis, how a disallowed Wash Sale loss adjusts basis, how to code adjustments to basis, etc. And, use your software's Help, Knowledgebase, Chat, Support, whatever features to learn how to do the data entry for the rows and columns on that 1099-B. I suggest taking a simple return with smaller numbers and preparing it by hand on paper forms to understand how the numbers flow from one form to another. When you know where all the numbers go, enter the same return in your software to make sure you understand the data entry needed to get the correct results. Then you'll feel more confident with larger numbers &/or more complicated returns. 1 Quote
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