Pacun Posted March 24, 2022 Report Posted March 24, 2022 I want to double check this: I have a statement from Robinhood Securities LLC for stock sales. Short termed: Proceeds $1,500, basis $1000 Long Term: Proceeds $2,000 and basis $1,200 The report shows $400 in expenses. Is Schedule A, itemized deductions, the only place to deduct those $400 Quote
GraceNY Posted March 24, 2022 Report Posted March 24, 2022 Perhaps Form 8949, (e) "Expenses not included in proceeds or basis." 1 Quote
GraceNY Posted March 24, 2022 Report Posted March 24, 2022 Just now, GraceNY said: Perhaps Form 8949, (e) "Expenses not included in proceeds or basis." It's the Form 8949 "Input Sheet." 1 Quote
Possi Posted March 24, 2022 Report Posted March 24, 2022 I believe that is for informational purposes only and not deductible anymore. But, I've been wrong before. 4 Quote
Gail in Virginia Posted March 24, 2022 Report Posted March 24, 2022 My first inclination was the same as Possi. But I did not think that Robinhood provided management/advisory services. So if these were actually expenses of the sale (although they seem high for that) then perhaps Grace is correct. So basically, like all tax questions I need to know more information and until then my answer is "it depends." 2 Quote
Lee B Posted March 24, 2022 Report Posted March 24, 2022 Hmm, Robin Hood advertises they are commission free? Quote
jklcpa Posted March 24, 2022 Report Posted March 24, 2022 It has other fees. Below is from the site, and the fee schedule booklet can be found at the link "RHF Fee Schedule" on its legal and disclosure page. Quote Commission-free trading refers to $0 commissions for Robinhood Financial self-directed individual cash or margin brokerage accounts that trade U.S. listed and certain OTC securities electronically. Keep in mind, other fees such as trading (non-commission) fees, Gold subscription fees, wire transfer fees, and paper statement fees may apply to your brokerage account. Please see Robinhood Financial’s fee schedule to learn more. 2 1 Quote
Pacun Posted March 24, 2022 Author Report Posted March 24, 2022 Let me change the name of the company to Fidelity investments to make it easier and let's say that the fee is only $100. Is Schedule A the only place to deduct that reasonable price? Quote
mcbreck Posted March 24, 2022 Report Posted March 24, 2022 You can't deduct on A anymore. Only time I've seen it where it was deductible was when a client paid a special fee to trade a stock on a foreign exchange - we included it in their cost basis. Otherwise I think it's very likely a lost expense. For example, wiring funds will show up often times as an expense and you can't deduct that. Look through the 1099 and see if it gives a reason for the expense and whether it should be included somewhere. 6 Quote
Abby Normal Posted March 24, 2022 Report Posted March 24, 2022 3 hours ago, GraceNY said: Perhaps Form 8949, (e) "Expenses not included in proceeds or basis." The problem is know whether it was included in the proceeds or basis by the broker. 5 Quote
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