giogis245 Posted April 11, 2023 Report Posted April 11, 2023 Hello, we're on the final stretch! I have a client who came in with this form, she inherited stock from her grandpa. He passed in July of 2022, she withdrew the money in Aug 2022, her Merrill Lynch stock broker told her she would not have to pay taxes. I've never had a situation like this, so your help is greatly appreciated! Quote
ILLMAS Posted April 11, 2023 Report Posted April 11, 2023 https://www.investopedia.com/terms/s/stepupinbasis.asp#:~:text=Step-up in basis%2C or,the asset is sold later. 1 Quote
giogis245 Posted April 11, 2023 Author Report Posted April 11, 2023 Thank you! Do I include form 8949 or nothing at all since based on this, client does not pay capital gain taxes. 1 Quote
ILLMAS Posted April 11, 2023 Report Posted April 11, 2023 Hello Teresa, you would report it as like any other stock sale but you need to go back to date of death and look up the value of the stocks. That would be your cost basis, there is a chance the stock didn’t appreciate in value between DOD and when your client sold them. 5 Quote
Lee B Posted April 11, 2023 Report Posted April 11, 2023 The stock market has been pretty volatile, there is an equal chance of significant price changes. 6 Quote
Lion EA Posted April 11, 2023 Report Posted April 11, 2023 You have to use Form 8949 to report the DOD cost basis to be able to show her actual gain/loss for her month of ownership. Plus, the IRS has the Form 1099-B so its computers will try to match to her return. Get the DOD values for each of the sales from her ML stock broker. In fact, have him print her gain/loss statement using the DOD cost basis for each transaction. He should upload it to a ML portal and give you access. Download it to your computer. Then you have the documentation you need to prepare her return and to include in her tax folder for her to keep. Also, save a copy of her ML gain/loss statement in your electronic file for your client, just in case she gets any IRS correspondence that you will respond to for her. 5 Quote
Pacun Posted April 11, 2023 Report Posted April 11, 2023 I thought that when you inherited stock, you start wearing the shoes of the deceased. Meaning, no step up basis and you inherit the gains and loses also. Quote
DANRVAN Posted April 12, 2023 Report Posted April 12, 2023 50 minutes ago, Pacun said: inherited stock, you start wearing the shoes of the deceased. Meaning, no step up basis You "step into the shoes" of the decedent for assets producing income in respect of the decedent, IRD. IRD includes such items as: installment notes receivable, IRA accounts,....... investments in annuities. 5 Quote
Catherine Posted April 13, 2023 Report Posted April 13, 2023 Stock gets basis stepped up as of date of death (in normal cases). It's gifts where the basis travels to the new owner, @Pacun. 1 Quote
michaelmars Posted April 14, 2023 Report Posted April 14, 2023 ignore the term, all inherited stock sales are considered LONG TERM 5 Quote
mcb39 Posted April 15, 2023 Report Posted April 15, 2023 On 4/11/2023 at 11:27 AM, cbslee said: The stock market has been pretty volatile, there is an equal chance of significant price changes. And, Inherited, is one case where she could possibly have a LT Capital loss. I have a client who will never outlive her carryforward $3000 a year loss. 3 Quote
Catherine Posted April 16, 2023 Report Posted April 16, 2023 13 hours ago, mcb39 said: I have a client who will never outlive her carryforward $3000 a year loss. I had one where I thought that for sure - until the client sold a patent some years later. Wiped out the whole kit and caboodle of the loss! 2 Quote
mcb39 Posted April 16, 2023 Report Posted April 16, 2023 That would be rare and amazing. My client is carrying a $200,000 carryover loss on the sale of an inherited house. 1 Quote
Lee B Posted April 16, 2023 Report Posted April 16, 2023 1 minute ago, mcb39 said: That would be rare and amazing. My client is carrying a $200,000 carryover loss on the sale of an inherited house. I can't even imagine how that could have happened? 2 Quote
mcb39 Posted April 16, 2023 Report Posted April 16, 2023 4 minutes ago, cbslee said: I can't even imagine how that could have happened? Before she became my client, which is many years ago; she inherited a $600,000 house from her father and sold it for approximately $400,000 just to get rid of it because it was standing empty. They wipe some of it out with CG; the most prominent one two years ago when they sold a Rental property. They still have a lot of CL left. Even more astonishing; WI only allows a $500 CL per year. They are a nice couple who are secure as one can be these days. They have invested wisely and live a happy, but not ostentatious life. They winter in AZ and come home in April. I have to say that when they first came to me, I was as intimidated as I have ever been. I thought they were way out of my league. That is no longer true. They trust me explicitly and I value them as clients. 5 Quote
DANRVAN Posted April 17, 2023 Report Posted April 17, 2023 6 hours ago, mcb39 said: she inherited a $600,000 house from her father and sold it for approximately $400,000 just to get rid of it because it was standing empty. That raises a couple possibilities. (a) The house could have been overvalued by $200,000 or (b) The house was sold for less than FMV and the difference should have been reported as a gift. 2 Quote
mcb39 Posted April 17, 2023 Report Posted April 17, 2023 11 hours ago, DANRVAN said: That raises a couple possibilities. (a) The house could have been overvalued by $200,000 or (b) The house was sold for less than FMV and the difference should have been reported as a gift. I cannot clarify that as she came to me with the Carryover loss already established and I don't know the particulars of the story. They have been with me for several years and have never been questioned by the IRS since I have known them. 1 Quote
Catherine Posted April 17, 2023 Report Posted April 17, 2023 There have been some nasty collapses in real estate market. If house was appraised in 2007 and then sold in 2009 or 2010, that would do it, easily. 2 Quote
JJStephens Posted April 17, 2023 Report Posted April 17, 2023 Part of what I love about this forum is the never-ending stream of fascinating situations and (I say this sincerely) brilliant responses! If there were a John Grisham for tax law, that person could have a never ending supply of plot lines just from reading the intriguing stuff posted here. 5 2 Quote
Yrags Posted April 18, 2023 Report Posted April 18, 2023 So, back to this topic. I have a question about proper reporting. I also have mucho sales of inherited stock. I created a spreadsheet showing the reported basis and the basis as of the DOD. On Line (e) Basis, do I put the DOD value, or the reported (earlier) value, with a code in line (f) and an adjustment in (g)? If a code, which code? I can see using (B) Basis Shown is Incorrect, or (O) All Other Adjustments. I looked in the 8949 Instructions, and it's a little unclear, as it does mention doing either but does not mention specifically when inherited property. Thanks! Quote
BrewOne Posted April 18, 2023 Report Posted April 18, 2023 For 8949 entries, I would just plug in the DOD valuation for cost basis. You have your spreadsheet in case the IRS questions the difference between what the broker reported and what you entered. My experience is that as long as the stock sales match IRS numbers, they are not going to get involved without some other type of trigger/red flag. 1 Quote
Margaret CPA in OH Posted April 18, 2023 Report Posted April 18, 2023 In ATX in the input sheet under (a) Transaction type you can choose 13, Inherited Property. 3 Quote
jklcpa Posted April 18, 2023 Report Posted April 18, 2023 10 hours ago, Yrags said: So, back to this topic. I have a question about proper reporting. I also have mucho sales of inherited stock. I created a spreadsheet showing the reported basis and the basis as of the DOD. On Line (e) Basis, do I put the DOD value, or the reported (earlier) value, with a code in line (f) and an adjustment in (g)? If a code, which code? I can see using (B) Basis Shown is Incorrect, or (O) All Other Adjustments. I looked in the 8949 Instructions, and it's a little unclear, as it does mention doing either but does not mention specifically when inherited property. Thanks! If the basis was NOT reported to IRS, then you would enter the basis at DOD from your worksheet. No code or adjustment is needed in this case. If the basis WAS reported to IRS, then enter the basis shown on the 1099B and enter code "B" in col (f) and enter the adjustment to basis in col (g). Code "B" is for incorrect basis reported to IRS. For either case, use "inherited" for date acquired and all of those sales will all be considered long-term. 6 Quote
BulldogTom Posted April 18, 2023 Report Posted April 18, 2023 2 hours ago, jklcpa said: For either case, use "inherited" for date acquired and all of those sales will all be considered long-term. In ATX, it would actually be "Transaction Type" of "Inherited" that you select to get you the "Long Term" tax treatment. The date acquired and the date sold will be the actual date you inherited and the date sold. Transaction type overrides date input in ATX. It may be different in Drake or other software. Tom Longview, TX 2 1 Quote
Catherine Posted April 18, 2023 Report Posted April 18, 2023 4 hours ago, BulldogTom said: It may be different in Drake or other software. In Drake, you put "INHERIT" in the acquired field and it forces long term treatment. 3 Quote
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