How to Calculate the State Income Tax Deductions on Form 8960, Part II, Line 9b

Form 8960, line 9b

Form 8960 - Net Investment Income Tax – Individuals, Estates, and Trusts was released by IRS in 2013. The purpose of this form is to computer the 3.8% net investment income tax on the lesser of an individual’s net investment income for the tax year or the excess of the individual’s modified adjusted gross income for the tax year over a threshold amount.

Part I of form 8960 is used to calculate total investment income. Part II is used to calculate total deductions allocable to investment income. On line 9b of part II, you should include any state, local or foreign income taxes you paid that are attributable to net investment income. Your total state income tax can be the state, local or foreign income tax you deducted on schedule A line 5a of Form 1040, or the state, local or foreign income taxes you actually paid for the year if you don't use schedule A to take itemized deductions. You will need to allocate the total tax between net investment income and excluded income if your investment income is only part of the income you reported on your tax return. IRS allows you to use any reasonable method to determine the portion of taxes allocable to net investment income. The example below shows one method that you can use to calculate the state income tax for Part II, line 9b:

Assume you report the following items on your tax return. You can allocate $20,000 state income tax by the ratio of $30,000 total investment income on line 8 of Form 8960 to $300,000 adjusted gross income on line 38 of Form 1040 to get the state income tax deduction for Part II, line 9b.





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How to Figure the Amount for Form 8960, Line 4b


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Example – Using Worksheet for Determining Support

Example – Using Worksheet for Determining Support

One of the five tests to be a qualifying child is the support test. To satisfy the support test, the child must not have provided more than half of his or her own support for the tax return year. The following example shows you how to use the worksheet provided by IRS to determine if you meet the support test.

Example: John is a 20-year-old full-time college student and single in 2020. He earned $10,000 wage from his summer job in 2020. His expenses in 2020 include $40,000 tuition, $10,000 rent and $6,000 food plus $2,000 clothing and $2,000 travel expense. He had $1,000 in his bank account at beginning and end of 2020.

Step 1: Input John’s income and expenses to each related line on the worksheet.

Step 2: Compare line 20 and line 21 on the worksheet.

Since line 21 is less than line 20, John did not provide more than half of his own support, therefore, he meets the support test.




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How to Calculate Tax Basis of Publicly Traded Partnership


Per IRS definition, "a publicly traded partnership (PTP) is any partnership an interest in which is regularly traded on an established securities market regardless of the number of its partners".

If you purchase shares (or units) of a PTP, you are a partner of the PTP. As a partner of a PTP, it is important to track your tax basis in the partnership. Your tax basis in a partnership is the amount you paid to purchase the partnership shares adjusted by your shares of the partnership income, loss, deductions, distributions and certain other items allocated to you from the partnership.

There are several reasons to track your tax basis in the partnership: First, to determine whether your distributions from a partnership is tax free. You don't need to pay tax for partnership distribution as long as the distribution is less than your tax basis. Second, to determine if your share of partnership loss is limited. Generally, you can't deduct loss that's more than your tax basis at the year end. Third, to determine gain or loss from selling your partnership interests. When you sell your partnership interest, your gain or loss is the difference between sales proceeds and your tax basis.

You may find your tax basis on the item L, part II of partnership K-1 you received. If the box next to tax basis is checked, the ending capital account balance is your tax basis at year end. If you can't find tax basis or are not sure whether the tax basis provided on K-1 is correct, you can calculate your tax basis by yourself. Here is an example to help you calculate the tax basis of your interest in a publicly traded partnership.

Example: Peter bought 800 shares of ABC partnership, a publicly traded partnership for $8,000 in year 1. He also sold 100 shares for $1,100 before the end of year 1. He owned the rest of shares for three years and sold all of them for $6,500 in year 3. Peter used the following worksheet to calculate his tax basis in ABC partnership and gain or loss from the sales.


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For more information, please see Partner's Instructions for Schedule K-1 (Form 1065) Partner's Share of Income, Deductions, Credits, etc. (For Partner's Use Only) and IRS Publication 541 and 551.

How to Figure the Amount for Form 8960, Line 4b

Form 8960, Line 4b

Form 8960 line 4 has three lines:

Line 4a  is used to report income from rental real estate, royalties, partnerships, S corporations, trusts, etc.

Line 4b  is used to adjust the amount reported on line 4a for net income or loss derived in the ordinary course of a non-section 1411 trade or business.

Line 4c is the combination of line 4a and line 4b.

To figure out what adjustment(s) you should make on line 4b, you need to know what income item(s) is included on line 4a, then decide which item(s)  to adjust on line 4b.

What is included on Form 8960, line 4a

The amount on Form 8960 line 4a is from what you report on Form 1040, line 17. It is also the total amount of income reported on Form 1040, Schedule E, which includes the following types of income:
  • Income or loss from rental real estate and royalties.
  • Income or loss from partnerships and S corporations.
  • Income or loss from estates and trusts.
  • Income or loss from real estate mortgage investment conduits (REMICs)—residual holder



What adjustments should be reported on Form 8960, line 4b

Generally, only net investment income from passive activities are subject to net investment income tax. A passive activity means any trade or business activity in which you do not materially participate. Since the income reported on Form 8960, line 4a (or Schedule E) may include both passive and nonpassive income, you need to enter total income from nonpassive activities on line 4b as an adjustment to remove it from line 4a, so that only passive investment income will be taxed. 

According to Form 8960 line 4b instruction, the following items are not subject to net investment income tax. You should review the completed Form 1040, Schedule E, identify these items and report the total nontaxable amount on line 4b.

1. "Net income or loss from a section 162 trade or business (see Note 1 below) that is not a passive activity and is not engaged in a trade or business of trading financial instruments or commodities."

2. "Net income or loss from a section 1411 trade or business (see Note 2 below) that is taken into account in determining self-employment income."

3. "Royalties derived in the ordinary course of a section 162 trade or business that is not a passive activity."

4. "Passive losses of a former passive activity that are allowed as a deduction in the current year by reason of section 469(f)(1)(A)." (see Note 3 below)

5. "Nonpassive net rental income or loss of a real estate professional where the rental activity rises to a section 162 trade or business."

6. "Net rental income or loss that is a nonpassive activity because it was grouped with a trade or business under Regulations section 1.469-4(d)(1)."

7. "Other rental income or loss from a section 162 trade or business reported on Schedule K-1 (Form 1065), Partner's Share of Income, Deductions, Credits, etc., line 3, from a partnership, or Schedule K-1 (Form 1120S), Shareholder's Share of Income, Deductions, Credits, etc., line 3, from an S corporation, where the activity is not a passive activity."

8. "Net income that has been recharacterized as not from a passive activity under the section 469 passive loss rules and is derived in the ordinary course of a section 162 trade or business. For example:
  • Net rental income or loss from a rental that meets an exception under Regulations section 1.469-1T(e)(3)(ii), the activity rises to a section 162 trade or business, and you materially participated in the activity, or
  • Net income from property rented to a nonpassive activity. See Special Rules for Certain Rental Income, earlier." 

Note 1: Here is a definition of section 162 trade or business from www.taxpayeradvocate.irs.gov. "The Supreme Court has interpreted “trade or business” for purposes of IRC § 162 to mean an activity conducted with “continuity and regularity” and with the primary purpose of earning income or making profit."

Note 2: Per IRS code section 1411S(c)(2), section 1411 trade or business is a trade or business that is either a passive activity for the taxpayer or is a trade or business of trading in financial instruments or commodities.

Note 3: If you have disallowed passive loss from former passive activity and use it to  offset against the income from such activity for the current taxable year, you need to remove it from line 4a because the income from such activity is nonpassive for current taxable year and is not included or removed from line 4a. See example below.



Treatment of income or loss from a publicly traded partnership (PTP)

If you have an overall gain (total income, gain minus total losses) from a publicly traded partnership (PTP), the net gain is treated as nonpassive income, therefore is not subject to net investment income tax. The net gain should be an adjustment on line 4b.

If you have an overall loss from a publicly traded partnership (PTP), you can not deduct the net loss. It will be carried forward to future years to offset income from the same PTP. You don't need to make adjustment on line 4b since the net loss is not allowed and not included on line 4a.

If you have income or loss from multiple PTP, you must treat each PTP separately when you calculate the overall gains or losses. You also can't combine income or losses from a PTP with income or losses from NON-PTP activities.

For more information, please see IRS Instructions for Form 8960, Partner's Instructions for Schedule K-1 (Form 1065) and Instructions for Schedule E (Form 1040).



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How to Determine If You Must File a Federal Income Tax Return

How to Determine If You Must File a Federal Income Tax Return

Whether or not you need to file a federal income tax return depends on your filing status, age and gross income. This step by step guide will help you determine if you should file a tax return in the year you have income.

Step 1: Check Your W-2 Form.

If you received a W-2 form for the wages you earned, check the box 2 – Federal income tax withheld on W-2. If there is any amount reported on this box, you should file a tax return no matter how much income you earned during the year, so you will not miss the tax refund in case you over paid federal withholding tax.

Note: You don’t need to go through the rest of steps if you can determine that you need to file a return at this step.

Step 2: Check Table 1. 2017 Filing Requirements Chart for Most Taxpayers to determine if you need to file a return. Or check Table 2. 2017 Filing Requirements for Dependents if you are a dependent (see How to determine if you are a dependent).






Note: You don’t need to go through the step 3 if you can determine that you need to file a return at this step.

Step 3: Check Table 3. Other Situations When You Must File a 2017 Return.




For more information about federal income tax filing requirements, please see IRS Publication 501.

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How to Determine If You Are a Dependent

How to Determine If You Are a Dependent

Per IRS publication 501, the term “dependent” means a qualifying child or a qualifying relative.
To determine if you are a qualifying child, go through the 5 tests on Table 4. Tests To Be a Qualifying Child. You must meet all 5 tests to be a qualifying child.



To determine if you are a qualifying relative, go through the 4 tests on Table 5. Tests To Be a Qualifying Relative. You must meet all 4 tests to be a qualifying relative.




For more details and examples, please see IRS Publication 501.


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How to Claim Earned Income Tax Credit

How to claim earned income tax credit

The Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) is a refundable tax credit for taxpayers with low to moderate income. You must meet EITC rules set-up by IRS and file a federal income tax return to claim EITC.

Step 1: Determine if you are eligible to claim earned income tax credit.


The table below lists all EITC eligibility requirements by the number of qualifying children you are going to claim. You must meet all the requirements that apply to you.





Step 2: Collect information needed to claim EITC.


In addition to collect documents for preparing your federal income tax return, you also need to have certain documents ready in case you need to prove that you can claim EITC for your qualifying child(ren). You can find lists of these documents on Form 886-H-EIC, Documents You Need to Send to Claim the Earned Income Credit  on the Basis of a Qualifying Child or Children for Tax Year 2015.

Step 3: Prepare and file tax forms with IRS  to claim EITC.


You must file a federal income tax return Form 1040, or 1040EZ, or 1040A with Schedule EIC (if you want to claim qualifying child(ren)) in order to claim EITC.

If you want to prepare and file tax returns by yourself, you can use free tax preparation software offered on IRS website. You will be guided by the software to input information for your return. After you input all the information, you tax return will be generated and your EITC will be calculated by the software. You can file your return after you complete the whole preparation process guided by the software.

You can also use the free tax return preparation service provided by the Volunteer Income Tax Assistance (VITA) program. Generally, you can find the services located at you community and neighborhood centers, libraries, schools or shopping centers. You can also find the VITA site near you by using the VITA locator Tool on the IRS website. or call 800-906-9887.

If you don't want to prepare your own tax return and can't get any free help, you can hire a paid tax professional to prepare and file your tax return to claim the credit for you.


For more information, please see IRS Publication 596.



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