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Form 1099-INT Q&A

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Q: Why did I receive the Form 1099-INT?
A: If you received interest more than $10, you would get a Form 1099-INT. A 1099-INT tax form is a record that a person or entity paid you interest during the tax year. You may not have to pay income tax on all the interest it reports, but you still need to report this information on the return.

Q:
Who sends the Form 1099-INT?
A:
The Internal Revenue Service requires most payments of interest income to be reported on tax form 1099-INT by the person or entity that makes the payments. This is most commonly a bank, other financial institution, or government agency.

Q:
What information is included in the Form 1099-INT?
A:
The form 1099-INT will include your Social Security Number or Taxpayer Identification Number and the amount you received. When you file your tax return, you don’t need to attach the copies of the form 1099-INT you receive, but you need to report the information from the forms on your tax return. That is because each bank, financial institution or other entities that pay you at least $10 of interest during the year must prepare a form 1099-INT and send it to IRS. IRS uses the form 1099-INT to ensure you report the correct amount of interest income on your tax return.

Q:
How to understand the boxes in the form 1099-INT?
A:
Box 1 of the Form 1099-INT reports all taxable interest you receive, such as your earnings from a savings bank account.
Box 2 reports interest penalties you are charged for withdrawing money from an account before the maturity date.
Box 3 reports interest earned on U.S. savings bonds or Treasury notes, bills, or bonds.
Box 4 reports any federal tax withheld on your interest income by the payer.
Box 8 relates to interest-bearing investments you hold with state and local governments, such as municipal bonds.

Q:
How to report the Form 1099-INT on my own tax return?
A:
You can report the interest on the appropriate lines of your tax return:
All amounts reported in box 1 of Form 1099-INT must be reported on the “taxable interest” line of your tax return and are taxed in the same way as the other income you report on the return. For the penalty amounts reported in box 2 of Form 1099-INT, you may be able to take a deduction in the “adjusted gross income” section of your return. For the interest amounts reported in box 3 of Form 1099-INT, note that some of this kind of interest may be tax-exempt. You need to appropriately report the withheld tax (box 4 of Form 1099-INT) in the “payment section” of your tax return. You need to report the tax-exempt interest (Form 1099-INT box 8) on the “tax-exempt interest” line of your own tax return.
Please remember you should also prepare a Schedule B with the name of each payer and the amount of interest received when the combined total of taxable interest reported on all 1099-INTs exceeds $1,500.

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