IRS Pub. 17, Your Federal Income Tax
This chapter discusses the taxability of any social security or
equivalent tier 1 railroad retirement benefits you may have received.
It also explains:
- How to figure whether your benefits are taxable,
- How to use the social security benefits worksheet (with
examples),
- How to report your taxable benefits on Form 1040 and Form
1040A (with examples), and
- How to treat repayments that are more than the benefits you
received during the year.
When the term "benefits" is used in this chapter, it applies
to both social security benefits and equivalent tier 1 railroad
retirement benefits.
Social security benefits include monthly survivor and disability
benefits. They do not include supplemental security income (SSI)
payments, which are not taxable.
Equivalent tier 1 railroad retirement benefits are the part of tier
1 benefits that a railroad employee or beneficiary would have been
entitled to receive under the social security system. They are
commonly called the social security equivalent benefit (SSEB) portion
of tier 1 benefits.
If you received these benefits during 1998, you should have
received a Form SSA-1099 or Form RRB-1099 (Form
SSA-1042S or Form RRB-1042S if you are a nonresident
alien) showing the amount.
What is not covered in this chapter. This chapter does not cover the tax rules for the following
railroad retirement benefits:
- Non-social security equivalent benefit (NSSEB) portion of
tier 1 benefits,
- Tier 2 benefits,
- Vested dual benefits, and
- Supplemental annuity benefits.
~
For information on these benefits see Publication 575,
Pension and Annuity Income.
This chapter also does not cover the tax rules for foreign social
security or railroad retirement benefits. These benefits are taxable
as annuities, unless they are exempt from U.S. tax under a treaty.
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