IRS Pub. 17, Your Federal Income Tax
A loss on deposits can occur when a bank, credit union, or other
financial institution becomes insolvent or bankrupt. If you incurred
this type of loss, you have three choices of how to deduct the loss.
- As a casualty loss.
- As an ordinary loss.
- As a nonbusiness bad debt.
Casualty loss or ordinary loss.
You can choose to deduct a loss on deposits as a casualty loss or
as an ordinary loss for any year in which you can reasonably estimate
how much of your deposits you have lost in an insolvent or bankrupt
financial institution. The choice is generally made on the return you
file for that year and applies to all your losses on deposits for the
year in that particular financial institution. Once you treat the loss
as a casualty or ordinary loss, you cannot treat the same amount of
the loss as a nonbusiness bad debt when it actually becomes worthless.
Nonbusiness bad debt.
If you do not choose to deduct the loss as a casualty loss or as an
ordinary loss, you must wait until the actual loss is determined
before you can deduct the loss as a nonbusiness bad debt. Once you
make this choice, you cannot change it without permission from the
Internal Revenue Service.
How to report.
The kind of deduction you choose for your loss on deposits
determines how you report your loss. If you choose:
- Casualty loss -- report it on Form 4684 first and then
on Schedule A (Form 1040).
- Ordinary loss -- report it on Schedule A (Form 1040).
- Nonbusiness bad debt -- report it on Schedule D (Form
1040).
More information.
For more information, see Special Treatment for Losses on
Deposits in Insolvent or Bankrupt Financial Institutions in the
instructions for Form 4684.
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