Pub. 17, Chapter 8 - Interest Income
A few items of general interest are covered here.
Passive activity income and losses.
There are tax rules that limit the amount of losses and tax credits
from passive activities you can claim.
Generally, you can
use losses from passive activities only to offset income from passive
activities. You generally cannot use passive activity losses to offset
your other income, such as your wages or your portfolio income (that
is, any gross income from interest, dividends, etc., that is not
derived in the ordinary course of a trade or business). For more
information about determining and reporting income and losses from
passive activities, see Publication 925,
Passive Activity and
At-Risk Rules.
Tax on investment income of a child under age 14.
Part of a child's 1999 investment income may be taxed at the
parent's tax rate. This may happen if all the following are true.
- The child was under age 14 on January 1, 2000.
- The child had more than $1,400 of investment income (such as
taxable interest and dividends) and has to file a tax return.
- Either parent was alive at the end of 1999.
If all these statements are true, Form 8615,
Tax for Children Under Age 14 Who Have Investment Income of
More Than $1,400, must be completed and attached to the child's
tax return. If any of these statements is not true, Form 8615 is not
required and the child's income is taxed at his or her own tax rate.
However, the parent can choose to include the child's interest and
dividends on the parent's return if certain requirements are met. Use
Form 8814, Parents'
Election To Report Child's Interest and Dividends, for this
purpose.
For more information about the tax on investment income of children
and the parents' election, see chapter 32.
Beneficiary of an estate or trust.
Interest, dividends, and other investment income you receive as a
beneficiary of an estate or trust is generally taxable income. You
should receive a Schedule K-1 (Form 1041),
Beneficiary's Share of Income, Deductions, Credits, etc.,
from the fiduciary. Your copy of Schedule K-1 and its
instructions will tell you where to report the items on your Form
1040.
Social security number (SSN).
You must give your name and SSN to any person required by federal
tax law to make a return, statement, or other document that relates to
you. This includes payers of interest.
SSN for joint account.
If the funds in a joint account belong to one person, list that
person's name first on the account and give that person's SSN to the
payer. (For information on who owns the funds in a joint account, see
Joint accounts, later.) If the joint account contains
combined funds, give the SSN of the person whose name is listed first
on the account.
These rules apply both to joint ownership by a married couple and
to joint ownership by other individuals. For example, if you open a
joint savings account with your child using funds belonging to the
child, list the child's name first on the account and give the child's
SSN.
Custodian account for your child.
If your child is the actual owner of an account that is recorded in
your name as custodian for the child, give the child's SSN to the
payer. For example, you must give your child's SSN to the payer of
dividends on stock owned by your child, even though the dividends are
paid to you as custodian.
Penalty for failure to supply SSN.
If you do not give your SSN to the payer of interest, you may have
to pay a penalty. See Failure to supply social security number
under Penalties in chapter 1.
Backup withholding also
may apply.
Backup withholding.
Your investment income is generally not subject to regular
withholding. However, it may be subject to backup withholding to
ensure that income tax is collected on this income.
When you open a new account you must certify under penalties of
perjury that your SSN is correct and that you are not subject to
backup withholding. Your payer will give you a
Form W-9,
Request for Taxpayer Identification Number and
Certification, or a similar form, to make this certification. If
you fail to make this certification, backup withholding may begin
immediately on your new account or investment.
Backup withholding may also be required if the Internal Revenue
Service (IRS) has determined that you underreported your interest or
dividend income. For more information, see Backup Withholding
in chapter 5.
Reporting backup withholding.
If backup withholding is deducted from your interest income, the
payer must give you a Form 1099-INT for the year that indicates
the amount withheld. The Form 1099-INT will show any backup
withholding as "Federal income tax withheld."
Joint accounts.
In a joint account, two or more persons hold property as joint
tenants, tenants by the entirety, or tenants in common.
That property can include a
savings account or bond. Each person may receive a share of any
interest from the property. Each person's share is determined by local
law.
Income from property given to a child.
Property you give as a parent to your child under the Model Gifts
of Securities to Minors Act, the Uniform Gifts to Minors Act, or any
similar law, becomes the child's property.
Income from the property is taxable to the child unless it is used
in any way to satisfy a legal obligation to support that child. The
income is taxable to the person having the legal obligation to support
the child (the parent or guardian) to the extent that it is used for
the child's support.
Savings account with parent as trustee.
Interest income from a savings account opened for a child who is a
minor, but placed in the name and subject to the order of the parents
as trustees, is taxable to the child if, under the law of the state in
which the child resides, both of the following are true.
- The savings account legally belongs to the child.
- The parents are not legally permitted to use any of the
funds to support the child.
Form 1099-INT.
Interest income is generally reported to you on Form
1099-INT, Interest Income, or a similar statement, by
banks, savings and loans, and other payers of interest. This form
shows you the interest you received during the year. Keep this form
for your records. You do not have to attach it to your tax return.
Report on your tax return the total amount of interest income that
is shown on any Form 1099-INT that you receive for the tax year.
You must also report all of your interest income for which you did not
receive a Form 1099-INT.
Nominees.
Generally, if someone receives interest as a nominee for you, that
person will give you a Form 1099-INT showing the interest
received on your behalf.
If you receive a Form 1099-INT that includes amounts
belonging to another person, see the discussion on nominee
distributions under How To Report Interest Income in
chapter 1 of Publication 550,
or see the Schedule 1 (Form 1040A) or
Schedule B (Form 1040) instructions.
Incorrect amount.
If you receive a Form 1099-INT that shows an incorrect amount
(or other incorrect information), you should ask the issuer for a
corrected form. The new Form 1099-INT you receive will be marked
"CORRECTED."
Form 1099-OID.
Reportable interest income may also be shown on Form
1099-OID, Original Issue Discount. For more
information about amounts shown on this form, see Original Issue
Discount (OID), later in this chapter.
Exempt-interest dividends.
Exempt-interest dividends you receive from a regulated investment
company (mutual fund) are not included in your taxable income.
(However, see Information-reporting requirement, next.) You
will receive a notice from the mutual fund telling you the amount of
the exempt-interest dividends that you received. Exempt-interest
dividends are not shown on Form 1099-DIV or Form 1099-INT.
Information-reporting requirement.
Although exempt-interest dividends are not taxable, you must show
them on your tax return if you have to file. This is an information
reporting requirement and does not change the exempt-interest
dividends to taxable income.
Note.
Exempt-interest dividends paid from specified private activity
bonds may be subject to the alternative minimum tax. See
Alternative Minimum Tax in chapter 31
for more information.
Chapter 1 of Publication 550
contains a discussion on private activity
bonds, under State or Local Government Obligations.
Interest on VA dividends.
Interest on insurance dividends that you leave on deposit with the
Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) is not taxable. This includes
interest paid on dividends on converted United States Government Life
Insurance and on National Service Life Insurance policies.
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