Pub. 17, Chapter 9 - Dividends & Other Corporate Distributions
You may receive any of the following distributions during the year.
Exempt-interest dividends.
Exempt-interest dividends you receive from a regulated investment
company (mutual fund) are not included in your taxable income. You
will receive a notice from the mutual fund telling you the amount of
the exempt-interest dividends you received. Exempt-interest dividends
are not shown on Form 1099-DIV or Form 1099-INT. See
Gains and Losses in Publication 564
for information about
the loss treatment of mutual fund stock on which you received
exempt-interest dividends.
Information reporting requirement.
Although these 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 tax-exempt dividends to taxable
income.
Alternative minimum tax treatment.
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.
Dividends on insurance policies.
Insurance policy dividends that the insurer keeps and uses to pay
your premiums are not taxable. However, you must report as taxable
interest income the interest that is paid or credited on dividends
left with an insurance company.
If dividends on an insurance contract (other than a modified
endowment contract) are distributed to you, they are a partial return
of the premiums you paid. Do not include them in your gross income
until they are more than the total of all net premiums you paid for
the contract. (For information on the treatment of a distribution from
a modified endowment contract, see Distribution Before Annuity
Starting Date From a Nonqualified Plan under Taxation of
Nonperiodic Payments in Publication 575,
Pension and
Annuity Income.) Report any taxable distributions on insurance
policies on line 16b (Form 1040) or line 11b (Form 1040A).
Dividends on veterans' insurance.
Dividends you receive on veterans' insurance policies are not
taxable. In addition, do not report as taxable income interest on
dividends left with the Department of Veterans Affairs.
Patronage dividends.
Generally, patronage dividends you receive in money from a
cooperative organization are included in your income.
Do not include in your income patronage dividends you receive on:
- Property bought for your personal use, or
- Capital assets or depreciable property bought for use in
your business. But you must reduce the basis (cost) of the items
bought. If the dividend is more than the adjusted basis of the assets,
you must report the excess as income.
These rules are the same whether the cooperative paying the
dividend is a taxable or tax-exempt cooperative.
Alaska Permanent Fund dividends.
Do not report these amounts as dividends. Instead, report them on
line 21 of Form 1040, line 12 of Form 1040A, or line 3 of Form 1040EZ.
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