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Employee
April 13, 2020
Question

Why do I see a positive number ($329) for "Medical Expenses" when I have NOT added any medical expenses?

  • April 13, 2020
  • 1 reply
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I see $329 for "Medical Expenses" on the "Your tax breaks" summary page for my 2019 return. That is after I made sure there are NO actual medical expenses added in this section. I even went trough all the related questions multiple times and entered 0 everywhere and I still see the $329. If I actually enter some medical expenses, for example I need to enter $684 for doctors, I then see $1,013 on the summary page. Where is this extra $329 coming from??? Can someone help and explain please?

1 reply

April 13, 2020

Since we cant' see your return in this forum, most likely the $329 for Medical Expenses is being transferred from a W-2, a 1099-R,  SSA-1099, 1095-A, or another document, since you didn't enter it yourself.

 

If you are using TurboTax Online, once you have paid for your return, look at the Medical Expenses Worksheet to see what the expense was.

 

NS1Author
Employee
April 15, 2020

Thank you so much for the response @mglauner! I am using TurboTax Self Employed online, and we do have only a Form 1095-A, We do not have W2-s, or any of the other forms you have mentioned. Our self employed income is from K-1s, if that matters.

 

I also just spent almost an hour on the phone with TT support to no avail - we deleted the medical expenses form, which did not reset that number. By now, I assume it is being added automatically, likely mysteriously related to the 1095-a.

 

Thank you for the advise that I must pay, so I can see the worksheets. I am not willing to pay $179 for a product that automatically adds numbers without any information whatsoever. Phone support wasted a lot of my time as well. TT is the most expensive product out there, so I am starting to consider other options.

 

VolvoGirl
Employee
April 15, 2020

Sounds like you had to pay back part of the subsidy.  If you went to an exchange for Health Insurance, and had to pay back some of the subsidy, part of the adjustment will flow to Schedule A.  I would not worry about any Medical showing up on schedule A.  You probably don't have enough Medical to deduct.  And most people are taking the Standard Deduction now anyway.  So it won't affect anything.

 

But if you have self employment income you can deduct it directly on the 1040 against your schedule C if you have a Net Profit.

 

If you enter the 1095-A and select the "Self-employed and bought a Marketplace plan" box, it will automatically include those premiums in the SE Health Insurance section.  

 

You can deduct self employed health insurance directly on 1040 Schedule 1  line 16 without going through schedule A and meeting the 7.5% floor.

 

Self-employed health insurance deduction goes on Form 1040 schedule 1 line 16, as long as the expense is not greater than your net self-employment income. If it does exceed your net self-employment income it gets split automatically. An amount equal to your net self-employment income goes on Form 1040 Schedule 1 line 16, and the remainder gets added in to medical expenses on Schedule A.