Skip to main content
February 19, 2024
Solved

1099-MISC Royalties from OK but live in TX with no land ownership nor business

  • February 19, 2024
  • 1 reply
  • 0 views

Good evening,

I live in TX and received a 1099-MISC Royalties from a company in TX that drills in OK. Using TurboTax Premier, I have the following questions:

  1. 1099-MISC Line 2 Royalties: I have several options available to enter in royalties (a) OK W2 Wages, (b) OK Interest Income + Dividends, or (c) OK Rental, Partnerships, Etc. I believe my option will be 'c'. Is this correct?
  2. Gains or Losses from an Electing Passthrough Entity (PTE) (Yes/No): I have no idea what to enter here. I'm guessing this will be a 'Yes'.
  3. In selecting electing PTE 'Yes', TurboTax states "Enter any Oklahoma gains or losses covered by the election pursuant to the provisions of the Pass-Through Entity Act of 2019." If royalties = $1200, will $1200 be entered as a Gains in both "Total Amount" AND "Oklahoma Amount"?
  4. In the Passthrough Entity Information: I have "Passthrough Entity Name: ", "Passthrough Entity Employer ID Number: ", "Passthrough Entity Federal Taxable Income: ", and "Passthrough Entity Oklahoma Taxable Income: ". What do I need to enter for the "Federal Taxable Income" and "Oklahoma Taxable Income"? Is this where I enter $1200 under both?
  5. Oklahoma Adjustments: Lastly which of these applies to me "Income from an oil or gas well that is subject to depletion" or "Gain or loss from an electing passthrough entity" or "Other additions"? I do not believe the other handful of options apply to me.

Any help is greatly appreciated.

Thank you,

Tulane

    Best answer by DaveF1006

    @DaveF1006 , yes you are correct. I only added Line 2 Royalties to Oklahoma Income->Rental, Partnerships, Etc->Oklahoma Amount column. However, I also see the "Federal Amount" column having the same amount. Is this correct? You mentioned in an earlier post that I need to add Royalties to Federal Taxes as well. Hence, I believe $1200 is showing in both "Federal Amount" and "Oklahoma Amount" for rental.

     

    I would like to reiterate, under "Recapture of Depletion and/or Add Back of Excess Federal Depletion", do I insert $84 under both "Total Amount" column as well as "Oklahoma Amount" column?

     

    Thank you,

    Tulane

     


    It depends. You would enter the information FIRST in the federal return in your desktop version according to the steps I listed above, which includes the steps where you would enter your Oklahoma taxes withheld in Boxes 16-18. This information along with all your other income will populate in your Oklahoma non-resident return. You do not need to make any additional entries in your federal return. 

     

    Now when you prepare your Oklahoma non-resident tax return, you will allocate income that is Oklahoma income.  in the allocations, all income will be mentioned. For the income that is excluded, leave those screens blank.  The only income that will be recorded as Oklahoma income will be your royalty income that was already reported in your federal return.  The amount allocated should be allocated here is your Royalty income minus the 15% depletion.   

     

    Now, i need to change my original answer regarding the 7% additional depletion allowance for Oklahoma. This will be entered as an Oklahoma subtraction because this will subtract rather than add to your Oklahoma income. First remove this from "Recapture of Depletion and/or Add Back of Excess Federal Depletion". We don't want this added to your income, but as a reduction because of the additional 7% allowance.

     

    • Now go to the forms mode in your Turbo Tax program.
    • Go to Schedule A-H in your Oklahoma State return of your software in the Forms mode and add $84 in Line 8 of this Schedule 511-NR-B Oklahoma Subtractions. Enter $84 in both columns.

    I think also this you may have indicated this is a rental.  It's not a rental, it is a royalty.  This may be the reason why your depletion% is not being accounted for. Please review all your entries in your 1099 MISC section in the federal return and make certain where it asks what of income it is, indicate it's royalty income.  Also there should be a screen that asks what type of royalty income it is, indicate it is Oil and Gas. This way, you will receive the 15% depletion allowance in your federal and state return. 

     

    Once everything is reported and done correctly, this is what your Form 511 NR form should look like this in the forms mode. Your overall income is not what is shown here but this does reflect Oklahoma source income in Box 4, which represents the $1200 income minus the 15% depletion percentage. Line 5 represents the additional subtraction that is the difference between the federal depletion and the additional Oklahoma depletion allowance. Here is the screenshot and how this is to appear in your return. Don't be concerned if all income is showing because your final return results because your Oklahoma tax is based on the percentage between Oklahoma based income and your overall income for the year. Your taxable income, if this is prepared correctly is $936, which represents your Oklahoma Sourced income. 

     

    @Tulane 

     

    1 reply

    PatriciaV
    Employee
    February 19, 2024

    Yes, you have chosen the correct answer for Oklahoma rental income. However, the remaining questions relate to income reported on Schedule K-1, not Form 1099-MISC. Change your answer for #2 to "no" and the next two questions will not be asked. For Oklahoma Adjustments, choose "income from oil or gas well that is subject to depletion."

    **Say "Thanks" by clicking the thumb icon in a post**Mark the post that answers your question by clicking on "Mark as Best Answer"
    TulaneAuthor
    February 19, 2024

    Hi, thank you PatriciaV for your insight. Having selected "income from oil or gas well that is subject to depletion", I now have "Oklahoma Oil Depletion Adjustment" that allows an optional depletion of 22%. TT states "If you elect this option, enter the allowable difference between your Oklahoma depletion amount and the depletion amount claimed on your federal return." As my 1099-MISC only shows Line 2 Royalties, I don't know if I can enter anything here. Is this correct?

     

    In addition, I forgot to mention that my 1099-MISC also has line 16 "State Tax Withheld". Where do I enter in this number?

     

    Thank you,

    Tulane

     

    DaveF1006
    February 19, 2024

    It depends.  It sounds like you received a 1099 MISC rather than a K-1 so all steps in your original post in steps 2-4 are irrelevant so I would ignore these if this is the case.

     

    If you are working in Turbo Tax Online, here are the precise steps you must take to complete your return.  

     

    1. Go to federal>wages and income>other common income>1099 MISC
    2. Answer all questions regarding your royalty to complete your royalty information.
    3. After answering these questions, you will receive a screen that will allow you to enter income.  Here you make the selection that your income comes from a 1099 MISC.
    4. When you begin recording information in your 1099 MISC, be sure you check the Box indicating My form has other info in boxes 1-17. This will expand the screen and you can enter your state tax information in Boxes 16-18.
    5. Once the information has been completed, your 15% federal depletion percentage will be automatically deducted and the net amount of your Royalty income will be reported in line 8 of your 1040 and your federal and state AGI will reflect this adjustment. 
    6. Once done, your additional 7% depletion allowance will be factored in and subtracted from your Oklahoma-sourced income.

    If you are working in Turbo Tax Desktop, the procedure is a little more complicated. Rather than listing this, if you are working in the Software, let me know at @DaveF1006 and I will list precise steps for completing this in Desktop.

     

     

    [Edited 02/19/24|2:55 pm PST]

     

    @Tulane 
     

    **Say "Thanks" by clicking the thumb icon in a post**Mark the post that answers your question by clicking on "Mark as Best Answer"