"In this regard, if the cash liquidation distribution is greater than your basis such that your basis is reduced to zero, then the excess cash liquidation distribution becomes a capital gain and is reported as such in TurboTax. Did you sell any part of your REIT in 2022?"
Yes. All of REIT sold in 2022. So yes it is a capital gain.
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Working from Turbo Tax Screens:
Did you get a brokerage statement? I got a 1099-DIV with both a 2a (Capital Gain Distribution) and Box 9 (cash liquidation distribution).
Which brokerage sent the form? I assume that “REIT_X” is a brokerage and enter that.
It is one sale. So I enter Sale #1
Description: Purchase + Dividend Reinvestments [Is that good enuf? I don’t have share numbers]
Date sold: May 20, 2022
Date acquired: Various. [But definitely long-term]
Sale amt: I have
Cost basis: I have memo from Investment Firm, not REIT.
Sales Category: Long Term noncovered (Cost basis not reported on 1099)
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Looking back at what I entered and my assumptions, kindly advise.
I believe that an Attachment about the Cost Basis will be necessary. Would I enter that somewhere in the form?
Thanks for your help.
Enter a Date Acquired so that TurboTax can verify LT/ST. The gains are taxed differently. You can use the date when you first acquired the REIT (or any date over one year prior to sale).
If you know the Cost Basis, enter it. Keep records of that amount.
You won't need to attach anything about the Cost Basis to your return.
@NM37