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February 6, 2024
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2 1099-G for tax refunds related to different years from California

  • February 6, 2024
  • 1 reply
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I have a tax refund from previous year when I did not itemize and I have a tax refund from a prior year related to 1040x. That year I had itemized.

 

But because my SALT were substantially above the federal deduction cap in both those years, I should not be paying taxes on either of the refunds. I have received 2 1099-G.

 

The first one was auto recorded by TurboTax when it imported data from prior year tax return and I see that it's not being taxed. When I manually enter the 2nd 1099-G, all the amount in box 2 is reported as taxable in schedule 1 line 1. It should not be.

 

How do I correctly enter this 1099-G so that it does not get taxed?

 

How do I handle this situation?

 

Thank you.

Best answer by rjs

You don't have to enter the second 1099-G. Since you know it's not taxable, just don't enter it.

 

1 reply

rjs
rjsAnswer
Employee
February 6, 2024

You don't have to enter the second 1099-G. Since you know it's not taxable, just don't enter it.

 

chenarAuthor
March 19, 2024

Thanks for the pointers.

 

I found out the state and local income tax worksheet in the turbotax form mode and found out the taxable 1099-G entry for prior years. The column d showed the same amount as column c. Changing the column d to zero did the trick.

Since (I think) the worksheet does not get filed along with the returns, technically I am doing exactly the same thing as you suggested above. So marking your answer as the best one.

For years, I blindly followed turbotax and let it do what it wanted to but now I am discovering that I should be at least paying attention to how the tax due/tax refund amount changes at the top whenever I change numbers.