Pub. 17, Chapter 1 - Filing Information
You must use one of three forms to file your return: Form 1040EZ, Form
1040A, or Form 1040. (But also see Does My Return Have To Be On Paper,
later.)
Form 1040EZ
Form 1040EZ is the simplest form to use.
You can use Form 1040EZ if all of the following apply.
- Your filing status is single or married filing jointly.
- You (and your spouse if married filing a joint return) were under
age 65 on January 1, 2000, and not blind at the end of 1999.
- You do not claim any dependents.
- Your taxable income is less than $50,000.
- Your income is only from wages, salaries, tips, unemployment compensation,
Alaska Permanent Fund dividends, taxable scholarship and fellowship
grants, qualified state tuition program earnings, and taxable interest
of $400 or less.
- You did not receive any advance earned income credit (EIC) payments.
- If you were a nonresident alien at any time in 1999, your filing
status is married filing jointly.
- You do not claim any adjustments to income, such as a deduction
for IRA contributions or student loan interest.
- You do not claim any credits other than the earned income credit.
You must meet all of these requirements to use Form 1040EZ. If you do
not, you must use Form 1040A or Form 1040.
Table 1-3 Other Situations When You Must File
Form 1040A
If you do not qualify to use Form 1040EZ, you may be able to use Form
1040A.
You can use Form 1040A if all of the following apply.
- Your income is only from wages, salaries, tips, IRA distributions,
pensions and annuities, taxable social security and railroad retirement
benefits, taxable scholarship and fellowship grants, interest, ordinary
dividends (including Alaska Permanent Fund dividends), qualified state
tuition program earnings, and unemployment compensation.
- Your taxable income is less than $50,000.
- Your adjustments to income are for only the following items.
- The deduction for contributions to an IRA.
- The student loan interest deduction.
- You do not itemize your deductions.
- Your taxes are from only the following items.
- Tax Table.
- Alternative minimum tax (see chapter
31).
- Advance earned income credit (EIC) payments, if you received
any (see chapter 37).
- You claim only the following credits.
- The credit for child and dependent care expenses (see chapter
33).
- The credit for the elderly or the disabled (see chapter
34).
- The child tax credit (see chapter 35).
- The education credits (see chapter 36).
- The earned income credit (see chapter
37).
- The adoption credit (see chapter 38).
You must meet all of the above requirements to use Form 1040A. If you
do not, you must use Form 1040.
Form 1040
If you cannot use Form 1040EZ or Form 1040A, you must use Form 1040.
You can use Form 1040 to report all types of income, deductions, and
credits, including those you cannot put on either Form 1040EZ or Form
1040A.
You may have received Form 1040A or Form 1040EZ in the mail because
of the return you filed last year. If your situation has changed this
year, it may be to your advantage to file Form 1040 instead. You may
pay less tax by filing Form 1040 because you can take itemized deductions,
and some adjustments to income, and credits that you cannot take on
Form 1040A or Form 1040EZ.
You must use Form 1040 if any of the following apply.
- Your taxable income is $50,000 or more.
- You itemize your deductions.
- You received or paid accrued interest on securities transferred
between interest payment dates.
- You received nontaxable dividends or capital gain distributions.
- You have to complete Part III of Schedule B (Form 1040) because:
- You received a distribution from a foreign trust, or
- You had a bank, securities, or other financial account in a
foreign country at any time during the year.
Note: If the combined value of the foreign account(s)
was $10,000 or less during all of 1999, or if the account(s)
was with a U.S. military banking facility operated by a U.S.
financial institution, you may be able to use Form 1040A or
Form 1040EZ.
- You had income that cannot be reported on Form 1040EZ or Form 1040A.
This includes gain from the sale of property, barter income, alimony
income, taxable refunds of state and local income taxes, and self-employment
income (including farm income).
- You sold or exchanged capital assets or business property.
- You claim adjustments to gross income for payments to a medical
savings account; moving expenses; one-half of your self-employment
tax; payments for self-employed health insurance; payments to a Keogh,
SEP, or SIMPLE plan; the penalty on early withdrawal of savings; alimony
paid; certain required repayments of supplemental unemployment benefits;
jury pay turned over to your employer; qualified performing artists'
expenses; or other allowable adjustments to income.
- Your Form W-2 shows uncollected employee tax (social security and
Medicare tax) on tips or group-term life insurance in box 13. See
chapter 7.
- You received $20 or more in tips in any one month and did not report
all of them to your employer. See chapter 7.
- You must pay tax on self-employment income. See Schedule SE (Form
1040), Self-Employment Tax.
- You must pay household employment taxes. See Schedule H (Form 1040).
- You have to recapture an investment credit, a low-income housing
credit, a qualified electric vehicle credit, or an Indian employment
credit you claimed in a previous year.
- You have to recapture tax on the disposition of a home purchased
with a federally-subsidized mortgage. See chapter
16.
- You have to pay tax on an excess golden parachute payment.
- You claim any of the following credits.
- Mortgage interest credit.
- Foreign tax credit.
- Any general business credit.
- Credit for prior year minimum tax.
- Credit for fuel from a nonconventional source.
- Credit for federal tax on fuels.
- Qualified electric vehicle credit.
- Regulated investment company credit.
- You file any of the following forms.
- Form 2555, Foreign Earned Income.
- Form 2555-EZ, Foreign Earned Income Exclusion.
- Form 4563, Exclusion of Income for Bona Fide Residents of
American Samoa.
- Form 4970, Tax on Accumulation Distribution of Trusts.
- Form 4972, Tax on Lump-Sum Distributions. (See chapter
11.)
- Form 5329, Additional Taxes Attributable to IRAs, Other Qualified
Retirement Plans, Annuities, Modified Endowment Contracts, and
MSAs.
Note: Do not file Form 1040 only because you have to
file Form 5329. File Form 5329 by itself. (See chapters
11 and 18.)
- Form 8271, Investor Reporting of Tax Shelter Registration
Number.
- Form 8814, Parents' Election To Report Child's Interest and
Dividends.
- Form 8853, Medical Savings Accounts and Long-Term Care Insurance
Contracts.
Table 1-4 Benefits of e-file
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