Market Discount Bonds
A market discount bond is any bond having market discount except:
- Short-term obligations (those with fixed maturity dates of up to 1 year from the date of issue),
- Tax-exempt obligations that you bought before May 1, 1993,
- U.S. savings bonds, and
- Certain installment obligations.
Market discount arises when the value of a debt obligation decreases after its issue date, generally because of an increase in interest rates. If
you buy a bond on the secondary market, it may have market discount.
When you buy a market discount bond, you can choose to accrue the market discount over the period you own the bond and include it in your income
currently as interest income. If you do not make this choice, the following rules generally apply.
- You must treat any gain when you dispose of the bond as ordinary interest income, up to the amount of the accrued market discount. See
Discounted Debt Instruments under Capital Gains and Losses in chapter 4.
- You must treat any partial payment of principal on the bond as ordinary interest income, up to the amount of the accrued market discount.
See Partial principal payments, later in this discussion.
- If you borrow money to buy or carry the bond, your deduction for interest paid on the debt is limited. See Deferral of interest
deduction for market discount bonds under When To Deduct Investment Interest in chapter 3.
Market discount.
Market discount is the amount of the stated redemption price of a bond at maturity that is more than your basis in the bond immediately after you
acquire it. You treat market discount as zero if it is less than one-fourth of 1% (.0025) of the stated redemption price of the bond multiplied by the
number of full years to maturity (after you acquire the bond).
If a market discount bond also has OID, the market discount is the sum of the bond's issue price and the total OID includible in the gross income
of all holders (for a tax-exempt bond, the total OID that accrued) before you acquired the bond, reduced by your basis in the bond immediately after
you acquired it.
Bonds acquired at original issue.
Generally, a bond that you acquired at original issue is not a market discount bond. If your adjusted basis in a bond is determined by reference to
the adjusted basis of another person who acquired the bond at original issue, you are also considered to have acquired it at original issue.
Exceptions.
A bond you acquired at original issue can be a market discount bond if either of the following is true.
- Your cost basis in the bond is less than the bond's issue price.
- The bond is issued in exchange for a market discount bond under a plan of reorganization. (This does not apply if the bond is issued in
exchange for a market discount bond issued before July 19, 1984, and the terms and interest rates of both bonds are the same.)
Accrued market discount.
The accrued market discount is figured in one of two ways.
Ratable accrual method.
Treat the market discount as accruing in equal daily installments during the period you hold the bond. Figure the daily installments by dividing
the market discount by the number of days after the date you acquired the bond, up to and including its maturity date. Multiply the daily installments
by the number of days you held the bond to figure your accrued market discount.
Constant yield method.
Instead of using the ratable accrual method, you can choose to figure the accrued discount using a constant interest rate (the constant yield
method). Make this choice by attaching to your timely filed return a statement identifying the bond and stating that you are making a constant
interest rate election. The choice takes effect on the date you acquired the bond. If you choose to use this method for any bond, you cannot change
your choice for that bond.
For information about using the constant yield method, see Figuring OID using the constant yield method under Debt Instruments
Issued After 1984 in Publication 1212. To use this method to figure market discount (instead of OID), treat the bond as having been issued on
the date you acquired it. Treat the amount of your basis (immediately after you acquired the bond) as the issue price. Then apply the formula shown in
Publication 1212.
Choosing to include market discount in income currently.
You can make this choice if you have not revoked a prior choice to include market discount in income currently within the last 5 calendar years.
Make the choice by attaching to your timely filed return a statement in which you:
- State that you have included market discount in your gross income for the year under section 1278(b) of the Internal Revenue Code,
and
- Describe the method you used to figure the accrued market discount for the year.
Once you make this choice, it will apply to all market discount bonds that you acquire during the tax year and in later tax years. You cannot
revoke your choice without the consent of the IRS.
Also see Election To Report All Interest as OID, later. If you make that election, you must use the constant yield method.
Effect on basis.
You increase the basis of your bonds by the amount of market discount you include in your income.
Partial principal payments.
If you receive a partial payment of principal on a market discount bond that you acquired after October 22, 1986, and you did not choose to include
the discount in income currently, you must treat the payment as ordinary interest income up to the amount of the bond's accrued market discount.
Reduce the amount of accrued market discount reportable as interest at disposition by that amount.
You can choose to figure accrued market discount for this purpose:
- On the basis of the constant yield method, described earlier,
- In proportion to the accrual of OID for any accrual period, if the debt instrument has OID, or
- In proportion to the amount of stated interest paid in the accrual period, if the debt instrument has no OID.
Under method (2) above, figure accrued market discount for a period by multiplying the total remaining market discount by a fraction. The numerator
(top part) of the fraction is the OID for the period, and the denominator (bottom part) is the total remaining OID at the beginning of the period.
Under method (3) above, figure accrued market discount for a period by multiplying the total remaining market discount by a fraction. The numerator
is the stated interest paid in the accrual period, and the denominator is the total stated interest remaining to be paid at the beginning of the
accrual period.
Discount on Short-Term Obligations
When you buy a short-term obligation (one with a fixed maturity date of 1 year or less from the date of issue), other than a tax-exempt obligation,
you can generally choose to include any discount and interest payable on the obligation in income currently. If you do not make this
choice, the following rules generally apply.
- You must treat any gain when you sell, exchange, or redeem the obligation as ordinary income, up to the amount of the ratable share of the
discount. See Discounted Debt Instruments under Capital Gains and Losses in chapter 4.
- If you borrow money to buy or carry the obligation, your deduction for interest paid on the debt is limited. See Deferral of interest
deduction for short-term obligations under When To Deduct Investment Interest in chapter 3.
Short-term obligations for which no choice is available.
You must include any discount or interest in current income as it accrues for any short-term obligation (other than a tax-exempt obligation) that
is:
- Held by an accrual-basis taxpayer,
- Held primarily for sale to customers in the ordinary course of your trade or business,
- Held by a bank, regulated investment company, or common trust fund,
- Held by certain pass-through entities,
- Identified as part of a hedging transaction, or
- A stripped bond or stripped coupon held by the person who stripped the bond or coupon (or by any other person whose basis in the obligation
is determined by reference to the basis in the hands of that person).
Effect on basis.
Increase the basis of your obligation by the amount of discount you include in income currently.
Figuring the accrued discount.
Figure the accrued discount by using either the ratable accrual method or the constant yield method discussed previously in
Accrued market discount under Market Discount Bonds, earlier.
Government obligations.
For an obligation described above that is a short-term government obligation, the amount you include in your income for the current year is the
accrued acquisition discount, if any, plus any other accrued interest payable on the obligation. The acquisition discount is the stated
redemption price at maturity minus your basis.
If you choose to use the constant yield method to figure accrued acquisition discount, treat the cost of acquiring the obligation as the issue
price. If you choose to use this method, you cannot change your choice.
Nongovernment obligations.
For an obligation listed above that is not a government obligation, the amount you include in your income for the current year is the accrued OID,
if any, plus any other accrued interest payable. If you choose the constant yield method to figure accrued OID, apply it by using the obligation's
issue price.
Choosing to include accrued acquisition discount instead of OID.
You can choose to report accrued acquisition discount (defined earlier under Government obligations) rather than accrued OID on these
short-term obligations. Your choice will apply to the year for which it is made and to all later years and cannot be changed without the consent of
the IRS.
You must make your choice by the due date of your return, including extensions, for the first year for which you are making the choice. Attach a
statement to your return or amended return indicating:
- Your name, address, and social security number,
- The choice you are making and that it is being made under section 1283(c)(2) of the Internal Revenue Code,
- The period for which the choice is being made and the obligation to which it applies, and
- Any other information necessary to show you are entitled to make this choice.
Choosing to include accrued discount and other interest in current income.
If you acquire short-term discount obligations that are not subject to the rules for current inclusion in income of the accrued discount or other
interest, you can choose to have those rules apply. This choice applies to all short-term obligations you acquire during the year and in all later
years. You cannot change this choice without the consent of the IRS.
The procedures to use in making this choice are the same as those described for choosing to include acquisition discount instead of OID on
nongovernment obligations in current income. However, you should indicate that you are making the choice under section 1282(b)(2) of the Internal
Revenue Code.
Also see the following discussion. If you make the election to report all interest currently as OID, you must use the constant yield method.
Election To Report All Interest as OID
Generally, you can elect to treat all interest on a debt instrument acquired during the tax year as OID and include it in income currently. For
purposes of this election, interest includes stated interest, acquisition discount, OID, de minimis OID, market discount, de minimis market discount,
and unstated interest as adjusted by any amortizable bond premium or acquisition premium. See Treasury Regulation 1.1272-3.
When To Report Interest Income
- Accrual method
- Cash method
When to report your interest income depends on whether you use the cash method or an accrual method to report income.
Cash method.
Most individual taxpayers use the cash method. If you use this method, you generally report your interest income in
the year in which you actually or constructively receive it. However, there are special rules for reporting the discount on certain debt instruments.
See U.S. Savings Bonds and Discount on Debt Instruments, earlier.
Example.
On September 1, 2000, you loaned another individual $2,000 at 12% compounded annually. You are not in the business of lending money. The note
stated that principal and interest would be due on August 31, 2002. In 2002, you received $2,508.80 ($2,000 principal and $508.80 interest). If you
use the cash method, you must include in income on your 2002 return the $508.80 interest you received in that year.
Constructive receipt.
You constructively receive income when it is credited to your account or made available to you. You do not need to have physical possession of it.
For example, you are considered to receive interest, dividends, or other earnings on any deposit or account in a bank, savings and loan, or similar
financial institution, or interest on life insurance policy dividends left to accumulate, when they are credited to your account and subject to your
withdrawal. This is true even if they are not yet entered in your passbook.
You constructively receive income on the deposit or account even if you must:
- Make withdrawals in multiples of even amounts,
- Give a notice to withdraw before making the withdrawal,
- Withdraw all or part of the account to withdraw the earnings, or
- Pay a penalty on early withdrawals, unless the interest you are to receive on an early withdrawal or redemption is substantially less than
the interest payable at maturity.
Accrual method.
If you use an accrual method, you report your interest income when you earn it, whether or not you have received
it. Interest is earned over the term of the debt instrument.
Example.
If, in the previous example, you use an accrual method, you must include the interest in your income as you earn it. You would report the interest
as follows: 2000, $80; 2001, $249.60; and 2002, $179.20.
Coupon bonds.
Interest on coupon bonds is taxable in the year the coupon becomes due and payable. It does not matter when you mail the coupon for payment.
How To Report Interest Income
- Nominee
- Original issue discount (OID)
Generally, you report all of your taxable interest income on line 8a, Form 1040; line 8a, Form 1040A; or line 2, Form 1040EZ.
You cannot use Form 1040EZ if your interest income is more than $1,500. Instead, you must use Form 1040A or Form 1040.
In addition, you cannot use Form 1040EZ if you must use Form 1040, as described later, or if any of the statements listed under Schedule B,
later, are true.
Form 1040A.
You must complete Part I of Schedule 1 (Form 1040A) if you file Form 1040A and any of the following are true.
- Your taxable interest income is more than $1,500.
- You are claiming the interest exclusion under the Education Savings Bond Program (discussed earlier).
- You received interest from a seller-financed mortgage, and the buyer used the property as a home.
- You received a Form 1099-INT for tax-exempt interest.
- You received a Form 1099-INT for U.S. savings bond interest that includes amounts you reported before 2002.
- You received, as a nominee, interest that actually belongs to someone else.
- You received a Form 1099-INT for interest on frozen deposits.
List each payer's name and the amount of interest income received from each payer on line 1. If you received a Form 1099-INT or Form
1099-OID from a brokerage firm, list the brokerage firm as the payer.
You cannot use Form 1040A if you must use Form 1040, as described next.
Form 1040.
You must use Form 1040 instead of Form 1040A or Form 1040EZ if:
- You forfeited interest income because of the early withdrawal of a time deposit,
- You received or paid accrued interest on securities transferred between interest payment dates,
- You had a financial account in a foreign country, unless the combined value of all foreign accounts was $10,000 or less during all of 2002
or the accounts were with certain U.S. military banking facilities,
- You acquired taxable bonds after 1987 and choose to reduce interest income from the bonds by any amortizable bond premium (discussed in
chapter 3 under Bond Premium Amortization), or
- You are reporting OID in an amount more or less than the amount shown on Form 1099-OID.
Schedule B.
You must complete Part I of Schedule B (Form 1040) if you file Form 1040 and any of the following apply.
- Your taxable interest income is more than $1,500.
- You are claiming the interest exclusion under the Education Savings Bond Program (discussed earlier).
- You had a foreign account.
- You received interest from a seller-financed mortgage, and the buyer used the property as a home.
- You received a Form 1099-INT for tax-exempt interest.
- You received a Form 1099-INT for U.S. savings bond interest that includes amounts you reported before 2002.
- You received, as a nominee, interest that actually belongs to someone else.
- You received a Form 1099-INT for interest on frozen deposits.
- You received a Form 1099-INT for interest on a bond that you bought between interest payment dates.
- Statement (4) or (5) in the preceding list is true.
On line 1, Part I, list each payer's name and the amount received from each. If you received a Form 1099-INT or Form 1099-OID from
a brokerage firm, list the brokerage firm as the payer.
Reporting tax-exempt interest.
Report the total of your tax-exempt interest (such as interest or accrued OID on certain state and municipal bonds) and exempt-interest dividends
from a mutual fund on line 8b of Form 1040A or Form 1040. If you file Form 1040EZ, print TEI in the space to the right of the words Form
1040EZ on line 2. After TEI, show the amount of your tax-exempt interest, but do not add tax-exempt interest in the total on Form 1040EZ,
line 2.
You should not have received a Form 1099-INT for tax-exempt interest. But if you did, you must fill in Schedule 1 (Form 1040A) or Schedule B
(Form 1040). See the Schedule 1 or Schedule B instructions for how to report this. Be sure to also show this tax-exempt interest on line 8b.
Do not report interest from an individual retirement arrangement (IRA) as tax-exempt interest.
Form 1099-INT.
Your taxable interest income, except for interest from U.S. savings bonds and Treasury obligations, is shown in box 1 of Form 1099-INT. Add
this amount to any other taxable interest income you received. You must report all of your taxable interest income even if you do not receive a Form
1099-INT.
1099 INT
If you forfeited interest income because of the early withdrawal of a time deposit, the deductible amount will be shown on Form 1099-INT, in
box 2. See Penalty on early withdrawal of savings, later.
Box 3 of Form 1099-INT shows the amount of interest income you received from U.S. savings bonds, Treasury bills, Treasury notes, and Treasury
bonds. Add the amount shown in box 3 to any other taxable interest income you received, unless part of the amount in box 3 was previously included in
your interest income. If part of the amount shown in box 3 was previously included in your interest income, see U.S. savings bond interest
previously reported, later. If you redeemed U.S. savings bonds you bought after 1989 and you paid qualified educational expenses, see
Interest excluded under the Education Savings Bond Program, later.
Box 4 (federal income tax withheld) of Form 1099-INT will contain an amount if you were subject to backup withholding. Report the amount from
box 4 on Form 1040EZ, line 7, on Form 1040A, line 39, or on Form 1040, line 62.
Box 5 of Form 1099-INT shows investment expenses you may be able to deduct as an itemized deduction. Chapter 3 discusses investment expenses.
If there are entries in boxes 6 and 7 of Form 1099-INT, you must file Form 1040. You may be able to take a credit for the amount shown in box
6 (foreign tax paid) unless you deduct this amount on Schedule A of Form 1040 as Other taxes. To take the credit, you may have to file
Form 1116, Foreign Tax Credit. For more information, see Publication 514, Foreign Tax Credit
for Individuals.
Form 1099-OID.
The taxable OID on a discounted obligation for the part of the year you owned it is shown in box 1 of Form 1099-OID. Include this amount in
your total taxable interest income. But see Refiguring OID shown on Form 1099-OID under Original Issue Discount (OID),
earlier.
You must report all taxable OID even if you do not receive a Form 1099-OID.
Box 2 of Form 1099-OID shows any taxable interest on the obligation other than OID. Add this amount to the OID shown in box 1 and include the
result in your total taxable income.
If you forfeited interest or principal on the obligation because of an early withdrawal, the deductible amount will be shown in box 3. See
Penalty on early withdrawal of savings, later.
Box 4 of Form 1099-OID will contain an amount if you were subject to backup withholding. Report the amount from box 4 on Form 1040EZ, line 7,
on Form 1040A, line 39, or on Form 1040, line 62.
Box 7 of Form 1099-OID shows investment expenses you may be able to deduct as an itemized deduction. Chapter 3 discusses investment expenses.
U.S. savings bond interest previously reported.
If you received a Form 1099-INT for U.S. savings bond interest, the form may show interest you do not have to report. See Form
1099-INT for U.S. savings bond interest under U.S. Savings Bonds, earlier.
On line 1, Part I of Schedule B (Form 1040), or on line 1, Part I of Schedule 1 (Form 1040A), report all the interest shown on your Form
1099-INT. Then follow these steps.
- Several lines above line 2, enter a subtotal of all interest listed on line 1.
- Below the subtotal write U.S. Savings Bond Interest Previously Reported and enter amounts previously reported or interest accrued
before you received the bond.
- Subtract these amounts from the subtotal and enter the result on line 2.
Example 1.
Your parents bought U.S. savings bonds for you when you were a child. The bonds were issued in your name, and the interest on the bonds was
reported each year as it accrued. (See Choice to report interest each year under U.S. Savings Bonds, earlier.)
In March 2002, you redeemed one of the bonds - a $1,000 series EE bond. The bond was originally issued in March 1984. When you redeemed the
bond, you received $1,522.00 for it.
The Form 1099-INT you received shows interest income of $1,022.00. However, since the interest on your savings bonds was reported yearly, you
need only include the $31.20 interest that accrued from January 2002 to March 2002.
You received no other taxable interest for 2002. You file Form 1040A.
On line 1, Part I of Schedule 1 (Form 1040A), enter your interest income as shown on Form 1099-INT - $1,022.00. (If you had other
taxable interest income, you would enter it next and then enter a subtotal, as described earlier, before going to the next step.) Several lines above
line 2, write U.S. Savings Bond Interest Previously Reported and enter $990.80 ($1,022.00 - $31.20). Subtract $990.80 from $1,022.00 and
write $31.20 on line 2. Enter $31.20 on line 4 of Schedule 1 and on line 8a of Form 1040A.
Example 2.
Your uncle died and left you a $1,000 series EE bond. You redeem the bond when it reaches maturity.
Your uncle paid $500 for the bond, so $500 of the amount you receive upon redemption is interest income. Your uncle's executor included in your
uncle's final return $200 of the interest that had accrued at the time of your uncle's death. You have to include only $300 in your income.
The bank where you redeem the bond gives you a Form 1099-INT showing interest income of $500. You also receive a Form 1099-INT showing
taxable interest income of $300 from your savings account.
You file Form 1040 and you complete Schedule B. On line 1 of Schedule B, you list the $500 and $300 interest amounts shown on your Forms 1099.
Several lines above line 2, you put a subtotal of $800. Below this subtotal, write U.S. Savings Bond Interest Previously Reported and enter the
$200 interest included in your uncle's final return. Subtract the $200 from the subtotal and write $600 on line 2. You then complete the rest of the
form.
Worksheet for savings bonds distributed from a retirement or profit-sharing plan.
If you cashed a savings bond acquired in a taxable distribution from a retirement or profit-sharing plan (as discussed under U.S. Savings
Bonds, earlier), your interest income does not include the interest accrued before the distribution and taxed as a distribution from the plan.
Use the worksheet below to figure the amount you subtract from the interest shown on Form 1099-INT.
A. |
Write the amount of cash received upon redemption of the bond |
|
B. |
Write the value of the bond at the time of distribution by the plan |
|
C. |
Subtract the amount on line B from the amount on line A. This is the amount of interest accrued on the bond since it was distributed by the plan |
|
D. |
Write the amount of interest shown on your Form 1099-INT |
|
E. |
Subtract the amount on line C from the amount on line D. This is the amount you include in U.S. Savings Bond Interest Previously Reported |
|
Your employer should tell you the value of each bond on the date it was distributed.
Example.
You received a distribution of series EE U.S. savings bonds in December 2000 from your company's profit-sharing plan.
In March 2002, you redeemed a $100 series EE bond that was part of the distribution you received in 2000. You received $98.68 for the bond the
company bought in May 1990. The value of the bond at the time of distribution in 2000 was $93.04. (This is the amount you included on your 2000
return.) The bank gave you a Form 1099-INT that shows $48.68 interest (the total interest from the date the bond was purchased to the date of
redemption). Since a part of the interest was included in your income in 2000, you need to include in your 2002 income only the interest that accrued
after the bond was distributed to you.
On line 1 of Schedule B (Form 1040), include all the interest shown on your Form 1099-INT as well as any other taxable interest income you
received. Several lines above line 2, put a subtotal of all interest listed on line 1. Below this subtotal write U.S. Savings Bond Interest
Previously Reported and enter the amount figured on the worksheet below.
A. |
Write the amount of cash received upon redemption of the bond |
$98.68 |
B. |
Write the value of the bond at the time of distribution by the plan |
93.04 |
C. |
Subtract the amount on line B from the amount on line A. This is the amount of interest accrued on the bond since it was distributed by the plan |
$5.64 |
D. |
Write the amount of interest shown on your Form 1099-INT |
$48.68 |
E. |
Subtract the amount on line C from the amount on line D. This is the amount you include in U.S. Savings Bond Interest Previously Reported |
$43.04 |
Interest excluded under the Education Savings Bond Program.
Use Form 8815, to figure your interest exclusion when you redeem qualified savings bonds and pay qualified higher educational expenses
during the same year.
For more information on the exclusion and qualified higher educational expenses, see the earlier discussion under Education Savings Bond
Program.
You must show your total interest from qualified savings bonds that you cashed during 2002 on line 6 of Form 8815 and on line 1 of either Schedule
1 (Form 1040A) or Schedule B (Form 1040). After completing Form 8815, enter the result from line 14 (Form 8815) on line 3 of Schedule 1 (Form 1040A)
or line 3 of Schedule B (Form 1040).
Interest on seller-financed mortgage.
If an individual buys his or her home from you in a sale that you finance, you must report the buyer's name, address, and social security number on
line 1 of Schedule 1 (Form 1040A) or line 1 of Schedule B (Form 1040). If you do not, you may have to pay a $50 penalty. The buyer may have to pay a
$50 penalty if he or she does not give you this information.
You must also give your name, address, and social security number (or employer identification number) to the buyer. If you do not, you may have to
pay a $50 penalty.
Frozen deposits.
Even if you receive a Form 1099-INT for interest on deposits that you could not withdraw at the end of 2002, you must exclude these amounts
from your gross income. (See Interest income on frozen deposits under Interest Income, earlier.) Do not include this income on
line 8a of Form 1040A or Form 1040. In Part I of Schedule 1 (Form 1040A) or Part I of Schedule B (Form 1040), include the full amount of interest
shown on your Form 1099-INT on line 1. Several lines above line 2, put a subtotal of all interest income. Below this subtotal, write Frozen
Deposits and show the amount of interest that you are excluding. Subtract this amount from the subtotal and write the result on line 2.
Accrued interest on bonds.
If you received a Form 1099-INT that reflects accrued interest paid on a bond you bought between interest payment dates, include the full
amount shown as interest on the Form 1099-INT on line 1, Part I of Schedule B (Form 1040). Then, below a subtotal of all interest income listed,
write Accrued Interest and the amount of accrued interest that you paid to the seller. That amount is taxable to the seller, not you. Subtract
that amount from the interest income subtotal. Enter the result on line 2 and also on Form 1040, line 8a.
For more information, see Bonds Sold Between Interest Dates, earlier.
Nominee distributions.
If you received a Form 1099-INT that includes an amount you received as a nominee for the real owner, report the full amount shown as
interest on the Form 1099-INT on line 1, Part I of Schedule 1 (Form 1040A) or Schedule B (Form 1040). Then, below a subtotal of all interest
income listed, write Nominee Distribution and the amount that actually belongs to someone else. Subtract that amount from the interest income
subtotal. Enter the result on line 2 and also on line 8a of Form 1040A or 1040.
File Form 1099-INT with the IRS.
If you received interest as a nominee in 2002, you must file a Form 1099-INT for that interest with the IRS. Send Copy A of Form
1099-INT with a Form 1096, Annual Summary and Transmittal of U.S. Information Returns, to your Internal Revenue Service
Center by February 28, 2003 (March 31, 2003 if you file Form 1099-INT electronically). Give the actual owner of the interest Copy B of the Form
1099-INT by January 31, 2003. On Form 1099-INT, you should be listed as the Payer. Prepare one Form 1099-INT for each other
owner and show that person as the Recipient. However, you do not have to file Form 1099-INT to show payments for your spouse. For more
information about the reporting requirements and the penalties for failure to file (or furnish) certain information returns, see the General
Instructions for Forms 1099, 1098, 5498, and W2-G.
Similar rules apply to OID reported to you as a nominee on Form 1099-OID. You must file a Form 1099-OID with Form 1096 to show the
proper distributions of the OID.
Example.
You and your sister have a joint savings account that paid $1,500 interest for 2002. Your sister deposited 30% of the funds in this account, and
you and she have agreed to share the yearly interest income in proportion to the amount that each of you has invested. Because your social security
number was given to the bank, you received a Form 1099-INT for 2002 that includes the interest income earned belonging to your sister. This
amount is $450, or 30% of the total interest of $1,500.
You must give your sister a Form 1099-INT by January 31, 2003, showing $450 of interest income that she earned for 2002. You must also send a
copy of the nominee Form 1099-INT, along with Form 1096, to the Internal Revenue Service Center by February 28, 2003 (March 31, 2003, if you
file Form 1099-INT electronically). Show your own name, address, and social security number as that of the Payer on the Form
1099-INT. Show your sister's name, address, and social security number in the blocks provided for identification of the Recipient.
When you prepare your own federal income tax return, report the total amount of interest income, $1,500, on line 1, Part I of Schedule 1 (Form
1040A) or line 1, Part I of Schedule B (Form 1040), and identify the name of the bank that paid this interest. Show the amount belonging to your
sister, $450, as a subtraction from a subtotal of all interest on Schedule 1 (or Schedule B) and identify this subtraction as a Nominee
Distribution. (Your sister will report the $450 of interest income on her own tax return, if she has to file a return, and identify you as the
payer of that amount.)
Previous | First | Next
Publication Index | 2002 Tax Help Archives | Tax Help Archives | Home