10.2 Capital Gains, Losses/Sale of Home: Stocks (Options, Splits, Traders)
How do we show on our tax form where dividends are reinvested?
Some corporations allow investors to choose to use their dividends to buy
more shares of stock in the corporation instead of receiving the dividends
in cash. If you are a member of this type of plan, you must report the fair
market value on the dividend payment date of the dividends that are reinvested
as income on your tax return. You do not actually show that the dividends
were reinvested on your return. Keep good records of the dollar amount of
the reinvested dividends, the number of additional shares purchased, and the
purchase dates. You will need this information when you sell the shares.
Report the dividends that were reinvested with your other dividends, if
any, on line 9 of Form 1040 or Form 1040A. If your total income from ordinary
dividends is over $1,500.00, you also must file either Form 1040, Schedule B (PDF) or Form 1040A, Schedule 1 (PDF).
For more information on this and other types of dividend reinvestment plans,
refer to Ordinary Dividends in Chapter 1 of Publication 550, Investment
Income and Expenses.
References:
How do I compute the basis for stock I sold, when I received the
stock over several years through a dividend reinvestment plan?
The basis of the stock you sold is the cost of the shares plus any adjustments,
such as sales commissions. If you have not kept detailed records of your dividend
reinvestments, you may be able to reconstruct those records with the help
of public records from sources such as the media, your broker, or the company
that issued the dividends.
If you cannot specifically identify which shares were sold, you must use
the first-in first-out rule. This means that you deem that you sold the oldest
shares first, then the next oldest, then the next-to-the-next oldest, until
you have accounted for the number of shares in the sale. In order to establish
the basis of these shares, you need to have kept adequate documentation of
all your purchases, including those that were through the dividend reinvestment
plan. You may not use an average cost basis. Only mutual fund shares may have
an average cost basis.
Refer to Publication 550, Investment Income and Expenses, and Publication 551, Basis of Assets.
References:
I know the basis of stock includes the cost of the original purchase,
but does it also include the value of stock acquired through a dividend reinvestment
plan?
Unless you sell all of your shares at one time, your total basis, which
includes both your original purchase and any purchases through a dividend
reinvestment, is not the figure used to report the sale of shares. If you
sell less than all of your shares at one time, you need to have kept adequate
documentation of all your purchases, including those that were through the
dividend reinvestment plan in order to establish the basis of the shares sold.
You may not use an average cost basis. Only mutual fund shares may have an
average cost basis.
When reporting the sale of shares of stocks, the basis for the calculation
of gain or loss is the actual cost (plus adjustments, such as sales commissions)
of those shares. If you cannot specifically identify which of your shares
were sold, you must use the first-in first-out rule.
For more information, refer to Publication 550, Investment Income
and Expenses, and Publication 551, Basis of Assets.
References:
Do I have to pay taxes again on the stock acquired through a dividend
reinvestment plan when I sell them?
After you report the dividends as income, you have basis in the shares
acquired through dividend reinvestment. When you report the sale of the shares,
you will be taxed only on the amount that the sales proceeds (minus commissions)
exceed your cost basis (in this case, the amount of the dividends reinvested).
References:
Would the shares acquired by stock dividends have a shorter holding
period than the original shares purchased?
Yes, if they were taxable stock dividends, the holding period begins on
the date the new shares were distributed by the corporation. For nontaxable
stock dividends, the holding period is the same as the underlying stock.
When you purchase additional mutual shares with reinvested dividends, the
dividends are generally taxable. You thus have a holding period starting on
the date of the transaction, as reported in your statements, just as you do
for shares that you purchase outright.
References:
Would shares in mutual fund acquired through dividend reinvestment
in prior years be long-term capital gains while shares acquired through dividend
reinvestment in the year of sale be treated as short-term capital gains?
Any shares or fractional shares purchased and sold during the current tax
year are short-term capital assets. For shares purchased in the year previous
to the tax year to be considered long-term, the holding period must be more
than one year.
References:
10.3 Capital Gains, Losses/Sale of Home: Mutual Funds (Costs, Distributions, etc.)
If I do not have the records showing each dividend reinvestment,
how do I calculate the basis of my shares in a mutual fund that I acquired
years ago?
Unless you have acquired shares through gifts or inheritances, your basis
is what the shares cost you. Your mutual fund company can often provide you
with this information upon request. Another source of information is your
broker, if the fund was purchased through a broker. You cannot calculate your
basis in your mutual fund shares accurately without this information. You
can only claim the amount of basis that you can establish and substantiate
with records. You may lose a large part of your basis if you cannot establish
the amount of dividends that were reinvested. This is why keeping records
is so important.
Another source of information on reinvested dividends is your prior year
tax returns. If your mutual fund has been reinvesting dividends, those reinvested
dividends should have been reported as dividend income on your tax return
each year.
For more information, refer to Publication 564, Mutual Fund Distributions.
References:
Do the dividends and/or capital gains I report affect my cost basis
of the individual mutual fund shares I own?
They would affect your total basis and total number of shares if they were
reinvested in the mutual fund. Add the reinvested dividends and capital gains
that you have reported as income on your tax return to your total basis. You
will also own additional shares in the fund because the dividends and capital
gains have been used to purchase shares. Keep good records. If you are going
to be using an average basis method to determine per-share basis on sales,
be sure and keep records of all your mutual fund activity until you no longer
own any shares in that fund.
There is a worksheet to help you keep track of your number of shares and
your basis in Publication 564, Mutual Fund Distributions.
References:
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