Taxes Questions and Answers

Where do I enter 1099-G laying-off on Ohio's online I-File?

I am doing taxes for my brother-in-law. He received a 1099-G form for the unemployment benefits he be paid within 2007. I see on Ohio's I-File site where to enter W-2 income, but not this. Where on that site would I enter his severance income? No state taxes were withheld on it, in recent times federal. Does he have to include this dismissal as income for his Ohio state taxes?


Answers: Hi I ran into this same problem roughly a week ago, and e-mailed the Ohio I-File site. Here was the answer I get via e-mail:

"If there is no state withholding reported on the 1099 or W-2, near would be no Ohio withholding account number. If nearby is no Ohio withholding, please do not enter the W-2 or 1099 information into the I-File system. This page is for verifying Ohio withholding and the reciprocated filing credit just. Your taxable income is already included in your federal on the same wavelength gross income."

In other words, you don't specifically enter the 1099-G anywhere in Ohio's I-File. However, the Unemployment income will show up subsequent when they ask you for your Federal Adjusted Gross Income -- because in charge to figure that on your brother's federal 1040, you would've included the 1099-G in that.
I checked around and couldn't find an answer for you. (I filed my Ohio taxes using I-File this year and took a snapshot of respectively page as I went through it. Going rear legs and looking through those snapshot files, I don't see anything referring to unemployment compensation.)

This is one where on earth I'd have to recommend that you give the name the Ohio Department of Taxation and ask them directly.

Here's their website with contact information: http://tax.ohio.gov/channels/global/cont...

If i still owe off last years return 2006 can they deduct what i owe from my rebate check?




Answers: Yes the rebates do not affect last or next year, on ly this one so is OK
Yes

Is the stimulus check going to be coming from our 2009 taxes?

I was told from a H & R rep that the stimulus check will be a credit from our 2009 taxes. Is this true?


Answers: Yes.

While the rebate depends on your 2007 income, it is actually a rebate toward your 2008 taxes. According to the bill, within 2008, taxes would be cut from 10 percent to zero percent on the first $6,000 dollars of taxable income for individual taxpayers.

It's resembling a one time tax cut for 2008, but you draw from the rebate now instead of waiting to directory your 2008 taxes. Because this is an advance giving on your 2008 taxes, your refund subsequent year could be more (or less!) depending on your 2008 income.

For the rebate based on taxable income ($600 for singles, $1200 for reciprocated filers), the rebate will about equal the import tax cut, so your refund subsequent year will not be effected.

Of precise concern are the $300 rebates to those who reimburse no tax and the $300 rebate for dependent children. Those who receive these rebates may twirl up paying it back subsequent year.
The money is not an advance, most of the money comes from loans from China. The stimulus checks are really a opening for us to go out and spend the money, buying expensive items and what do americans spend profusely of their money on, electronics. A lot of the electronics come from China so in veracity we are stimulating there reduction.

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