What: The American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 provided for an exclusion of up to $10,200 for unemployment benefits paid to taxpayers in 2020. Normally, unemployment benefits are fully taxable and the exclusion is only available to taxpayers with modified adjusted gross incomes of less than $150,000. However, since the American Rescue Plan was enacted on March 11, 2021, about a month after the filing season for 2020 tax returns had commenced, millions of taxpayers had already filed their 2020 tax returns. Given these circumstances, the IRS has now issued guidance addressing both what taxpayers who have already filed should do to report their unemployment benefits and how taxpayers who have yet to file their tax return should report the exclusion.
Why: Issuing this guidance should help alleviate the need for the millions of taxpayers who have already filed their 2020 tax returns to file amended returns to claim their unemployment benefits exclusion. The IRS has also provided specific instructions on how taxpayers who have yet to file their 2020 tax returns should report unemployment compensation on those returns through revisions to Form 1040 Schedule 1 instructions.
Who: Tax expert Mark Luscombe, JD, LL.M, CPA, Principal Federal Tax Analyst at Wolters Kluwer Tax & Accounting, can help discuss the various tax guidance with respect to reporting the unemployment compensation exclusion.
Contact: To arrange interviews with Mark Luscombe and other federal and state tax experts from Wolters Kluwer Tax & Accounting on this or any other tax-related topics, please contact Bart Lipinski.
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