Reporting on Your Tax Return (2024)

Reporting on Your Tax Return (1)

You may be wondering: are my investments taxable? Are my gambling winnings taxed? How do I file my rental income? Use tax software like the eFile Tax App to answer simple questions, and we will help report any taxable income on your individual income tax return. Sign up for a free eFile account and let us do your hard work for you.

Types of Unearned Income

Unearned income is similar and sometimes the same as passive income. Passive income is generally any money made from activities that are not traditional work and often generates income from not doing anything. The most common forms of passive income are stocks, interest, dividends, and capital gains.Tip: Maximize your income by working - whether self-employed or as an employee - while earning passive income with your invested money. Passive income ideas may be investing in a financial account that yields interest or putting money into a cryptocurrency and letting it grow in value without trading.

See also: Taxable income vs. nontaxable income.

Report your unearned income on eFile.com, including passive income investments, unemployment income, and other types of unearned income - sign up for a free account here. If you have income from a job besides unearned income from investments or other sources, we will help report these on the proper IRS and state forms. When you use tax software and eFileIT for the IRS and state, you do not have to worry about handling or mailing complicated tax forms.

The table below shows the various kinds of unearned income and a brief description. You can use this information to understand your tax situation to prepare for Tax Day. In comparison, here is a list of earned income. Use the FILEucator to determine if you must file taxes based on how much you made in both earned and unearned income.

Type

Description

Interest

Interest often accrues from investments, such as stocks. These may come regularly throughout the year, like a monthly interest payment. When you receive interest, it is often reported on Form 1099-INT for a given tax year. See how to add income from Form 1099-INT to your taxes. In some cases, you may be sent a 1099-OID.

Similar to interest, dividends are paid to you for your investments. When you are a company stockholder, they opt to pay you dividends. You can reinvest those dividends once received if you choose - they are typically small payments. You may receive a 1099-DIV reporting your dividends for the tax year.

Unemployment Compensation

If you receive unemployment benefits while looking for work during the year, you should receive a 1099-G reporting this income. Unemployment income is generally taxable and should be reported on your income tax return.

Social Security Benefits

When you begin receiving your Social Security benefits at a certain age, you will receive Form SSA-1099 reporting the amounts of your payments. If you have other income, your benefits may be taxed - generally, if Social Security is your only income, it is likely not taxable.

Debt Cancellation

If you have forgiven debt in a given year, you should receive Form 1099-C reporting this unearned income. This amount is often taxable as part of an agreement to settle or forgive your debt for a loan, such as a credit card.

Pensions, Retirement, Annuities

Retirement payments are considered unearned income; these are payments from Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs), pensions, or other retirement plans. These amounts are reported via Form 1099-R and should be included on your tax return.

Gambling Winnings

When you win money from gambling, whether from the lottery, scratch cards, or casino, the income is typically taxable and reported to you on Form W-2G. Don't confuse this with Form W-2, which reports earned income from wage or salary jobs!

Alimony, Child Support

Alimony and child support payments are usually direct payments from person to person and are not considered earned income. These payments may or may not be taxable depending on when the agreement was finalized - see the linked page for specific details.

Rental Payments

If you rent out your property (land, home, etc.) and receive income for this, you will report this unearned income on your tax return. For rental income in a given tax year, eFileIT IRS Schedule E.

Gifts, Inheritance

Gifts in cash or currency above a certain amount may be taxable, unearned income. This gift can be from family for a holiday or other scenarios if it is a cash gift given for nothing in exchange. View the linked page for details - keep track of your gift amount and consider the tax implications of it.

Veteran's Benefits

Services like pensions, home loans, life insurance, education, healthcare, and disability compensation provided by the Veterans Benefits Administration may count as unearned income. This is income from certain programs for a taxpayer's service in the American Armed Forces - see details on military and taxes and review IRS Publication 3, Armed Forces Tax Guide.

Passive or Unearned Income

To maximize individual profit during the year - or to make the most money - individuals can combine their ability to work for income while investing their paychecks to make passive or unearned income. Start a side hustle or a simple way to make some extra cash in addition to your primary source of income. Use the ideas below for various passive income ideas, including small and large investment opportunities.

  • Invest in a company, stock, virtual currency, etc.
    • These can be small or large investments, like buying a small stock in a startup company versus buying a stock in Tesla.
  • Download and use cash-back apps that find coupons for you and sometimes earn you rewards.
  • Move the money in your checking account to a high-yield savings account.
  • Loan your money via money-sharing apps or platforms, called peer-to-peer or P2P lending.
  • Rent out a spare room, home, or other living quarters.
  • Rent your property, like your tools, vehicle, bike, or storage/garage.
  • Create a product that requires minimal management.
    • Create a website, online course, book or eBook, blog page, nonfungible token NFT, or other digital assets you publish once and do not have to upkeep.
  • Allow a company to advertise their business on your car via vehicle wrap or other means.
  • Buy a billboard and allow companies to display their business for monthly or annual rates.
  • Invest in a real estate investment trust or REIT.
  • Invest in real estate.

If you are unfamiliar with unearned income and investments, consider opening an account with a robo-advisor. These are digital or robotic advisors that automatically invests your money over time. They are capable of moving your money from different stocks or other investments and some can maximize your tax-loss harvesting.

At the end of the year, gather all your forms and receipts that show your investment income and losses. Add these forms to your eFile account and let the tax app do the hard work for you to minimize your taxes.

See more details on taxable and nontaxable income.

TurboTax® is a registered trademark of Intuit, Inc.
H&R Block® is a registered trademark of HRB Innovations, Inc.

Reporting on Your Tax Return (2024)

FAQs

What must be reported on your tax return? ›

Most income is taxable unless it's specifically exempted by law. Income can be money, property, goods or services. Even if you don't receive a form reporting income, you should report it on your tax return. Income is taxable when you receive it, even if you don't cash it or use it right away.

How much income do you typically report on your tax returns? ›

The IRS requires you to report all of your income. This includes your side income, interest income, and other income on top of what you might have earned from wages and tips. All of this income is reported directly on your Form 1040 or Schedule 1.

How do I make sure I take out enough taxes? ›

Use the Tax Withholding Estimator on IRS.gov. The Tax Withholding Estimator works for most employees by helping them determine whether they need to give their employer a new Form W-4. They can use their results from the estimator to help fill out the form and adjust their income tax withholding.

Will the IRS answer my tax questions? ›

The IRS can help taxpayers get forms and publications and answer a wide range of tax questions.

What are 3 types of income that can be reported when filing taxes? ›

The three main types of income to consider are:
  • Active income. If you have a job and receive a paycheck, you make your money through active or earned income . ...
  • Portfolio income. Portfolio income comes from investments such as dividends, interest, royalties and capital gains. ...
  • Passive income.
Feb 3, 2023

Which 3 types of records must you keep to support your tax return? ›

You must keep records, such as receipts, canceled checks, and other documents that support an item of income, a deduction, or a credit appearing on a return as long as they may become material in the administration of any provision of the Internal Revenue Code, which generally will be until the period of limitations ...

What type of income is not taxable? ›

Nontaxable income won't be taxed, whether or not you enter it on your tax return. The following items are deemed nontaxable by the IRS: Inheritances, gifts and bequests. Cash rebates on items you purchase from a retailer, manufacturer or dealer.

Do I have to report income under $600? ›

Yes. The IRS requires that you report all of your income, even if it's less than $600 and you didn't get a tax form for it. Follow these steps to enter your income. We'll ask you some questions to determine if your income is from self-employment or is ordinary income.

What type of income should you report on your taxes? ›

Taxable income not only includes earnings from your job but can also include retirement and disability benefits. Even if your income is below the amount that requires you to file, you can still file a return to claim a refundable tax credit or get a tax refund.

How do I make sure I get a bigger tax refund? ›

How to boost your tax refund (or lower your tax bill)
  1. Work with a tax professional. ...
  2. Claim all eligible tax credits and deductions. ...
  3. Don't overlook deductible expenses. ...
  4. Choose the right filing status. ...
  5. Maximize your contributions. ...
  6. Adjust your W-4. ...
  7. File at the right time.
Mar 2, 2024

Is it better to claim 1 or 0 on your taxes? ›

Claiming 1 on your tax return reduces withholdings with each paycheck, which means you make more money on a week-to-week basis. When you claim 0 allowances, the IRS withholds more money each paycheck but you get a larger tax return.

How do I know if I have enough money to file taxes? ›

Tax Year 2022 Filing Thresholds by Filing Status
Filing StatusTaxpayer age at the end of 2022A taxpayer must file a return if their gross income was at least:
married filing separatelyany age$5
qualifying surviving spouseunder 65$25,900
qualifying surviving spouse65 or older$27,300
7 more rows

What gets the IRS attention? ›

Excessive deductions

The IRS will compare your itemized deductions to the average total deductions for a given item claimed by other taxpayers who are in the same income range as you. A taxpayer whose deductions appear to exceed these averages may be further scrutinized by the IRS.

Does IRS check all returns? ›

The IRS does not check every tax return; in fact, it does not check the majority of them; however, the IRS implements methods that track certain factors that would result in a further examination or audit by them.

Will you know if the IRS is investigating you? ›

Signs You May Be Under Investigation

Many times the IRS won't tell you directly that you're under criminal investigation. But there are signs you can watch out for: IRS agents suddenly stop contacting you after requesting information or asking you to pay taxes owed.

What should I include in my tax return? ›

Steps to file your federal tax return
  1. A W-2 form from each employer.
  2. Other earning and interest statements (1099 and 1099-INT forms)
  3. Receipts for charitable donations; mortgage interest; state and local taxes; medical and business expenses; and other tax-deductible expenses if you are itemizing your return.
Mar 29, 2024

What has to be reported to the IRS? ›

Gross income.

Gross income means all income an individual received in the form of money, goods, property and services that aren't exempt from tax. This includes any income from sources outside the United States or from the sale of a main home, even if a taxpayer can exclude part or all of it.

What money do you have to report on taxes? ›

Generally, you must include in gross income everything you receive in payment for personal services. In addition to wages, salaries, commissions, fees, and tips, this includes other forms of compensation such as fringe benefits and stock options.

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