Employment Development Department (EDD) if you are applying for some type of assistance from the EDD this could be possible. You should get this information from the EDD.
They can be and you would use the information from the K-1 to report the amounts on your 1040 income tax return. Go to the IRS gov web site and use the search box for K-1 Beneficiary's Share of Income, Deductions, Credits, etc.
This could be possible.
Trading account statement does not report net of income taxes or net of income.
Yes. You need to report.
No. Refunds are portions of your income which were already reported but were nontaxable. You do not have to report any income more than once.
They can be and you would use the information from the K-1 to report the amounts on your 1040 income tax return. Go to the IRS gov web site and use the search box for K-1 Beneficiary's Share of Income, Deductions, Credits, etc.
This could be possible.
Trading account statement does not report net of income taxes or net of income.
Yes! Income in respect of a decedent must be included in the income of one of the following: * The decedent's estate, if the estate receives it; * The beneficiary, if the right to income is passed directly to the beneficiary and the beneficiary receives it; or * Any person to whom the estate properly distributes the right to receive it.
Yes. You need to report.
No. Refunds are portions of your income which were already reported but were nontaxable. You do not have to report any income more than once.
Yes, simply report the premiums paid on your taxes. Keep in mind if WL and you do not report your premiums that are paid for you, the cash value is taxed as well rather than viewed as a return on premium.
You google it
It depends on where the income comes from. If it is interest on a municipal bond, then no. If it is distributions from a traditional IRA, then yes (except for the decedent's basis in the IRA). There are many kinds of accounts or other property that you can be the beneficiary of. It depends on exactly what you received.
No. Refunds are part of your income which you already reported. You do not have to report any income more than once.
No, but you may have to report it as income on your own state's tax forms.
No. As you stated, "as earned income?", it does not qualify as such. Only bonafide wages actually earned is required.