No.
income taxes ? no insurance payments are exempt
No, the insurance settlement is considered compensation for a loss, not income.
If you surrender a whole life insurance policy, you may have to claim the money on your income tax. The IRS states the amount you receive that is above the amount paid for premiums is considered taxable.
The journal entry for goods destroyed by rain, with an insurance claim of 90,000 admitted by the insurance company, would involve recognizing the loss of the inventory and the insurance receivable. The entry would be: Debit "Loss from Inventory Write-off" for 90,000. Credit "Inventory" for 90,000. Debit "Insurance Receivable" for 90,000 when the claim is recognized. Credit "Insurance Income" for 90,000 once the claim is received. This reflects the loss of goods and the expected recovery from the insurance claim.
If there are two owners then each has the right to claim half unless the owners have entered into some other agreement in writing.If there are two owners then each has the right to claim half unless the owners have entered into some other agreement in writing.If there are two owners then each has the right to claim half unless the owners have entered into some other agreement in writing.If there are two owners then each has the right to claim half unless the owners have entered into some other agreement in writing.
That depends. If the renter has their own flood insurance then the renter could certainly file a claim on it they have a flood loss. If your asking can the renter file a claim on the Property owners flood insurance then the answer would be no. The owners flood insurance would be specific to the owners property, not property belonging to a tenant.
income taxes ? no insurance payments are exempt
No, the insurance settlement is considered compensation for a loss, not income.
It is up to the insurance company to seek damages, not you.
In your Income and Expenditure Account, show the Health Insurance premium paid by you as expenses and claim income tax rebate as permissible in Income Tax Act of your country.
If you are the beneficiary of a life insurance payout, the income is not taxable. If you withdraw from a policy that you have on yourself, then yes, it is taxable as regular income. http://taxresolutionaries.blogspot.com
What! Insurance pays for financial losses. I don't understand your question. <><><> If you mean claim an insurance payment as income- that would depend on a lot of actors- so we cannot give you a blanket answer- however, in general- Let's say your car was stolen. Your insurance company paid you $1000 for it. Unless you claimed that as a casualty loss on your taxes, then it is income neutral- and would not be income.
Your auto insurance claim has nothing to do with filing your income taxes. You file your auto claim by notifying your agent right when the incident occurs so they can start working on the claim as fast as possible.
You better believe it.
probably none.
If you surrender a whole life insurance policy, you may have to claim the money on your income tax. The IRS states the amount you receive that is above the amount paid for premiums is considered taxable.
That means that it is really stupid