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WHEN COMPLETING A FINAL FORM 1040 FOR A DECEDENT DO YOU THE CALENDAR YEAR
OR DATE OF DEATH SAY 8.4.2019-12.3
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A person dies on One Date. Not in a date range.
Don't yell at us; we're volunteers
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Nice try, considering the question makes no sense.
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A person has only one kind of 1040, all of it.
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@AMWCPA are you asking if you file a short tax year, the answer is no for an individual. Could you give more details to your question (as @TaxGuyBill said, "no charge for extra words")
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"if you file a short tax year"
Oooh, good mind-reading attempt.
Don't yell at us; we're volunteers
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been getting lessons from @IRonMaN 😁
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The next virtual mind reading is going to be scheduled for............................ never mind ----------------- for anybody that has been attending for this long, they should just know when the next class is.
Slava Ukraini!
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Treasury Regulations § 1.443-1
(a) Returns for short period. A return for a short period, that is, for a taxable year consisting of a period of less than 12 months, shall be made under any of the following circumstances: . . .
(2) Taxpayer not in existence for entire taxable year. If a taxpayer is not in existence for the entire taxable year, a return is required for the short period during which the taxpayer was in existence.. . .Although the return of a decedent is a return for the short period beginning with the first day of his last taxable year and ending with the date of his death, the filing of a return and the payment of tax for a decedent may be made as though the decedent had lived throughout his last taxable year.
***
IRS used to accept returns filed before the end of the year for a decedent's final return. I think they still do, but it confuses them. You have to use the previous year's forms. If someone dies in March and the survivors don't want to wait a year to settle the estate, it's an option, especially if there is no tax owed or a small balance due.
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You file a return for the year the client died and input his date of death. If he died in 2019 you don't do a 2020 return.