Welcome back! Ask questions, get answers, and join our large community of tax professionals.
cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

Loss carryforward not being applied to current year income

Karim - Texas
New Member

I have Schedule C loss carryforward from previous year but it is not being applied to current year Schedule C income to lower my tax liability.  Is there a certain box that needs to be checked off or a specific way/method it needs to be done?

0 Cheers
1 Best Answer

Accepted Solutions
Just-Lisa-Now-
Level 15
Level 15

" Schedule C (Form 8995-A) Loss Netting and Carry Forward"

That sounds like a QBI carryover, not an NOL.


♪♫•*¨*•.¸¸♥Lisa♥¸¸.•*¨*•♫♪

View solution in original post

19 Comments 19
BobKamman
Level 15


You’ve come to an Intuit site supporting tax professionals, and you may be looking for support as an individual taxpayer. Please visit the TurboTax Help site for support.


Karim - Texas
New Member

I am not looking for individual support but as a tax preparer using Proseries Basic.

Terry53029
Level 14
Level 14

Schedule C loss does not carryover, unless it is a NOL. Or are you talking about home office loss carryover?

 

Karim - Texas
New Member

It is a NOL

0 Cheers
BobKamman
Level 15

You should not be preparing tax returns for compensation if you have to ask questions like that.  

Karim - Texas
New Member

I don't need lectures.

0 Cheers
Terry53029
Level 14
Level 14

It will be on the NOL worksheet. Find it in forms lookup.

0 Cheers
TaxGuyBill
Level 15

@Karim - Texas wrote:

It is a NOL


 

 A NOL is when the entire tax return has net loss. That is different than a Schedule C loss (although a Schedule C loss could cause the a NOL/net loss over the entire tax return).

If you have a NOL, ProSeries Basic does not calculate the NOL or carry it forward. You will need to manually calculate it and enter the allowable NOL amount into the software.

Terry53029
Level 14
Level 14

@TaxGuyBill thanks Bill, did not know basic did not carry it over. 

abctax55
Level 15

And beware the 80% issue if there is an actual N O L.

HumanKind... Be Both
Karim - Texas
New Member

That is a very good answer. I did not know that Proseries basic does not do that automatically.

It is on Schedule C (Form 8995-A) Loss Netting and Carry Forward.  Can you please help me a little bit more by letting me know on which schedule and which box to enter the figure?

Really appreciate your answer.

0 Cheers
abctax55
Level 15

"...to lower my tax liability (emphasis added)."

That phrasing tends to lead us long-time volunteer helpers to think you might be a DIYer

HumanKind... Be Both
Just-Lisa-Now-
Level 15
Level 15

" Schedule C (Form 8995-A) Loss Netting and Carry Forward"

That sounds like a QBI carryover, not an NOL.


♪♫•*¨*•.¸¸♥Lisa♥¸¸.•*¨*•♫♪
abctax55
Level 15

QBI loss carryovers are 'not' the same a NOL's

HumanKind... Be Both
abctax55
Level 15

@Just-Lisa-Now-    jinx

HumanKind... Be Both
Just-Lisa-Now-
Level 15
Level 15

And they don't reduce income.

@Karim - Texas please follow the numbers to see how that carryover QBI loss affects the QBI in the current year.  It will only reduce the income that the QBI deduction is calculated on, not income on the tax return.


♪♫•*¨*•.¸¸♥Lisa♥¸¸.•*¨*•♫♪
BobKamman
Level 15

@Karim - Texas wrote:

I don't need lectures.


You need warnings about what happens when you take on work for which you are not qualified or trained.  If, indeed, you are working on someone else's return.  Refer the client to someone who understands NOLs.  

abctax55
Level 15

Or, understands QBID carryovers.

HumanKind... Be Both
TaxGuyBill
Level 15

@Karim - Texas wrote:

It is on Schedule C (Form 8995-A) Loss Netting and Carry Forward.  Can you please help me a little bit more by letting me know on which schedule and which box to enter the figure?


 

As others noted, that is a completely different kind of carryover.

 

I don't mean to offend you, but your comments show that this tax return is well above your skill and knowledge.  You should either decline this client and/or do some extensive continuing education about preparing tax returns for a business on Schedule C.