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Do the override. When efiling that client's return, uncheck the Enable conversion error checking. Problem solved. I would be sure only this client is selected for efiling when you uncheck the conversion error checking box.
Do the override. When efiling that client's return, uncheck the Enable conversion error checking. Problem solved. I would be sure only this client is selected for efiling when you uncheck the conversion error checking box.
Thanks for helping with this.
I've never seen that. If you make sure the "prior depreciation" is correct, the final year of the recovery/amortization period SHOULD automatically take the rest of it.
I've never seen that either. It appears to be rounding. The re-fi costs were $2,096 amortized over 5 years at $419/year. This is the fifth year and there is a remaining balance of $1. It appears that amortization was $419.20/year.
So it appears the $1 rounding is due to the .20/year amortization not recognized. You would think the program would automatically adjust that to $420 final year amortization.
Thanks.
Now that I think about it, amortization would probably do that, but depreciation wouldn't. Depreciation uses a formula that would use the rest of it in the final year.
Personally, I would just add a few bucks to the Basis/amortization cost to make it calculate that extra $1.
@david3 Orrrrr..., you can sell the asset for $0 on December 31. It will show up on the 4797 with the $1 loss, the asset will be off the depreciation schedule, and you do not have to override the PS depreciation calculation.
Thanks for the recommendations to resolve this.
Thanks again for your help. I guess any of these recommendations is better than overriding?
You could leave the $1 alone until after efiling the return. Then override the prior amount by a dollar so when return transfers to 2020 it will show full amount amortized. It is only $1 so not like client is losing out on a tax break.
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