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Hi, any help much appreciated,
Client received a 1099-MISC from a lawyer as settlement for storm damage in Florida. Has $75k in Box 3 as other income. Assume we report this as other income.
Client has provided details $90k of out-of-pocket remediation expenses for the same incident.
Where do I enter these expenses to negate the $75k of income? Cannot find a category in Schedule 1 for "other adjustments", or am I thinking about this incorrectly?
Thanks Nolan
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Thank you, this may be my only option as client does not have disaster ID number,
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If they used that money to rebuild their home, I think IRC 139 might apply here to exclude that income or Federal Disaster Tax Relief Act of 2023 might make that settlement excludable as well.
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Probably did not require a 1099, but maybe required a lawyer to negotiate with the insurance company and they thought it might be a good idea since they got one too. It is not income and you are just playing "trick the IRS computer" by trying to add it in just to subtract it out. Was it business property or a disaster area? Then 4684 should work. Otherwise, I would attach an explanation to the return. Others, of course, would play "trick the computer," increasing the likelihood of an audit by increasing the client's gross income.
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@BobKamman It has been widely reported that the only way to get settlement proceeds from an insurance company in Florida is to bring suit.
AI gave this:
In 2020, 79% of homeowners insurance lawsuits nationwide were filed in Florida, even though the state only accounted for 9% of the nation's homeowners insurance claims. This indicates a disproportionately high number of lawsuits relative to the number of claims, suggesting that a significant portion of Florida homeowners may need to sue to get money from their insurance companies.
The more I know the more I don’t know.
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About 90 percent of all insurance claims are settled without escalating into a court fight, said Charles Nyce, a professor of risk management and insurance at Florida State University’s College of Business.
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Thank you very much Bob
So your suggestion is use 4684, enter the $75k settlement from the 1099-MSC there as insurance reimbursement not as a 1099-MSC box 3 income? As the 1099 is likely copied to the IRS, it may flag anyway - I guess I could write a covering letter?
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Bumping this so I can get notified of replies. Have the same question. 1099-misc from Florida homeowners insurance claim with no clear way to input expenses.
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Report the 1099 MISC as other income.
Also report an Other Income = negative same number with description - Shown on line X of Form Y.
Answers are easy. Questions are hard!
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Thank you, this may be my only option as client does not have disaster ID number,