What are Dividends?
Dividends are amounts paid out of the earnings and profits of
a corporation. Some items that you might think of as interest are treated by the IRS as dividends,
and vice versa. For example, distributions by money market mutual
funds are considered "dividends," but ordinary distributions by tax-free
municipal bond mutual funds are treated as "interest."
"Ordinary
dividends" you receive from mutual funds reported in Box 1 of the
1099-DIV do not include the amount of any long-term capital gains
distributions (i.e., net gains from sales of securities by the fund,
which are passed through to the shareholders). Instead, your total
long-term capital gain distributions are included in Box 2a. The specific
type of capital gain included in Box 2a is shown in Box 2b, 2c, and
2d. You report Box 2a amounts on Schedule D, Capital Gains and
Losses, or on Form 8949 as indicated in the instructions to Schedule
D. You will use the amounts in Box 2b, 2c and 2d to calculate your tax liability using the
appropriate capital gains tax rate in Part III of Schedule D.
You
must report and pay tax on the gross amount of all the ordinary dividends
you were entitled to receive, even if you never actually received
them because you reinvested them through a common-stock dividend reinvestment
plan (DRIP) or a mutual fund reinvestment plan. If you paid any commissions
or fees for reinvesting, you may be able to deduct them as investment expenses.
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Save Money If you do reinvest dividends, make
sure that you keep track of them by saving the annual statements on
which they are reported. If you keep good records, when you sell
the investment, you'll be able to add the reinvested amounts to your
basis in the investment, and pay less in capital gains tax. If you
lose your records, in some cases the issuer of the stock or mutual
fund will be able to tell you what your reinvestments were, but they
might not be able to locate records that go back as far as you need.
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If you sold stock after a dividend was declared, but
before it was paid, you are still treated as having received the dividend,
and you must pay tax on it.
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