세금

Schedule 1, Schedule 2, and Schedule 3.

esmile1 2025. 2. 26. 06:29

let's compare Schedule 1, Schedule 2, and Schedule 3.

 

1. Schedule 1 (Additional Income and Adjustments to Income):

  • Purpose: This form is used to report additional income and adjustments to income that don't have a specific line on the main Form 1040. It acts as a supplementary form, allowing you to detail certain financial activities that impact your overall tax liability.
  • Key Sections:
    • Part I: Additional Income: This section is where you report income sources that aren't already covered on the main 1040 form. This includes:
      • Unemployment compensation (line 7): As we've discussed, this is where your 1099-G amount goes.
      • Other income: This can include things like prizes, awards, gambling winnings, hobby income, and income from activities not considered a business.
    • Part II: Adjustments to Income: This section is for "above-the-line" deductions. These are deductions you can take to reduce your gross income, regardless of whether you itemize deductions later on Schedule A. Common examples include:
      • Educator expenses
      • IRA deduction
      • Student loan interest deduction
      • Self-employment tax deduction
      • Health savings account (HSA) deduction

2. Schedule 2 (Tax):

  • Purpose: This schedule is used to report certain taxes that aren't directly calculated on Form 1040.
  • Key Sections:
    • Tax from Form 4972: Used to calculate tax on lump-sum distributions from qualified retirement plans.
    • Excess advance premium tax credit repayment: If you received excess advance payments of the premium tax credit for health insurance purchased through the Marketplace, you'll report the repayment amount here.
  • Impact on Form 1040: The total tax from Schedule 2 is entered on Form 1040, line 16.

3. Schedule 3 (Nonrefundable Credits):

  • Purpose: This schedule is used to claim certain nonrefundable credits, which can reduce your tax liability to $0 but cannot be received as a refund.
  • Key Sections:
    • Foreign Tax Credit: For taxes paid to a foreign country.
    • Credit for Child and Dependent Care Expenses: For expenses paid for the care of a qualifying child or other qualifying person to allow you to work or look for work.
    • Education Credits: Such as the Lifetime Learning Credit.
    • Retirement Savings Contributions Credit (Saver's Credit): For low-to-moderate income taxpayers who contribute to a retirement account.
    • General Business Credit: From Form 3800.
  • Impact on Form 1040: The total nonrefundable credits from Schedule 3 are entered on Form 1040, line 20.

Here's a table summarizing the key differences:

Purpose Additional income & adjustments to income To report certain taxes not directly calculated on Form 1040 To claim certain nonrefundable credits
What it Reports Details of specific income and adjustments Tax from Form 4972 and excess advance premium tax credit repayment Credits for taxes paid to a foreign country, child and dependent care expenses, education expenses, retirement savings contributions, and business credits
Impact on 1040 Impacts Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) on Form 1040 (Schedule 1, line 10 goes to Form 1040, line 8) Total tax from Schedule 2 is entered on Form 1040, line 16 Total nonrefundable credits from Schedule 3 are entered on Form 1040, line 20

Feature Schedule 1 Schedule 2 Schedule 3

In simple terms:

  • Schedule 1: More income details
  • Schedule 2: Specific tax calculations
  • Schedule 3: Nonrefundable credits