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Actually my previous respone was incorrect. When an account is marked as Tax deferred, it is excluded by default from the tax reports but dividends are still recorded as _DivInc.
The _DivIncTaxFree category is supposed to be used for securities like tax exempt bond funds where the security has been marked Tax free.
So you don't need to convert previous dividends in a Roth account to __DivIncTaxFree, just make sure the account is excluded from any tax report.
The _DivIncTaxFree category is supposed to be used for securities like tax exempt bond funds where the security has been marked Tax free.
So you don't need to convert previous dividends in a Roth account to __DivIncTaxFree, just make sure the account is excluded from any tax report.
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Interesting.... just reading along -Jim_Harman said:
The _DivIncTaxFree category is supposed to be used for securities like tax exempt bond funds where the security has been marked Tax free.
Looked at my Vanguard Muni fund (in a taxable acct) and the fund was NOT marked as Tax-Free and the Divs were just Reinvested -
Will have to go back and take another look.
I don't import Quicken into TurboTax - and just use the Quicken Tax Planner for a ballpark idea of the financials, so it doesn't really matter - in our case -
@ps56k,
Right. You should mark the Muni fund Tax free in the Security Details. You can use the regular Inc and Reinvest dialogs to record the dividends and Quicken will categorize them as _DivIncTaxFree. This affects dividends that you have already entered as well.
You will see this categorization in the Investment Income report for example. One thing I noticed however is that if you change the Tax free box for a security the report is not updated dynamically - you have to close and re-open the report to see the change.
Right. You should mark the Muni fund Tax free in the Security Details. You can use the regular Inc and Reinvest dialogs to record the dividends and Quicken will categorize them as _DivIncTaxFree. This affects dividends that you have already entered as well.
You will see this categorization in the Investment Income report for example. One thing I noticed however is that if you change the Tax free box for a security the report is not updated dynamically - you have to close and re-open the report to see the change.
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Perhaps it is worth noting that for Quicken that tax-free checkbox for a security is all-or-nothing. In the real world at tax time, a 'tax-free' muni bond fund may actually report some taxable dividend income. Quicken cannot replicate that real-world circumstance.
That represents a case where the download from Quicken to TurboTax is inaccurate and needs to be corrected at the TurboTax level. I would not consider the deficiency significant with respect to Quicken's tax-planner module.
That represents a case where the download from Quicken to TurboTax is inaccurate and needs to be corrected at the TurboTax level. I would not consider the deficiency significant with respect to Quicken's tax-planner module.
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[see correction below]