This chapter discusses which taxes you can deduct if you itemize deductions on Schedule A (Form 1040). It also explains which
taxes you can deduct on other schedules or forms and which taxes you cannot deduct.
This chapter covers the following topics.
-
Income taxes (federal, state, local, and foreign).
-
General sales taxes (state and local).
-
Real estate taxes (state, local, and foreign).
-
Personal property taxes (state and local).
-
Taxes and fees you cannot deduct.
Use Table 22-1 as a guide to determine which taxes you can deduct.
The end of the chapter contains a section that explains which forms you use to deduct different types of taxes.
Business taxes.
You can deduct certain taxes
only if they are ordinary and necessary expenses of your trade or
business or of producing
income. For information on these taxes, see
Publication 535, Business Expenses.
State or local taxes.
These are taxes imposed by the
50 states, U.S. possessions, or any of their political subdivisions
(such as a county
or city), or by the District of Columbia.
Indian tribal government.
An Indian tribal government
recognized by the Secretary of the Treasury as performing substantial
government functions
will be treated as a state for purposes of
claiming a deduction for taxes. Income taxes, real estate taxes, and
personal property
taxes imposed by that Indian tribal government
(or by any of its subdivisions that are treated as political
subdivisions of
a state) are deductible.
General sales taxes.
These are taxes imposed at one
rate on retail sales of a broad range of classes of items.
Foreign taxes.
These are taxes imposed by a foreign country or any of its political subdivisions.
The following two tests must be met for you to deduct any tax.
The tax must be imposed on you.
In general, you can deduct only taxes imposed on you.
Generally, you can deduct
property taxes only if you are an owner of the property. If your spouse
owns the property
and pays the real estate taxes, the taxes are
deductible on your spouse's separate return or on your joint return.
You must pay the tax during your tax year.
If you are a cash basis
taxpayer, you can deduct only those taxes you actually paid during your
tax year. If you pay
your taxes by check, the day you mail or deliver
the check is the date of payment, provided the check is honored by the
financial
institution. If you use a pay-by-phone account
(such as a credit card or electronic funds withdrawal), the date
reported on
the statement of the financial institution
showing when payment was made is the date of payment. If you contest a
tax liability
and are a cash basis taxpayer, you can deduct
the tax only in the year you actually pay it (or transfer money or other
property
to provide for satisfaction of the contested
liability). See Publication 538, Accounting Periods and Methods, for
details.
If you use an accrual method of accounting, see Publication 538 for more information.
This section discusses the deductibility of state and local income taxes (including employee contributions to state benefit
funds) and foreign income taxes.
State and Local Income Taxes
You can deduct state and local income taxes. However, you can elect to deduct state and local general sales taxes instead
of state and local income taxes. See General Sales Taxes, later.
Exception.
You cannot deduct state
and local income taxes you pay on income that is exempt from federal
income tax, unless the
exempt income is interest income. For
example, you cannot deduct the part of a state's income tax that is on a
cost-of-living
allowance exempt from federal income tax.
Your deduction may be for withheld taxes, estimated tax payments, or other tax payments as follows.
Withheld taxes.
You can deduct state and
local income taxes withheld from your salary in the year they are
withheld. Your Form(s)
W-2 will show these amounts. Forms W-2G,
1099-G, 1099-R, and 1099-MISC may also show state and local income taxes
withheld.
Estimated tax payments.
You can deduct estimated
tax payments you made during the year to a state or local government.
However, you must have
a reasonable basis for making the
estimated tax payments. Any estimated state or local tax payments that
are not made in good
faith at the time of payment are not
deductible. For example, you made an estimated state income tax payment.
However, the
estimate of your state tax liability shows
that you will get a refund of the full amount of your estimated
payment. You had
no reasonable basis to believe you had any
additional liability for state income taxes and you cannot deduct the
estimated
tax payment.
Refund applied to taxes.
You can deduct any part
of a refund of prior-year state or local income taxes that you chose to
have credited to your
2011 estimated state or local income
taxes.
Do not reduce your deduction by either of the following items.
However, part or all of this refund (or credit) may be taxable. See
Refund (or credit) of state or local income taxes
, later.
Separate federal returns.
If you and your spouse
file separate state, local, and federal income tax returns, you each can
deduct on your federal
return only the amount of your own state
and local income tax that you paid during the tax year.
Joint state and local returns.
If you and your spouse
file joint state and local returns and separate federal returns, each of
you can deduct on
your separate federal return a part of the
total state and local income taxes paid during the tax year. You can
deduct only
the amount of the total taxes that is
proportionate to your gross income compared to the combined gross income
of you and
your spouse. However, you cannot deduct
more than the amount you actually paid during the year. You can avoid
this calculation
if you and your spouse are jointly and
individually liable for the full amount of the state and local income
taxes. If so,
you and your spouse can deduct on your
separate federal returns the amount you each actually paid.
Joint federal return.
If you file a joint
federal return, you can deduct the total of the state and local income
taxes both of you paid.
Contributions to state benefit funds.
As
an employee, you can deduct mandatory contributions to state benefit
funds withheld from your wages that provide protection
against loss of wages. For example,
certain states require employees to make contributions to state funds
providing disability
or unemployment insurance benefits.
Mandatory payments made to the following state benefit funds are
deductible as state income
taxes on Schedule A (Form 1040), line 5.
-
Alaska Unemployment Compensation Fund.
-
California Nonoccupational Disability Benefit Fund.
-
New Jersey Nonoccupational Disability Benefit Fund.
-
New Jersey Unemployment Compensation Fund.
-
New York Nonoccupational Disability Benefit Fund.
-
Pennsylvania Unemployment Compensation Fund.
-
Rhode Island Temporary Disability Benefit Fund.
-
Washington State Supplemental Workmen's Compensation Fund.
Employee contributions to private or voluntary disability plans are not deductible.
Refund (or credit) of state or local income taxes.
If you receive a refund
of (or credit for) state or local income taxes in a year after the year
in which you paid
them, you may have to include the refund
in income on Form 1040, line 10, in the year you receive it. This
includes refunds
resulting from taxes that were
overwithheld, applied from a prior year return, not figured correctly,
or figured again because
of an amended return. If you did not
itemize your deductions in the previous year, do not include the refund
in income. If
you deducted the taxes in the previous
year, include all or part of the refund on Form 1040, line 10, in the
year you receive
the refund. For a discussion of how much
to include, see
Recoveries
in chapter 12.
Generally,
you can take either a deduction or a credit for income taxes imposed on
you by a foreign country or a U.S. possession.
However, you cannot take a deduction or
credit for foreign income taxes paid on income that is exempt from U.S.
tax under
the foreign earned income exclusion or the
foreign housing exclusion. For information on these exclusions, see
Publication
54, Tax Guide for U.S. Citizens and Resident
Aliens Abroad. For information on the foreign tax credit, see
Publication 514.
You
can elect to deduct state and local general sales taxes, instead of
state and local income taxes, as an itemized deduction
on Schedule A (Form 1040), line 5b. You can use
either your actual expenses or the state and local sales tax tables to
figure
your sales tax deduction.
Actual expenses.
Generally, you can deduct the
actual state and local general sales taxes (including compensating use
taxes) if the
tax rate was the same as the general sales tax
rate. However, sales taxes on food, clothing, medical supplies, and
motor vehicles
are deductible as a general sales tax even if
the tax rate was less than the general sales tax rate. If you paid sales
tax
on a motor vehicle at a rate higher than the
general sales tax rate, you can deduct only the amount of tax that you
would
have paid at the general sales tax rate on that
vehicle. If you use the actual expenses method, you must have receipts
to
show the general sales taxes paid. Do not
include sales taxes paid on items used in your trade or business.
Motor vehicles.
For purposes of this section,
Motor vehicles include cars, motorcycles, motor homes, recreational
vehicles, sport
utility vehicles, trucks, vans, and off-road
vehicles. This also includes sales taxes on a leased motor vehicle, but
not on
vehicles used in your trade or business.
Optional sales tax tables.
Instead of using your actual
expenses, you can figure your state and local general sales tax
deduction using the state
and local sales tax tables in the Instructions
for Schedule A (Form 1040). You may also be able to add the state and
local
general sales taxes paid on certain specified
items.
Your applicable table amount
is based on the state where you live, your income, and the number of
exemptions claimed
on your tax return. Your income is your adjusted
gross income plus any nontaxable items such as the following.
-
Tax-exempt interest.
-
Veterans' benefits.
-
Nontaxable combat pay.
-
Workers' compensation.
-
Nontaxable part of social security and railroad retirement benefits.
-
Nontaxable part of IRA, pension, or annuity distributions, excluding rollovers.
-
Public assistance payments.
If you lived in different states during
the same tax year, you must prorate your applicable table amount for
each state based
on the days you lived in each state. See the
Instructions for Schedule A (Form 1040), line 5, for details.
Deductible
real estate taxes are any state, local, or foreign taxes on real
property levied for the general public welfare.
You can deduct these taxes only if they are
based on the assessed value of the real property and charged uniformly
against
all property under the jurisdiction of the
taxing authority.
Deductible real estate taxes generally do not
include taxes charged for local benefits and improvements that increase
the
value of the property. They also do not include
itemized charges for services (such as trash collection) assessed
against
specific property or certain people, even if the
charge is paid to the taxing authority. For more information about
taxes
and charges that are not deductible, see
Real Estate-Related Items You Cannot Deduct
, later.
Tenant-shareholders in a cooperative housing corporation.
Generally, if you are a
tenant-stockholder in a cooperative housing corporation, you can deduct
the amount paid to
the corporation that represents your share of
the real estate taxes the corporation paid or incurred for your dwelling
unit.
The corporation should provide you with a
statement showing your share of the taxes. For more information, see
Special Rules for Cooperatives in Publication 530.
Division of real estate taxes between buyers and sellers.
If you bought or sold real
estate during the year, the real estate taxes must be divided between
the buyer and the
seller.
The buyer and the seller must
divide the real estate taxes according to the number of days in the real
property tax
year (the period to which the tax is imposed
relates) that each owned the property. The seller is treated as paying
the taxes
up to, but not including, the date of sale. The
buyer is treated as paying the taxes beginning with the date of sale.
This
applies regardless of the lien dates under local
law. Generally, this information is included on the settlement
statement
provided at the closing.
If
you (the seller) cannot deduct taxes until they are paid because you
use the cash method of accounting, and the buyer of
your property is personally liable for the tax,
you are considered to have paid your part of the tax at the time of the
sale.
This lets you deduct the part of the tax to the
date of sale even though you did not actually pay it. However, you must
also
include the amount of that tax in the selling
price of the property. The buyer must include the same amount in his or
her
cost of the property.
You figure your deduction for
taxes on each property bought or sold during the real property tax year
as follows.
Worksheet 22-1.Figuring Your Real Estate Tax Deduction
Real estate taxes for prior years.
Do not divide delinquent taxes
between the buyer and seller if the taxes are for any real property tax
year before
the one in which the property is sold. Even if
the buyer agrees to pay the delinquent taxes, the buyer cannot deduct
them.
The buyer must add them to the cost of the
property. The seller can deduct these taxes paid by the buyer. However,
the seller
must include them in the selling price.
Examples.
The following examples
illustrate how real estate taxes are divided between buyer and seller.
Example 1.
Dennis and Beth White's real property tax
year for both their old home and their new home is the calendar year,
with payment
due August 1. The tax on their old home,
sold on May 7, was $620. The tax on their new home, bought on May 3, was
$732. Dennis
and Beth are considered to have paid a
proportionate share of the real estate taxes on the old home even though
they did not
actually pay them to the taxing authority.
On the other hand, they can claim only a proportionate share of the
taxes they
paid on their new property even though
they paid the entire amount.
Dennis and Beth owned their old home during the real property tax year for 126 days (January 1 to May 6, the day before the
sale). They figure their deduction for taxes on their old home as follows.
Worksheet 22-1.Figuring Your Real Estate Tax Deduction — Taxes on Old Home
1. |
Enter the total real estate taxes for the real property tax year |
$620 |
2. |
Enter the number of days in the real property tax year that you owned the property |
126 |
3. |
Divide line 2 by 365 (for leap years, divide line 2 by 366) |
.3452 |
4. |
Multiply line 1 by line 3. This is your deduction. Enter it on Schedule A (Form 1040), line 6 |
$214 |
Since the buyers of their old home paid all of the taxes, Dennis and Beth also include the $214 in the selling price of the
old home. (The buyers add the $214 to their cost of the home.)
Dennis and Beth owned their new home during the real property tax year for 243 days (May 3 to December 31, including their
date of purchase). They figure their deduction for taxes on their new home as follows.
Worksheet 22-1.Figuring Your Real Estate Tax Deduction — Taxes on New Home
1. |
Enter the total real estate taxes for the real property tax year |
$732 |
2. |
Enter the number of days in the real property tax year that you owned the property |
243 |
3. |
Divide line 2 by 365 (for leap years, divide line 2 by 366) |
.6658 |
4. |
Multiply line 1 by line 3. This is your deduction. Enter it on Schedule A (Form 1040), line 6 |
$487 |
Since Dennis and Beth paid all of the
taxes on the new home, they add $245 ($732 paid less $487 deduction) to
their cost of
the new home. (The sellers add this $245
to their selling price and deduct the $245 as a real estate tax.)
Dennis and Beth's real estate tax deduction for their old and new homes is the sum of $214 and $487, or $701. They will enter
this amount on Schedule A (Form 1040), line 6.
Example 2.
George and Helen Brown bought a new home
on May 3, 2011. Their real property tax year for the new home is the
calendar year.
Real estate taxes for 2010 were assessed
in their state on January 1, 2011. The taxes became due on May 31, 2011,
and October
31, 2011.
The Browns agreed to pay all taxes due
after the date of purchase. Real estate taxes for 2010 were $680. They
paid $340 on
May 31, 2011, and $340 on October 31,
2011. These taxes were for the 2010 real property tax year. The Browns
cannot deduct
them since they did not own the property
until 2011. Instead, they must add $680 to the cost of their new home.
In January 2012, the Browns receive their
2011 property tax statement for $752, which they will pay in 2012. The
Browns owned
their new home during the 2011 real
property tax year for 243 days (May 3 to December 31). They will figure
their 2012 deduction
for taxes as follows.
Worksheet 22-1.Figuring Your Real Estate Tax Deduction — Taxes on New Home
1. |
Enter the total real estate taxes for the real property tax year |
$752 |
2. |
Enter the number of days in the real property tax year that you owned the property |
243 |
3. |
Divide line 2 by 365 (for leap years, divide line 2 by 366) |
.6658 |
4. |
Multiply line 1 by line 3. This is your deduction. Claim it on Schedule A (Form 1040), line 6 |
$501 |
The remaining $251 ($752 paid less $501 deduction) of taxes paid in 2012, along with the $680 paid in 2011, is added to the
cost of their new home.
Because the taxes up to the date of sale
are considered paid by the seller on the date of sale, the seller is
entitled to
a 2011 tax deduction of $931. This is the
sum of the $680 for 2010 and the $251 for the 123 days the seller owned
the home
in 2011. The seller must also include the
$931 in the selling price when he or she figures the gain or loss on the
sale. The
seller should contact the Browns in
January 2012 to find out how much real estate tax is due for 2011.
Form 1099-S.
For certain sales or exchanges
of real estate, the person responsible for closing the sale (generally
the settlement
agent) prepares Form 1099-S, Proceeds From Real
Estate Transactions, to report certain information to the IRS and to the
seller
of the property. Box 2 of Form 1099-S is for the
gross proceeds from the sale and should include the portion of the
seller's
real estate tax liability that the buyer will
pay after the date of sale. The buyer includes these taxes in the cost
basis
of the property, and the seller both deducts
this amount as a tax paid and includes it in the sales price of the
property.
For a real estate transaction
that involves a home, any real estate tax the seller paid in advance but
that is the
liability of the buyer appears on Form 1099-S,
box 5. The buyer deducts this amount as a real estate tax, and the
seller reduces
his or her real estate tax deduction (or
includes it in income) by the same amount. See
Refund (or rebate)
, later.
Taxes placed in escrow.
If your monthly mortgage
payment includes an amount placed in escrow (put in the care of a third
party) for real estate
taxes, you may not be able to deduct the total
amount placed in escrow. You can deduct only the real estate tax that
the third
party actually paid to the taxing authority. If
the third party does not notify you of the amount of real estate tax
that
was paid for you, contact the third party or the
taxing authority to find the proper amount to show on your return.
Tenants by the entirety.
If you and your spouse held
property as tenants by the entirety and you file separate federal
returns, each of you
can deduct only the taxes each of you paid on
the property.
Divorced individuals.
If your divorce or separation
agreement states that you must pay the real estate taxes for a home
owned by you and
your spouse, part of your payments may be
deductible as alimony and part as real estate taxes. See
Taxes and insurance
in chapter 18 for more information.
Ministers' and military housing allowances.
If you are a minister or a
member of the uniformed services and receive a housing allowance that
you can exclude from
income, you still can deduct all of the real
estate taxes you pay on your home.
Refund (or rebate).
If you received a refund or
rebate in 2011 of real estate taxes you paid in 2011, you must reduce
your deduction by
the amount refunded to you. If you received a
refund or rebate in 2011 of real estate taxes you deducted in an earlier
year
(either as an itemized deduction or an increase
to your standard deduction), you generally must include the refund or
rebate
in income in the year you receive it. However,
the amount you include in income is limited to the amount of the
deduction
that reduced your tax in the earlier year. For
more information, see
Recoveries
in chapter 12.
Table 22-1. Which Taxes Can You Deduct?
Type of Tax |
You Can Deduct |
You Cannot Deduct |
Fees and Charges |
Fees and charges that are expenses of your trade or business or of producing income. |
Fees and charges that are not expenses of your trade or business or of producing income, such as fees for driver's licenses,
car inspections, parking, or charges for water bills (see
Taxes and Fees You Cannot Deduct
).
|
|
|
Fines and penalties. |
Income Taxes |
State and local income taxes. |
Federal income taxes. |
|
Foreign income taxes. Employee contributions to state funds listed under
Contributions to state benefit funds
.
|
Employee contributions to private or voluntary disability plans. |
|
|
State and local general sales taxes if you choose to deduct state and local income taxes. |
General Sales Taxes
|
State and local general sales taxes, including compensating use taxes. |
State and local income taxes if you choose to deduct state and local general sales taxes. |
Other Taxes |
Taxes that are expenses of your trade or business. Taxes on property producing rent or royalty income. Occupational taxes. See chapter 28.
|
Federal excise taxes, such as tax on gasoline, that are not expenses of your trade or business or of producing income. |
|
Deductible part of self-employment tax. |
Per capita taxes. |
Personal Property Taxes |
State and local personal property taxes. |
Customs duties that are not expenses of your trade or business or of producing income. |
Real Estate Taxes |
State and local real estate taxes. Foreign real estate taxes. Tenant's share of real estate taxes paid by cooperative housing corporation.
|
Foreign real estate taxes, if you take the standard deduction and the real property is not used in your trade or business
or does not produce rental income.
|
|
|
Real estate taxes that are treated as imposed on someone else (see
Division of real estate taxes between buyers and sellers
).
|
|
|
Taxes for local benefits (with exceptions). See
Real Estate-Related Items You Cannot Deduct
.
|
|
|
Trash and garbage pickup fees (with exceptions). See
Real Estate-Related Items You Cannot Deduct
.
|
|
|
Rent increase due to higher real estate taxes. |
|
|
Homeowners' association charges. |
Real Estate-Related Items You Cannot Deduct
Payments for the following items generally are not deductible as real estate taxes.
-
Taxes for local benefits.
-
Itemized charges for services (such as trash and garbage pickup fees).
-
Transfer taxes (or stamp taxes).
-
Rent increases due to higher real estate taxes.
-
Homeowners' association charges.
Taxes for local benefits.
Deductible real estate
taxes generally do not include taxes charged for local benefits and
improvements tending to
increase the value of your property. These
include assessments for streets, sidewalks, water mains, sewer lines,
public parking
facilities, and similar improvements. You
should increase the basis of your property by the amount of the
assessment.
Local benefit taxes are
deductible only if they are for maintenance, repair, or interest charges
related to those
benefits. If only a part of the taxes is for
maintenance, repair, or interest, you must be able to show the amount of
that
part to claim the deduction. If you cannot
determine what part of the tax is for maintenance, repair, or interest,
none of
it is deductible.
Taxes
for local benefits may be included in your real estate tax bill. If
your taxing authority (or mortgage lender) does
not furnish you a copy of your real estate
tax bill, ask for it. You should use the rules above to determine if the
local
benefit tax is deductible. Contact the taxing
authority if you need additional information about a specific charge on
your
real estate tax bill.
Itemized charges for services.
An itemized charge for
services assessed against specific property or certain people is not a
tax, even if the charge
is paid to the taxing authority. For example,
you cannot deduct the charge as a real estate tax if it is:
-
A unit fee for the delivery of a service (such as a $5 fee charged for every 1,000 gallons of water you use),
-
A periodic charge for a residential service (such as a $20 per month or $240 annual fee charged to each homeowner for trash
collection), or
-
A flat fee charged for a single service provided by your government (such as a $30 charge for mowing your lawn because it
was allowed to grow higher than permitted under your local ordinance).
You
must look at your real estate tax bill to determine if any
nondeductible itemized charges, such as those listed above,
are included in the bill. If your taxing
authority (or mortgage lender) does not furnish you a copy of your real
estate tax
bill, ask for it.
Exception.
Service charges used to
maintain or improve services (such as trash collection or police and
fire protection) are
deductible as real estate taxes if:
-
The fees or charges are imposed at a like rate against all property in the taxing jurisdiction,
-
The funds collected are not earmarked; instead, they are commingled with general revenue funds, and
-
Funds used to maintain or improve services are not limited to or determined by the amount of these fees or charges collected.
Transfer taxes (or stamp taxes).
Transfer taxes and similar
taxes and charges on the sale of a personal home are not deductible. If
they are paid by
the seller, they are expenses of the sale and
reduce the amount realized on the sale. If paid by the buyer, they are
included
in the cost basis of the property.
Rent increase due to higher real estate taxes.
If your landlord increases
your rent in the form of a tax surcharge because of increased real
estate taxes, you cannot
deduct the increase as taxes.
Homeowners' association charges.
These charges are not
deductible because they are imposed by the homeowners' association,
rather than the state or
local government.
Personal property tax is deductible if it is a state or local tax that is:
-
Charged on personal property,
-
Based only on the value of the personal property, and
-
Charged on a yearly basis, even if it is collected more or less than once a year.
A
tax that meets the above requirements can be considered charged on
personal property even if it is for the exercise of a
privilege. For example, a yearly tax based on
value qualifies as a personal property tax even if it is called a
registration
fee and is for the privilege of registering
motor vehicles or using them on the highways.
If the tax is partly based on value and partly based on other criteria, it may qualify in part.
Example.
Your state charges a yearly motor vehicle
registration tax of 1% of value plus 50 cents per hundredweight. You
paid $32 based
on the value ($1,500) and weight (3,400 lbs.)
of your car. You can deduct $15 (1% × $1,500) as a personal property
tax because
it is based on the value. The remaining $17
($.50 × 34), based on the weight, is not deductible.
Taxes and Fees You Cannot Deduct
Many
federal, state, and local government taxes are not deductible because
they do not fall within the categories discussed
earlier. Other taxes and fees, such as federal
income taxes, are not deductible because the tax law specifically
prohibits
a deduction for them. See Table 22-1.
Taxes and fees that are generally not deductible include the following items.
-
Employment taxes. This
includes social security, Medicare, and railroad retirement taxes
withheld from your pay. However, you can take a deduction
in 2011 for the deductible part of
self-employment tax. See the instructions for Schedule SE (Form 1040)
for details. In addition,
the social security and other
employment taxes you pay on the wages of a household worker may be
included in medical expenses
that you can deduct or child care
expenses that allow you to claim the child and dependent care credit.
For more information,
see chapters 21 and 31.
-
Estate, inheritance, legacy, or succession taxes. However,
you can deduct the estate tax attributable to income in respect of a
decedent if you, as a beneficiary, must include
that income in your gross income. In
that case, deduct the estate tax as a miscellaneous deduction that is
not subject to
the 2%-of-adjusted-gross-income limit.
For more information, see Publication 559, Survivors, Executors, and
Administrators.
-
Federal income taxes. This includes income taxes withheld from your pay.
-
Fines and penalties. You cannot deduct fines and penalties paid to a government for violation of any law, including related amounts forfeited as
collateral deposits.
-
Gift taxes.
-
License fees. You cannot deduct license fees for personal purposes (such as marriage, driver's, and dog license fees).
-
Per capita taxes. You cannot deduct state or local per capita taxes.
Many taxes and fees other than those listed above are also nondeductible, unless they are ordinary and necessary expenses
of a business or income producing activity. For other nondeductible items, see
Real Estate-Related Items You Cannot Deduct
, earlier.
You deduct taxes on the following schedules.
State and local income taxes.
These taxes are deducted on Schedule A (Form 1040), line 5, even if your only source of income is from business, rents, or
royalties. Check
box a on line 5.
General Sales taxes.
Sales taxes are deducted on Schedule A (Form 1040), line 5. You
must check
box b on line 5. If you elect to deduct sales taxes, you cannot deduct state and local income taxes on Schedule A (Form 1040),
line 5, box a.
Foreign income taxes.
Generally, income taxes you
pay to a foreign country or U.S. possession can be claimed as an
itemized deduction on
Schedule A (Form 1040), line 8, or as a credit
against your U.S. income tax on Form 1040, line 47. To claim the credit,
you
may have to complete and attach Form 1116. For
more information, see
chapter 36, the Form 1040 instructions, or Publication 514.
Real estate taxes and personal property taxes.
Real
estate and personal property taxes are deducted on Schedule A (Form
1040), lines 6 and 7, respectively, unless they are
paid on property used in your business, in which
case they are deducted on Schedule C, Schedule C-EZ, or Schedule F
(Form
1040). Taxes on property that produces rent or
royalty income are deducted on Schedule E (Form 1040).
Self-employment tax.
The deductible part of your self-employment tax is deducted on Form 1040, line 27.
Other taxes.
All other deductible taxes are deducted on Schedule A (Form 1040), line 8.