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1099-DIV (Dividends)

What Is 1099-DIV?

Form 1099-DIV is a tax document used to report dividend income and certain capital gain distributions paid to investors during the tax year.

Financial institutions issue this form to individuals who receive dividends from stocks, mutual funds, or other investments.

Why It Matters

Dividends represent earnings distributed by companies or investment funds to shareholders. Most dividends must be reported as income when filing a tax return.

The 1099-DIV helps ensure investors report dividend income accurately.

How 1099-DIV Works

Financial institutions issue Form 1099-DIV to report:

  • ordinary dividends
  • qualified dividends
  • capital gain distributions

Different types of dividends may be taxed at different rates depending on IRS rules.

Example

If an investor owns shares of a company that pays $500 in dividends during the year, the brokerage firm may issue a 1099-DIV reporting those payments.

1099-DIV vs 1099-INT

  • 1099-DIV reports dividend income from investments.
  • 1099-INT reports interest earned from deposits or lending activities.

FAQs About 1099-DIV

Are dividends always taxable?
Most dividends are taxable, though the rate may vary.

What are qualified dividends?
Qualified dividends may be taxed at lower capital gains tax rates.

Do reinvested dividends count as income?
Yes. Dividends are taxable even if reinvested.

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