Publication 524
taxmap/pubs/p524-002.htm#en_us_publink100038698If you figure the credit yourself, fill out the front of Schedule
R. Next, fill out
Part III of Schedule R. If you file Form 1040A, enter the amount
from Schedule R, line 22 on line 30. If you file Form 1040, include the amount
from Schedule R, line 22 on line 53, check box
c, and enter "Sch R" on the line next to that box.
 | There are five steps in Part III to determine the amount
of your credit: |
- Determine your initial amount (lines 10–12).
- Determine the total of any nontaxable social security and
certain other nontaxable pensions and benefits you received (lines 13a, 13b, and
13c).
- Determine your excess adjusted gross income (lines 14–17).
- Determine the total of steps 2 and 3 (line 18).
- Determine your credit (lines 19–22).
These steps are discussed in more detail next.
taxmap/pubs/p524-002.htm#en_us_publink100038700To figure the credit, you must first determine your initial amount
using lines 10 through 12. See
Table 1. Your initial amount is on line 12.
taxmap/pubs/p524-002.htm#en_us_publink100038701If you are a qualified individual under age 65, your initial
amount cannot be more than your taxable disability income.
taxmap/pubs/p524-002.htm#en_us_publink100038702Step 2 is to figure the total amount of nontaxable social security
and certain other nontaxable payments you received during the year. You must
reduce your initial amount by these payments.
Enter these nontaxable payments on lines 13a or 13b and total
them on line 13c. If you are married filing a joint return, you must enter the
combined amount of nontaxable payments both you and your spouse receive.
 | Worksheets are provided in the instructions for Forms 1040
and 1040A to help you determine if any of your social security benefits (or
equivalent railroad retirement benefits) are taxable.
|
Include the following nontaxable payments in the amounts you
enter on lines 13a and 13b.
- Nontaxable social security payments. This is the nontaxable
part of the benefits shown in box 5 of Form SSA-1099, Social Security Benefit
Statement, which includes disability benefits, before deducting any amounts
withheld to pay premiums on supplementary Medicare insurance, and before any
reduction because of benefits received under workers' compensation. (Do not
include a lump-sum death benefit payment you may receive as a surviving spouse,
or a surviving child's insurance benefit payments you may receive as a
guardian.)
- Nontaxable railroad retirement pension payments treated as
social security. This is the nontaxable part of the benefits shown in box 5 of
Form RRB-1099, Payments by the Railroad Retirement Board.
- Nontaxable pension or annuity payments or disability benefits
that are paid under a law administered by the Department of Veterans Affairs
(VA). (Do not include amounts received as a pension, annuity, or similar
allowance for personal injuries or sickness resulting from active service in the
armed forces of any country or in the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration or the Public Health Service, or as a disability annuity under
section 808 of the Foreign Service Act of 1980.)
- Pension or annuity payments or disability benefits that are
excluded from income under any provision of federal law other than the Internal
Revenue Code. (Do not include amounts that are a return of your cost of a
pension or annuity. These amounts do not reduce your initial amount.)
 | You should be sure to take into account all of the nontaxable
amounts you receive. These amounts are verified by the IRS through information
supplied by other government agencies.
|
taxmap/pubs/p524-002.htm#en_us_publink100038705You also must reduce your initial amount by your excess adjusted
gross income. Figure your excess adjusted gross income on lines 14–17.
You figure your excess adjusted gross income as follows:
- Subtract from your adjusted gross income (Form 1040A, line
22 or Form 1040, line 38) the amount shown for your filing status in the
following list.
- $7,500 if you are single, a head of household, or a qualifying
widow(er),
- $10,000 if you are married filing a joint return, or
- $5,000 if you are married filing a separate return and you
and your spouse did not live in the same household at any time during the tax
year.
- Divide the result of (1) by 2.
taxmap/pubs/p524-002.htm#en_us_publink100038706To determine if you can take the credit, you must add (on line
18) the amounts you figured in Step 2 and Step 3.
IF the total of
Steps 2 and 3 is...
| THEN... |
|---|
| equal to or more than the amount in Step 1
| you
cannot take the credit.
|
| less than
the amount in Step 1
| you
can take the credit.
|
taxmap/pubs/p524-002.htm#en_us_publink100038707If you can take the credit, subtract the amount determined in
Step 4 (line 18) from the amount determined in Step 1 (line 12), and multiply
the result by 15%.
In certain cases, the amount of your credit may be limited. See
Limit on credit,
later.
taxmap/pubs/p524-002.htm#en_us_publink100038708You are 66 years old and your spouse is 64. Your spouse is not
disabled. You file a joint return on Form 1040. Your adjusted gross income is
$14,630. Together you received $3,200 from social security, which was
nontaxable. You figure the credit as follows:
| Example applying the 5 step process | Amount |
|---|
| | | | |
|---|
| 1. | Initial amount | | $5,000 |
| 2. | Total nontaxable social security and other nontaxable pensions
| $3,200 | |
| 3. | Excess adjusted gross income
($14,630–$10,000) ÷ 2
| 2,315 | |
| 4. | Add line 2 and line 3 | | 5,515 |
| 5. | Subtract line 4 from line 1
(Do not enter less than (-0-))
| | $ -0- |
You cannot take the credit because your nontaxable social security
(line 2) plus your excess adjusted gross income (line 3) is more than your
initial amount (line 1).
taxmap/pubs/p524-002.htm#en_us_publink100038709The amount of credit you can claim is generally limited to the
amount of your tax. Use the Credit Limit Worksheet in the instructions for
Schedule R to determine if your credit is limited.
taxmap/pubs/p524-002.htm#en_us_publink100038710The following examples illustrate the credit for the elderly
or the disabled. The initial amounts are taken from
Table 1. Initial Amounts.
taxmap/pubs/p524-002.htm#en_us_publink100038711Example 1.(p7)
James Davis is 58 years old, single, and files Form 1040A. In
2008 he retired on permanent and total disability, and he is still permanently
and totally disabled. He got the required physician's statement in 2008 and kept
it with his tax records. His physician signed on line B of the statement. This
year James checks the box in Part II of Schedule R. He does not need to get
another statement for 2010.
He received the following income for the year:
| Nontaxable social security | $1,500 |
| Interest (taxable) | 100 |
| Taxable disability pension | 11,400 |
| | | |
James' adjusted gross income is $11,500 ($11,400 + $100). He
figures the credit on Schedule R as follows:
| 1. | Initial amount | | $5,000 |
| 2. | Taxable disability pension | | 11,400 |
| 3. | Smaller of line 1 or line 2 | | 5,000 |
| 4. | Nontaxable social
security benefits
| $1,500 | | |
| 5. | Excess adjusted gross income
($11,500 − $7,500) ÷ 2
| 2,000 | | |
| 6. | Add lines 4 and 5 | | 3,500 |
| 7. | Subtract line 6 from line 3 (Do not enter less than (-0-))
| | 1,500 |
| 8. | Multiply line 7 by 15% (.15) | | 225 |
| 9. | Enter the amount from the Credit Limit Worksheet in the Schedule
R Instructions
| | 216 |
| 10. | Credit (Enter the smaller of
line 8 or line 9)
| | $ 216 |
He enters $216 on line 30 of Form 1040A. The Schedule R for James
Davis is not shown.
taxmap/pubs/p524-002.htm#en_us_publink100038712Example 2.(p8)
William White is 53. His wife Helen is 49. William had a stroke
3 years ago and retired on permanent and total disability. He is still
permanently and totally disabled because of the stroke. In November, Helen was
injured in an accident at work and retired on permanent and total disability.
William received nontaxable social security disability benefits
of $2,800 during the year and a taxable disability pension of $6,200. Helen
earned $11,100 from her job and received a taxable disability pension of $1,700.
Their joint return on Form 1040 shows adjusted gross income of $19,000 ($6,200 +
$11,100 + $1,700). They do not itemize deductions. They do not have any amounts
that would increase their standard deduction.
Helen got her doctor to complete the physician's statement in
the instructions for Schedule R. Helen is not required to include the statement
with their return for the year, but she must keep it for her records.
William got a physician's statement for the year he had the stroke.
His doctor had signed on line B of that physician's statement to certify that
William was permanently and totally disabled. William has kept the physician's
statement with his records. He checks the box in Part II of Schedule R and
writes his first name in the space above the box on line 2.
William and Helen use Schedule R to figure their $30 credit for
the elderly or the disabled. They attach Schedule R to their Form 1040 and enter
$30 on line 53. They check box
c
on line 53 and enter "Sch R" on the line next to that box. See their filled-in
Schedule R and Helen's filled-in physician's statement, later.
taxmap/pubs/p524-002.htm#w15046s01 | | Instructions for Physician's Statement | | | | | Taxpayer | Physician | | If you retired after 1976, enter the date you retired
in the space provided on the statement below. | A person is permanently and totally disabled if both of
the following apply: | | | 1. He or she cannot engage in any substantial gainful
activity because of a physical or mental condition.
| | | 2. A physician determines that the disability has
lasted or can be expected to last continuously for at least a year or can lead
to death.
| | Physician's Statement | | | | | I certify that
Helen A. White
| | Name of disabled person | | was permanently and totally disabled on January 1, 1976,
or January 1, 1977, or was permanently and totally disabled on the date he or
she retired. If retired after 1976, enter the date retired. November 1, 2010 | | | | Physician: Sign your name on either A or B below.
| | A The disability has lasted or can be expected to
last continuously for at least a year
|
| | | Physician's signature Date | | B There is no reasonable probability that the disabled
condition will ever improve
| Ayden D.
Doctor 2/8/11 | | | Physician's signature Date | | Physician's name | Physician's address | | Ayden D. Doctor | 1900 Green St., Hometown, MD 20000 |
|