Rev. date: 01/01/2011
Form 1040EZ is the simplest form to fill out. You may use Form 1040EZ if you meet all the following conditions:
- Your filing status is single or married filing jointly
- You claim no dependents
- You, and your spouse if filing a joint return, were under age 65 on January 1, 2013, and not blind at the end of
2012
- You have only wages, salaries, tips, taxable scholarship and fellowship grants, unemployment compensation, or Alaska Permanent Fund dividends, and your taxable interest was not over
$1,500
- Your taxable income is less than $100,000
- Your earned tips, if any, are included in boxes 5 and 7 of your Form
W-2
- You do not owe any household employment taxes on wages you paid to a household
employee
- You are not a debtor in a Chapter 11 bankruptcy case filed after October 16,
2005
- You do not claim any adjustments to income, such as a deduction for IRA contributions, a student loan interest deduction, an educator expenses deduction, or a tuition and fees
deduction
- You do not claim any credits other than the earned income credit
If you file Form 1040EZ, you cannot itemize deductions or claim any adjustments to income or tax credits (other than the earned income
credit).
References:
- Your income is only from wages, salaries, tips, taxable scholarships and fellowship grants, interest, or ordinary dividends, capital gain distributions, pensions, annuities, IRAs, unemployment compensation, taxable social security or railroad retirement benefits, and Alaska Permanent Fund
dividends
- Your taxable income is less than $100,000
- You do not itemize deductions
- You did not have an alternative minimum tax adjustment on stock you acquired from the exercise of an incentive stock
option
- Your taxes are only from the Tax Table, the alternative minimum tax, recapture of an education credit, Form 8615 or the Qualified Dividends and Capital Gain Tax
Worksheet
- Your only adjustments to income are the IRA deduction, the student loan interest deduction, the educator expenses deduction, the tuition and fees deduction,
and
- The only credits you are claiming are the credit for child and dependent care expenses, the earned income credit, the credit for the elderly or the disabled, education credits, the child tax credit, the additional child tax credit, and the retirement savings contribution
credit
You can also use Form 1040A if you received dependent care benefits.
References:
Often used Schedules:
Form f1040sb.pdf - Interest and Ordinary Dividends
Form f1040sr.pdf - Credit for the Elderly or the Disabled
Form f1040sei.pdf - Earned Income Credit
Form f1040s8.pdf - Child Tax Credit
Often used Forms:
Form 2441 - Child and Dependent Care Expenses
Form 8863 - Education Credits (American Opportunity and Lifetime Learning
Credits)
Form 8888 - Allocation of Refund (Including Savings Bond Purchases)
- Your taxable income is $100,000 or more
- You have certain types of income such as unreported tips; certain nontaxable distributions; self-employment earnings; or income received as a partner, a shareholder in an "S" Corporation, or a beneficiary of an estate or
trust
- You itemize deductions or claim certain tax credits or adjustments to income,
or
- You owe household employment taxes
A complete list of conditions outlining when Form 1040
must be used is in the
Instructions 1040-A.
References:
Often used Schedules:
Form f1040sb.pdf - Interest and Ordinary Dividends
Form f1040sei.pdf - Earned Income Credit
Form f1040s8.pdf - Child Tax Credit
Form f1040sr.pdf - Credit for the Elderly or the Disabled
Often used Forms:
Form 2441 - Child and Dependent Care Expenses
Form 8863 - Education Credits (American Opportunity and Lifetime Learning
Credits)
Form 8888 - Allocation of Refund (Including Savings Bond Purchases)
If you were a nonresident alien during the tax year and you were married to a U.S. citizen or resident alien, you may use any one of these three forms, based on your circumstances, only if you elect to file a joint return with your spouse. Other nonresident aliens may have to file
Form 1040-NR or
Form 1040-NR-EZ. For more information on resident and nonresident aliens, refer to
Tax Topic 851 and
Publication 519,
U. S. Tax Guide for Aliens, Chapter 7.