4 thoughts on “Dreading Doing Your Taxes? Use This Hack to Download Your IRS Account Transcript—For Free”

  1. Thank you for this article. I was aware of the feature from IRS for obtaining transcripts for past returns but did not realize that there were additional transcript types available.

    One thing I was expecting but did not find in my transcripts were 1099 reporting from my financial institutions for investment dividends, etc, although the 1099-DIV and 1099-INT statements from these institutions indicated that they were reported to IRS. I was unable to find any of these in past year transcripts. Is there a different way to obtain these from the IRS Transcripts?

  2. Correction to my own posting from earlier: I did find the 1099-DIV and 1099-INT reporting on the Wage & Income Transcripts from past years before last year but not for the last year. I see that you have indicated that there is a delay in IRS recording these – sometimes a month or two from tax day.

    1. Yes, in years’ past, especially when the IRS was struggling with unopened mail during worst of the pandemic, it could take until July. Most years, however, everything is posted by the end of May. The delay depends on a few things:
      1- If the information returns are paper/ snail-mailed, it takes longer to arrive and the IRS longer to process them than if they are e-filed by the company reporting the data.
      2- The deadline for each form is different… for example, 1099-NEC is due by the end of January, but most other 1099 forms (including 1099-DIV and 1099-INT) are not due to the IRS until March 31. Form 5498, which shows retirement contributions, is not due until May 31. K-1 forms from S-Corps, Partnerships, and Trusts are not due until the extension deadlines for those tax returns, September 15.
      3- And of course, there are information return preparers that are late or mistakenly do not file at all.

      For prior years, you should see all the information forms posted, but it can take a while for the current year. For folks who aren’t great at keeping track of documents or don’t have easy access to download and save them from portals, filing an extension might be the safest bet, and then checking for their transcript in the summer.

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