What are Section 199A Dividends?

Did you receive a Form 1099-DIV which lists an amount in Box 5 “Section 199A dividends”? If so, you might be asking, what the heck are Section 199A dividends? 

You probably never came across the term “Section 199A dividends” in high school algebra. That’s okay. Below I discuss what a Section 199A dividend is and how to report it on your tax return. 

Watch me discuss how Section 199A Dividends are reported on tax returns.

Who Pays Section 199A Dividends?

Real estate investment trusts (“REITs”) pay Section 199A dividends. REITs are a special type of business entity. A REIT owns almost entirely real estate. Many office buildings, hotels, hospitals, malls, and apartment buildings are owned by REITs. Investors can own the stock of a single REIT, or they can own mutual funds or ETFs that are partly or entirely composed of REIT stock. For example, there are some REITs in the Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund (VTSAX)

REITs are advantageous from a tax perspective. In exchange for paying 90 plus percent of its income out to investors as dividends, the REIT itself does not pay federal corporate income taxes. This results in REITs often paying higher dividends than companies in other industries. The dividends paid by the REIT are Section 199A dividends.

I discuss the Section 199A dividends paid by VTSAX in this video.

What is the Tax Benefit of a Section 199A Dividend?

A Section 199A dividend qualifies for the Section 199A qualified business income deduction. This is also referred to as the QBI deduction. The qualified business income deduction is a 20 percent federal income tax deduction

Here is an example of how the tax deduction works for Section 199A dividends.

Catherine owns shares of ABC REIT Mutual Fund. The mutual fund pays her $1,000.00 of dividends, all of which are Section 199A dividends reported to her in both Box 1a and Box 5 of Form 1099-DIV. She gets a $200 qualified business income deduction on her federal tax return (20 percent of $1,000.00) because of the $1,000.00 of Section 199A dividend.

There are several things to keep in mind when considering Section 199A dividends:

  1. Section 199A dividends are a slice of the pie of dividends. The full pie of dividends, “total ordinary dividends,” is reported in Box 1a of Form 1099-DIV. Since Box 1a reports all of the dividends, Box 5 must be equal to or less than Box 1a.
  1. There is no income limit (taxable income, MAGI, or otherwise) on the ability to claim the Section 199A qualified business income deduction for Section 199A dividends. The QBI deduction for self-employment income is generally subject to taxable income limitations on the ability to claim the deduction. Not so with the Section 199A dividends. Taxpayers can claim the QBI deduction for Section 199A dividends regardless of their level of income.
  1. Taxpayers get the Section 199A QBI deduction regardless of whether they claim the standard deduction or itemized deductions. 
  1. There is no requirement to be engaged in a qualified trade or business to claim the QBI deduction for Section 199A dividends. 
  1. The QBI deduction does not reduce adjusted gross income. Thus, it does not help a taxpayer qualify for many tax benefits, such as the ability to make an annual contribution to a Roth IRA
  1. Section 199A dividends are not qualified dividends (which are reported in Box 1b of Form 1099-DIV). They are taxed as ordinary income subject to the taxpayer’s ordinary income tax rates. They do not qualify for the preferred federal income tax rates for qualified dividends. 

Where Do I Report a Section 199A Dividend on My Tax Return?

Section 199A dividends create tax return reporting in three prominent places on a federal income tax return.

First, Form 1099-DIV Box 1a total ordinary dividends are reported on Form 1040 Line 3b. As Section 199A dividends are a component of Box 1a total ordinary dividends, they are thus reported on the Form 1040 on Line 3b. Section 199A dividends are not reported on Line 3a of Form 1040 because Section 199A dividends are not qualified dividends. 

Second, Section 199A dividends are reported on either Line 6 of Form 8995 or Line 28 of Form 8995-A. In most cases, taxpayers will file the simpler Form 8995 to report qualified business income and Section 199A dividends. By reporting Section 199A dividends on one of those lines most tax return preparation software should flow the dividends through the rest of the form as appropriate (but it never hurts to double check).

Third, the QBI deduction, computed on either Form 8995 or Form 8995-A, is claimed on Line 13 of Form 1040. 

Tax return software varies. Hopefully, by entering the Form 1099-DIV in full in the software’s Form 1099-DIV input form, all of the above will be generated. Ultimately, it is up to the taxpayer to review the return to ensure that the information has been properly input and properly reported on the tax return.

Conclusion 

Section 199A dividends create a taxpayer favorable federal income tax deduction. They are reported in Box 5 of Form 1099-DIV and should be reported on a taxpayer’s federal income tax return. 

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This post is for entertainment and educational purposes only. It does not constitute accounting, financial, legal, investment, or tax advice. Please consult with your advisor(s) regarding your personal accounting, financial, investment, legal, and tax matters. Please also refer to the Disclaimer & Warning section found here.

5 comments

  1. I have a Section 199A dividend and entered it on Line 6 of Form 8995 as a positive number per the instructions for line 6 of form 8995: “Enter income as a positive number and losses as a negative number.” Carrying through with this ends up ADDING the 20% of the dividend to earnings on my 1040. Is the Sect 199A amount considered a loss and thus should be entered as a minus on Line 6?

    1. Bill, thank you for reading. Unfortunately, I cannot address the specific situation of any one taxpayer or tax return on the blog.

    2. Bill, I added some bolded language above about the approach one might take when preparing their own tax return. You may be interested in that language from an educational perspective (though it is not advice for your particular situation).

  2. Sean,
    Thanks so much for the Section 199A Dividend breakdown. As a 61year old FIRE person who manages his dividend income very closely, you have helped me tremendously. I finally understand it now and will update my spreadsheets accordingly. You rock!!!

    1. James, many thanks for your kind words. If you are interested in Section 199A dividends, you may want to check out the video I’m releasing this upcoming Saturday on my YouTube channel.

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