1099-C: Taxable Income or Not

omg faceCreditors record canceled debts on a form 1099-C, which is then sent to the debtor and the IRS.  Most people are in for a surprise when they receive a 1099-C, not knowing that the canceled debt on this form must often be included as income on their tax return resulting in a big tax bill.  Some common triggers for receiving a 1099-C include forgiven loan balances (like a canceled credit card debt), a home foreclosure or short sale (which results in the sale of a home at a price below your mortgage amount), or if you simply haven’t paid a debt in the last three years and the lender hasn’t tried to collect in the past year.

While most canceled debts are taxable, a lender is only required to send you a 1099-C if it forgives more than $600 in debt in a single tax year.

Which Forgiven Debt is Not Taxable

The following forgiven debt is not reported as income:

  • Debt discharged in bankruptcy.
  • Under certain circumstances where a borrower is deemed to be insolvent, some or all of your debt may not be reportable as income.
  • Some student loan debt may not be considered income when forgiven.
  • Since the financial crisis, forgiven mortgage debt on a borrower’s principal residence can be excluded income

Unfortunately, the exclusion for has recently been approved for only one year at a time — it was extended to the 2014 tax year by a December 2013 vote by Congress — and whether it will extend into 2015 remains a question mark. Two pieces of legislation — H.R. 1002 and S. 608 — are currently circulating in Congress, leaving the mortgage exclusion up in the air for tax years 2015 and beyond. If history is any guide, Congress will save this decision for a year-end vote, making it an important piece of legislation to watch if you expect to have canceled mortgage debt in 2015.

What a 1099-C means — and what it doesn’t

The fact you received a form 1099-C does not necessarily mean that you are no longer on the hook to pay your debt. Creditors have to consider a debt forgiven if you haven’t paid in three years and they haven’t made meaningful attempts to collect in the last year (Code H). It’s quite possible to receive a 1099-C only to receive notices for collection immediately after. It may be in your best interest to speak to your creditors to see if your debt has actually been canceled.

Scroll to Top