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left arrowPrevious Page: Publication 17 - Your Federal Income Tax - Unemployment Benefits
right arrowNext Page: Publication 17 - Your Federal Income Tax - Other Income
Use  left arrowright arrow to find additional occurrences of topic items. Index for this Publication

taxmap/pub17/p17-073.htm#TXMP050c79f7
Welfare and Other Public Assistance Benefits(p86)


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Do not include in your income governmental benefit payments from a public welfare fund based upon need, such as payments due to blindness. Payments from a state fund for the victims of crime should not be included in the victims' incomes if they are in the nature of welfare payments. Do not deduct medical expenses that are reimbursed by such a fund. You must include in your income any welfare payments that are compensation for services or that are obtained fraudulently.


taxmap/pub17/p17-073.htm#TXMP1354c7d0
Alternative trade adjustment assistance (ATAA) payments.(p86)


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Payments you receive from a state agency under the Demonstration Project for Alternative Trade Adjustment Assistance for Older Workers (ATAA) must be included in your income. The state must send you Form 1099-G to advise you of the amount you should include in income. The amount should be reported on Form 1040, line 21.


taxmap/pub17/p17-073.htm#TXMP3c18cf3c
Persons with disabilities.(p86)


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If you have a disability, you must include in income compensation you receive for services you perform unless the compensation is otherwise excluded. However, you do not include in income the value of goods, services, and cash that you receive, not in return for your services, but for your training and rehabilitation because you have a disability. Excludable amounts include payments for transportation and attendant care, such as interpreter services for the deaf, reader services for the blind, and services to help mentally retarded persons do their work.


taxmap/pub17/p17-073.htm#TXMP438ecf95
Disaster relief grants.(p86)


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Do not include post-disaster grants received under the Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act in your income if the grant payments are made to help you meet necessary expenses or serious needs for medical, dental, housing, personal property, transportation, or funeral expenses. Do not deduct casualty losses or medical expenses that are specifically reimbursed by these disaster relief grants. If you have deducted a casualty loss for the loss of your personal residence and you later receive a disaster relief grant for the loss of the same residence, you may have to include part or all of the grant in your taxable income. See Recoveries, earlier. Unemployment assistance payments under the Act are taxable unemployment compensation. See Unemployment compensation under Unemployment Benefits, earlier.


taxmap/pub17/p17-073.htm#TXMP17e70b6c
Disaster relief payments.(p87)


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You can exclude from income any amount you receive that is a qualified disaster relief payment. A qualified disaster relief payment is an amount paid to you:

  1. To reimburse or pay reasonable and necessary personal, family, living, or funeral expenses that result from a qualified disaster,
  2. To reimburse or pay reasonable and necessary expenses incurred for the repair or rehabilitation of your home or repair or replacement of its contents to the extent it is due to a qualified disaster,
  3. By a person engaged in the furnishing or sale of transportation as a common carrier because of the death or personal physical injuries incurred as a result of a qualified disaster, or
  4. By a federal, state, or local government, or agency, or instrumentality in connection with a qualified disaster in order to promote the general welfare.
You can exclude this amount only to the extent any expense it pays for is not paid for by insurance or otherwise. The exclusion does not apply if you were a participant or conspirator in a terrorist action or his or her representative.

A qualified disaster is:

For amounts paid under item (4), a disaster is qualified if it is determined by an applicable federal, state, or local authority to warrant assistance from the federal, state, or local government, agency, or instrumentality.


taxmap/pub17/p17-073.htm#TXMP3b4a1355
Disaster mitigation payments.(p87)


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You also can exclude from income any amount you receive that is a qualified disaster mitigation payment. Like qualified disaster relief payments, qualified disaster mitigation payments are also most commonly paid to you in the period immediately following damage to property as a result of a natural disaster. However, disaster mitigation payments are grants you use to mitigate (reduce the severity of) potential damage from future natural disasters. They are paid to you through state and local governments based on the provisions of the Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act or the National Flood Insurance Act.

You cannot increase the basis or adjusted basis of your property for improvements made with nontaxable disaster mitigation payments.


taxmap/pub17/p17-073.htm#TXMP4faaac08
Mortgage assistance payments.(p87)


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Payments made under section 235 of the National Housing Act for mortgage assistance are not included in the homeowner's income. Interest paid for the homeowner under the mortgage assistance program cannot be deducted.


taxmap/pub17/p17-073.htm#TXMP27153c7d
Medicare.(p87)


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Medicare benefits received under title XVIII of the Social Security Act are not includible in the gross income of the individuals for whom they are paid. This includes basic (part A (Hospital Insurance Benefits for the Aged)) and supplementary (part B (Supplementary Medical Insurance Benefits for the Aged)).


taxmap/pub17/p17-073.htm#TXMP711e1c0a
Old-age, survivors, and disability insurance benefits (OASDI).(p87)


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OASDI payments under section 202 of title II of the Social Security Act are not includible in the gross income of the individuals to whom they are paid. This applies to old-age insurance benefits, and insurance benefits for wives, husbands, children, widows, widowers, mothers and fathers, and parents, as well as the lump-sum death payment.


taxmap/pub17/p17-073.htm#TXMP330d88c1
Nutrition Program for the Elderly.(p87)


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Food benefits you receive under the Nutrition Program for the Elderly are not taxable. If you prepare and serve free meals for the program, include in your income as wages the cash pay you receive, even if you are also eligible for food benefits.


taxmap/pub17/p17-073.htm#TXMP5fee8013
Payments to reduce cost of winter energy.(p87)


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Payments made by a state to qualified people to reduce their cost of winter energy use are not taxable.

left arrowPrevious Page:  Publication 17 - Your Federal Income Tax - Unemployment Benefits
right arrowNext Page:  Publication 17 - Your Federal Income Tax - Other Income
Use  left arrowright arrow to find additional occurrences of topic items. Index for this Publication