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If your NOL is more than your taxable income for the year to which you carry it (figured before deducting the NOL), you may have an NOL carryover. You must make certain modifications to your taxable income to determine how much NOL you will use up in that year and how much you can carry over to the next tax year. Your carryover is the excess of your NOL deduction over your modified taxable income for the carryback or carryforward year. If your NOL deduction includes more than one NOL, apply the NOLs against your modified taxable income in the same order in which you incurred them, starting with the earliest.
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Your modified taxable income is your taxable income figured with the following changes.
Your taxable income as modified cannot be less than zero.
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You can use Schedule B (Form 1045) to figure your modified taxable income for carryback years and your carryover from each of those years. Do not use Schedule B for a carryforward year. If your 2007 return includes an NOL deduction from an NOL year before 2007 that reduced your taxable income to zero (to less than zero, if an estate or trust), see NOL Carryover From 2007 to 2008, later.
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The following example illustrates how to figure an NOL carryover from a carryback year. It includes a filled-in Schedule B (Form 1045).
Ida Brown runs a small clothing shop. In 2007, she has an NOL of $36,000 that she carries back to 2005. She has no other carrybacks or carryovers to 2005.
Ida's adjusted gross income in 2005 was $29,000, consisting of her salary of $30,000 minus a $1,000 capital loss deduction. She is single and claimed only one personal exemption of $3,200. During that year, she gave $1,450 in charitable contributions. Her medical expenses were $2,725. She also deducted $1,650 in taxes and $1,125 in home mortgage interest.
Her deduction for charitable contributions was not limited because her contributions, $1,450, were less than 50% of her adjusted gross income. The deduction for medical expenses was limited to expenses over 7.5% of adjusted gross income (.075 × $29,000 = $2,175; $2,725 − $2,175 = $550). The deductions for taxes and home mortgage interest were not subject to any limits. She was able to claim $4,775 ($1,450 + $550 + $1,650 + $1,125) in itemized deductions for 2005. She had no other deductions in 2005. Her taxable income for the year was $21,025.
Ida's $36,000 carryback will reduce her 2005 taxable income to zero. She completes the column for the second preceding tax year ended 12/31/05 of Schedule B (Form 1045) to figure how much of her NOL she uses up in 2005 and how much she can carry over to 2006. See the illustrated Schedule B shown on page 13. Ida does not complete the column for the first preceding tax year ended 12/31/06 because the $10,700 carryover to 2006 is completely used up that year. (See the information for line 9 below.)
Line 1. Ida enters $36,000, her 2007 net operating loss, on line 1.
Line 2. She enters $21,025, her 2005 taxable income, on line 2.
Line 3. Ida enters her net capital loss deduction of $1,000 on line 3.
Line 6. Although Ida's entry on line 3 modifies her adjusted gross income, that does not affect any other items included in her adjusted gross income. Ida enters zero on line 6.
Line 7. Ida had itemized deductions and entered $1,000 on line 3, so she completes lines 11 through 35 to figure her adjustment to itemized deductions. On line 7, she enters the total adjustment from line 35.
Line 11. Ida's adjusted gross income for 2005 was $29,000.
Line 12. She adds lines 3 through 6 and enters $1,000 on line 12. (This is her net capital loss deduction added back, which modifies her adjusted gross income.)
Line 13. Her modified adjusted gross income for 2005 is now $30,000.
Line 14. On her 2005 tax return, she deducted $550 as medical expenses.
Line 15. Her actual medical expenses were $2,725.
Line 16. She multiplies her modified adjusted gross income, $30,000, by .075. She enters $2,250 on line 16.
Line 17. The difference between her actual medical expenses and the amount she is allowed to deduct is $475.
Line 18. The difference between her medical deduction and her modified medical deduction is $75. She enters this on line 18.
Line 19. She enters her modified adjusted gross income of $30,000 on line 19.
Line 20. She had no other carrybacks to 2005 and enters zero on line 20.
Line 21. Her modified adjusted gross income remains $30,000.
Line 22. Her actual contributions for 2005 were $1,450, which she enters on line 22.
Line 23. She now refigures her charitable contributions based on her modified adjusted gross income. Her contributions are well below the 50% limit, so she enters $1,450 on line 23.
Line 24. The difference is zero.
Lines 25 through 34. Ida had no casualty losses or deductions for miscellaneous items in 2005 so she leaves these lines blank.
Line 35. She combines lines 18, 24, 29, and 34 and enters $75 on line 35. She carries this figure to line 7.
Line 8. Ida enters the deduction for her personal exemption of $3,200 for 2005.
Line 9. After combining lines 2 through 8, Ida's modified taxable income is $25,300.
Line 10. Ida figures her carryover to 2006 by subtracting her modified taxable income (line 9) from her NOL deduction (line 1). She enters the $10,700 carryover on line 10. She also enters the $10,700 as her NOL deduction for 2006 on Form 1045, page 1, line 10, in the "After carryback" column under the column for the first preceding tax year ended 12/31/06. (For an illustrated example of page 1 of Form 1045, see Illustrated Form 1045 under How To Claim an NOL Deduction, earlier.)
Form 1045, page 3
Form 1045, page 4
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