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Internal Revenue Service
2011 Instructions for Schedule SE (Form 1040)
Use Schedule SE (Form 1040) to figure the tax due on net earnings from self-employment.
Social Security Administration uses the information from Schedule SE to figure your
Self-Employment The
benefits under the social security program. This tax applies no matter how old you are and
even if you are already getting social security or Medicare benefits.
Tax
See Pub. 225 or Pub. 334.
Additional information.
Section references are to the Internal
Revenue Code unless otherwise noted.
What’s New
More information. The IRS has created a
page on IRS.gov for information about
Form 1040 and its instructions, at www.irs.
gov/form1040. Information about any recent developments affecting Schedule SE
will be posted on that page.
Maximum income subject to social security
tax. The maximum amount of self-em-
ployment income subject to social security
tax remains $106,800.
Deduction for self-employed health insurance. You can no longer reduce your net
self-employment income by the amount of
your self-employed health insurance deduction (from line 29 of Form 1040 or
Form 1040NR).
SE tax rate. For 2011, the Old Age, Survi-
vors, and Disability Insurance (OASDI)
portion of the SE tax is reduced by 2%,
from 12.4% to 10.4%. The Medicare (HI)
portion of the SE tax remains 2.9%. As a
result, the SE tax rate is reduced from
15.3% to 13.3%.
SE tax deduction. For 2011, the SE tax de-
duction is revised to reflect an employer’s
equivalent portion of tax. Previously, the
deduction was equal to one-half of self-employment tax.
General Instructions
Who Must File Schedule SE
You must file Schedule SE if:
• The amount on line 4 of Short Schedule SE or line 4c of Long Schedule SE is
$400 or more, or
• You had church employee income of
$108.28 or more. Income from services you
performed as a minister or a member of a
religious order is not church employee income. See Employees of Churches and
Church Organizations.
Note. Even if you had a loss or a small
amount of income from self-employment,
it may be to your benefit to file Schedule
SE and use either ‘‘optional method’’ in
Part II of Long Schedule SE (discussed
later).
Exception. If your only self-employment
income was from earnings as a minister,
member of a religious order, or Christian
Science practitioner, see Ministers and
Members of Religious Orders.
Who Must Pay
Self-Employment (SE) Tax
Self-Employed Persons
You must pay SE tax if you had net earnings of $400 or more as a self-employed
person. If you are in business (farm or nonfarm) for yourself, you are self-employed.
You must also pay SE tax on your share
of certain partnership income and your
guaranteed payments. See Partnership Income or Loss, later.
Employees of Churches and
Church Organizations
If you had church employee income of
$108.28 or more, you must pay SE tax.
Church employee income is wages you received as an employee (other than as a minister or member of a religious order) of a
church or qualified church-controlled organization that has a certificate in effect
electing an exemption from employer social security and Medicare taxes.
Ministers and Members of
Religious Orders
In most cases, you must pay SE tax on salaries and other income for services you performed as a minister, a member of a
religious order who has not taken a vow of
poverty, or a Christian Science practitioner.
But if you filed Form 4361 and received
IRS approval, you will be exempt from
paying SE tax on those net earnings. If you
had no other income subject to SE tax,
enter “Exempt — Form 4361” on Form
1040, line 56, or Form 1040NR, line 54.
However, if you had other net earnings of
$400 or more subject to SE tax, see line A
at the top of Long Schedule SE.
SE-1
Oct 14, 2011
Cat. No. 24334P
If you have ever filed Form
2031 to elect social security
coverage on your earnings as a
minister, you cannot revoke
that election.
If you must pay SE tax, include this income on either Short or Long Schedule SE,
line 2. But do not report it on Long Schedule SE, line 5a; it is not considered church
employee income. Also, include on line 2:
• The rental value of a home or an allowance for a home furnished to you (including payments for utilities), and
• The value of meals and lodging provided to you, your spouse, and your dependents for your employer’s convenience.
However, do not include on line 2:
• Retirement benefits you received
from a church plan after retirement, or
• The rental value of a home or an allowance for a home furnished to you (including payments for utilities) after
retirement.
If you were a duly ordained minister
who was an employee of a church and you
must pay SE tax, when figuring SE tax,
subtract on line 2 allowable expenses from
your self-employment earnings and attach
an explanation. Please note that the unreimbursed employee business expenses
that you incurred as an employee of the
church are not allowable expenses for SE
tax purposes, and are allowed only as an
itemized deduction for income tax purposes.
If you were a U.S. citizen or resident
alien serving outside the United States as a
minister or member of a religious order and
you must pay SE tax, you cannot reduce
your net earnings by the foreign earned income exclusion or the foreign housing exclusion or deduction.
See Pub. 517 for details.
Members of Certain Religious
Sects
If you have conscientious objections to social security insurance because of your
membership in and belief in the teachings
of a religious sect recognized as being in
existence at all times since December 31,
1950, and which has provided a reasonable
level of living for its dependent members,
you are exempt from SE tax if you received
IRS approval by filing Form 4029. In this
case, do not file Schedule SE. Instead, enter
“Exempt — Form 4029” on Form 1040,
line 56, or Form 1040NR, line 54. See Pub.
517 for details.
U.S. Citizens Employed by
Foreign Governments or
International Organizations
You must pay SE tax on income you earned
as a U.S. citizen employed by a foreign
government (or, in certain cases, by a
wholly owned instrumentality of a foreign
government or an international organization under the International Organizations
Immunities Act) for services performed in
the United States, Puerto Rico, Guam,
American Samoa, the Commonwealth of
the Northern Mariana Islands, or the U.S.
Virgin Islands. Report income from this
employment on either Short or Long
Schedule SE, line 2. If you performed services elsewhere as an employee of a foreign
government or an international organization, those earnings are exempt from SE
tax.
Exception — Dual citizens. A person with
dual U.S.-foreign citizenship is generally
considered to be a U.S. citizen for social
security purposes. However, if you are a
U.S. citizen and also a citizen of a country
with which the United States has a bilateral
social security agreement, other than Canada or Italy, your work for the government
of that foreign country is always exempt
from U.S. social security taxes. For further
information about these agreements, see
the exception shown in the next section.
U.S. Citizens or Resident Aliens
Living Outside the United States
If you are a self-employed U.S. citizen or
resident alien living outside the United
States, in most cases you must pay SE tax.
You cannot reduce your foreign earnings
from self-employment by your foreign
earned income exclusion.
Exception. The United States has social
security agreements with many countries to
eliminate dual taxes under two social security systems. Under these agreements, you
must generally pay social security and
Medicare taxes to only the country you live
in.
The United States now has social security agreements with the following countries: Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada,
Chile, Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland,
France, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Italy,
Japan, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, South Korea, Spain,
Sweden, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom. Additional agreements are expected
in the future.
If you have questions about international social security agreements, you can:
1. Visit the Social Security
Administration’s (SSA’s) International
Programs website at www.socialsecurity.
gov/international;
2. Call the SSA’s Office of International
Programs at:
a. (410) 965-3322 for questions on benefits under agreements, or
b. (410) 965-7306 for questions on the
coverage rules of the agreements; or
3. Write to:
a. Social Security Administration, Office of International Programs, P.O. Box
17741, Baltimore, MD 21235-7741 USA
for information about an agreement, or
b. Social Security Administration,
OIO — Totalization, P.O. Box 17769, Baltimore, MD 21235-7769 USA for information about a claim for benefits.
If your self-employment income is exempt from SE tax, you should get a statement from the appropriate agency of the
foreign country verifying that your
self-employment income is subject to social security coverage in that country. If the
foreign country will not issue the statement, contact the SSA at the address shown
in (3a) above. Do not complete Schedule
SE. Instead, attach a copy of the statement
to Form 1040 and enter “Exempt, see attached statement” on Form 1040, line 56.
Nonresident Alien
If you are a self-employed nonresident
alien living in the United States, you must
pay SE tax if an international social security agreement in effect determines that you
are covered under the U.S. social security
system. See Exception under U.S. Citizens
or Resident Aliens Living Outside the
United States , earlier, for information
about international social security agreements. If your self-employment income is
subject to SE tax, complete Schedule SE
and file it with your Form 1040NR.
Chapter 11 Bankruptcy Cases
While you are a debtor in a chapter 11
bankruptcy case, your net profit or loss
from self-employment (for example, from
Schedule C or Schedule F) will not be included in your Form 1040 income. Instead,
it will be included on the income tax return
(Form 1041) of the bankruptcy estate.
However, you (not the bankruptcy estate)
are responsible for paying SE tax on your
net earnings from self-employment.
Enter on the dotted line to the left of
Schedule SE, line 3, “Chap. 11 bankruptcy
income” and the amount of your net profit
or (loss). Combine that amount with the total of lines 1a, 1b, and 2 (if any) and enter
the result on line 3.
For other reporting requirements, see
Chapter 11 Bankruptcy Cases in the instructions for Form 1040.
More Than One Business
If you had two or more businesses, your net
earnings from self-employment are the
SE-2
combined net earnings from all of your
businesses. If you had a loss in one business, it reduces the income from another.
Figure the combined SE tax on one Schedule SE.
Joint Returns
Show the name of the spouse with self-employment income on Schedule SE. If both
spouses have self-employment income,
each must file a separate Schedule SE.
However, if one spouse qualifies to use
Short Schedule SE (front of form) and the
other must use Long Schedule SE (back of
form), both can use the same form. One
spouse should complete the front and the
other the back.
Include the total profits or losses from
all businesses on Form 1040. Enter the
combined SE tax on Form 1040, line 56.
Community Income
The following rules only apply
to persons married for federal
tax purposes. Registered domestic partners and same-sex
spouses in California report community income for self-employment tax purposes the
same way they do for income tax purposes.
For more information, see Pub. 555.
If any of the income from a business (including farming) is community income,
then the income and deductions are reported based on the following.
• If only one spouse participates in the
business, all of the income from that business is the self-employment earnings of the
spouse who carried on the business.
• If both spouses participate, the income
and deductions are allocated to the spouses
based on their distributive shares.
• If either or both you and your spouse
are partners in a partnership, see Partnership Income or Loss, later.
• If you and your spouse elected to treat
the business as a qualifying joint venture,
see Qualified Joint Ventures, later.
Married filing separately. If you and your
spouse had community income and file
separate returns, attach Schedule SE to the
return of the spouse with the self-employment income. Also, attach Schedule(s) C,
C-EZ, or F (showing the spouse’s share of
community income and expenses) to the return of each spouse.
If you are the spouse who carried on the
business, you must include on Schedule
SE, line 3, the net profit or (loss) reported
on the other spouse’s Schedule C, C-EZ, or
F (except in those cases described later
under Income and Losses Not Included in
Net Earnings From Self-Employment).
Enter on the dotted line to the left of Schedule SE, line 3, “Community income taxed
to spouse” and the amount of any net profit
or (loss) allocated to your spouse as community income. Combine that amount with
the total of lines 1a, 1b, and 2 and enter the
result on line 3.
If you are not the spouse who carried on
the business and you had no other income
subject to SE tax, enter “Exempt community income” on Form 1040, line 56, or
Form 1040NR, line 54. Do not file Schedule SE. However, if you had $400 or more
of other net earnings subject to SE tax, include on Schedule SE, line 1a or 2, the net
profit or (loss) from Schedule(s) C, C-EZ,
or F allocated to you as community income.
Also, enter on the dotted line to the left of
Schedule SE, line 3, “Exempt community
income” and the allocated amount. If that
amount is a net profit, subtract it from the
total of lines 1a, 1b, and 2, and enter the
result on line 3. If that amount is a loss,
treat it as a positive amount, add it to the
total of lines 1a, 1b, and 2, and enter the
result on line 3.
Community income included
on Schedule(s) C, C-EZ, or F
must be divided for income tax
purposes based on the community property laws of your state. See Pub.
555 for more information.
Qualified Joint Ventures
If you and your spouse materially participate (see Material participation in the 2011
Instructions for Schedule C) as the only
members of a jointly owned and operated
business, and you file a joint return for the
tax year, you can make a joint election to be
taxed as a qualified joint venture instead of
a partnership.
To make this election, you must divide
all items of income, gain, loss, deduction,
and credit attributable to the business between you and your spouse in accordance
with your respective interests in the venture. Each of you must file a separate
Schedule C, C-EZ, or F. On each line of
your separate Schedule C, C-EZ, or F, you
must enter your share of the applicable income, deduction, or loss. Each of you also
must file a separate Schedule SE to pay SE
tax, as applicable.
For more information on qualified joint
ventures, go to IRS.gov. Enter “qualified
joint venture” in the search box and select
“Election for Husband and Wife Unincorporated Businesses.”
Rental real estate business. If you and
your spouse make the election for your
rental real estate business, the income generally is not subject to SE tax. To indicate
that election, be sure to check the “QJV”
box in Part I, line 2, of each Schedule E that
the rental property is listed on. Do not file
Schedule SE unless you have other income
subject to SE tax. For an exception to this
income not being subject to SE tax, see
item 3 under Other Income and Losses Included in Net Earnings From Self-Employment, later).
If the election is made for a farm rental
business that is not included in self-employment, file two Forms 4835, Farm
Rental Income and Expenses.
Fiscal Year Filers
If your tax year is a fiscal year, use the tax
rate and earnings base that apply at the time
the fiscal year begins. Do not prorate the
tax or earnings base for a fiscal year that
overlaps the date of a rate or earnings base
change.
Line Instructions
Read the flowchart on page 1 of Schedule
SE to see if you can use Section A — Short
Schedule SE, or if you must use Section
B — Long Schedule SE. For either section,
you will need to know what your net earnings from self-employment are. To find out
what is included as net earnings from
self-employment, see Net Earnings From
Self-Employment.
TIP
Enter all negative amounts in
parentheses.
You Have Only Church
Employee Income Subject to
SE Tax
If your only income subject to SE tax is
church employee income (described earlier
under Employees of Churches and Church
Organizations), skip lines 1 through 4b.
Enter -0- on line 4c and go to line 5a.
Note. Income from services you perform
as a minister of a religious order is not
church employee income.
Line 1b (Short or Long
Schedule SE)
If you were receiving social security retirement or social security disability benefits at
the time you received your Conservation
Reserve Program (CRP) payment(s), enter
the amount of your taxable CRP
payment(s) on line 1b. These payments are
included on Schedule F, line 4b, or listed
on Schedule K-1 (Form 1065), box 20,
code Y.
Line 4 (Short Schedule SE)
If line 4 is less than $400 and you have an
amount on line 1b, combine lines 1a and 2.
• If the total of lines 1a and 2 is $434 or
more, file Schedule SE (completed through
line 4) with your tax return. Enter -0- on
Form 1040, line 56, or Form 1040NR, line
54.
• If the total of lines 1a and 2 is less than
$434, do not file Schedule SE unless you
choose to use an optional method for figuring your SE tax.
Lines 4a Through 4c (Long
Schedule SE)
If both lines 4a and 4c are less than $400
and you have an amount on line 1b, combine lines 1a and 2.
SE-3
• If the total of lines 1a and 2 is $434 or
more, file Schedule SE (completed through
line 4c) with your tax return. Enter -0- on
Form 1040, line 56,* or Form 1040NR, line
54.*
• If the total of lines 1a and 2 is less than
$434, do not file Schedule SE unless you
choose to use an optional method to figure
your SE tax.
*If you also have church employee income
(described earlier under Employees of
Churches and Church Organizations), also
complete lines 5a and 5b. Complete the rest
of Schedule SE, as appropriate.
Net Earnings From
Self-Employment
In most cases, net earnings include your net
profit from a farm or nonfarm business.
Partnership Income or Loss
If you were a general or limited partner in a
partnership, include on line 1a or line 2,
whichever applies, the amount of net earnings from self-employment from Schedule
K-1 (Form 1065), box 14, code A, and
Schedule K-1 (Form 1065-B), box 9, code
J1. General partners should reduce this
amount by certain expenses before entering
it on Schedule SE. See your Schedule K-1
instructions. If you reduce the amount you
enter on Schedule SE, you must attach an
explanation. Limited partners include only
guaranteed payments for services actually
rendered to or on behalf of the partnership.
If a partner died and the partnership
continued, include in self-employment income the deceased’s distributive share of
the partnership’s ordinary income or loss
through the end of the month in which he or
she died. See section 1402(f).
If you were married and both you and
your spouse were partners in a partnership,
each of you must report your net earnings
from self-employment from the partnership. Each of you must file a separate
Schedule SE and report the partnership income or loss on Schedule E (Form 1040),
Part II, for income tax purposes. If only one
of you was a partner in a partnership, the
spouse who was the partner must report his
or her net earnings from self-employment
from the partnership.
Community income. Your own distribu-
tive share of partnership income is included
in figuring your net earnings from self-employment. Unlike the division of that income between spouses for figuring income
tax, no part of your share can be included in
figuring your spouse’s net earnings from
self-employment.
Registered domestic partners
and same-sex spouses in California report community income for self-employment tax
purposes the same way they do for income
tax purposes. For more information, see
Pub. 555.
Share Farming
You are considered self-employed if you
produced crops or livestock on someone
else’s land for a share of the crops or livestock produced (or a share of the proceeds
from the sale of them). This applies even if
you paid another person (an agent) to do the
actual work or management for you. Report
your net earnings for income tax purposes
on Schedule F (Form 1040) and for SE tax
purposes on Schedule SE. See Pub. 225 for
details.
Other Income and Losses
Included in Net Earnings
From Self-Employment
1. Rental income from a farm if, as landlord, you materially participated in the production or management of the production
of farm products on this land. This income
is farm earnings. To determine whether you
materially participated in farm management or production, do not consider the activities of any agent who acted for you. The
material participation tests for landlords are
explained in chapter 12 of Pub. 225.
2. Cash or a payment-in-kind from the
Department of Agriculture for participating
in a land diversion program.
3. Payments for the use of rooms or
other space when you also provided substantial services for the convenience of
your tenants. Examples are hotel rooms,
boarding houses, tourist camps or homes,
trailer parks, parking lots, warehouses, and
storage garages. See chapter 5 of Pub. 334
for more information.
4. Income from the retail sale of newspapers and magazines if you were age 18 or
older and kept the profits.
5. Income you receive as a direct seller.
Newspaper carriers or distributors of any
age are direct sellers if certain conditions
apply. See chapter 5 of Pub. 334 for details.
6. Amounts received by current or former self-employed insurance agents and
salespersons that are:
a. Paid after retirement but figured as a
percentage of commissions received from
the paying company before retirement,
b. Renewal commissions, or
c. Deferred commissions paid after retirement for sales made before retirement.
However, certain termination payments received by former insurance salespersons
are not included in net earnings from
self-employment (as explained in item 10
under Income and Losses Not Included in
Net Earnings From Self-Employment).
7. Income of certain crew members of
fishing vessels with crews of normally
fewer than 10 people. See chapter 10 of
Pub. 334 for details.
8. Fees as a state or local government
employee if you were paid only on a fee
basis and the job was not covered under a
federal-state social security coverage
agreement.
9. Interest received in the course of any
trade or business, such as interest on notes
or accounts receivable.
10. Fees and other payments received by
you for services as a director of a corporation.
11. Recapture amounts under sections
179 and 280F that you included in gross
income because the business use of the
property dropped to 50% or less. Do not
include amounts you recaptured on the disposition of property. See Form 4797.
12. Fees you received as a professional
fiduciary. This may also apply to fees paid
to you as a nonprofessional fiduciary if the
fees relate to active participation in the operation of the estate’s business, or the management of an estate that required extensive
management activities over a long period
of time.
13. Gain or loss from section 1256 contracts or related property by an options or
commodities dealer in the normal course of
dealing in or trading section 1256 contracts.
Income and Losses Not
Included in Net Earnings
From Self-Employment
1. Salaries, fees, etc., subject to social
security or Medicare tax that you received
for performing services as an employee, including services performed as an employee
under the railroad retirement system. This
includes services performed as a public official (except as a fee basis government employee as explained in item 8 under Other
Income and Losses Included in Net Earnings From Self-Employment, earlier.
2. Fees received for services performed
as a notary public. If you had no other income subject to SE tax, enter “Exempt — Notary” on Form 1040, line 56. Do
not file Schedule SE. However, if you had
other net earnings of $400 or more subject
to SE tax, enter “Exempt — Notary” and
the amount of your net profit as a notary
public from Schedule C or Schedule C-EZ
on the dotted line to the left of Schedule
SE, line 3. Subtract that amount from the
total of lines 1a, 1b, and 2, and enter the
result on line 3.
3. Income you received as a retired partner under a written partnership plan that
provides for lifelong periodic retirement
payments if you had no other interest in the
partnership and did not perform services
for it during the year.
4. Income from real estate rentals if you
did not receive the income in the course of
a trade or business as a real estate dealer.
Report this income on Schedule E.
5. Income from farm rentals (including
rentals paid in crop shares) if, as landlord,
you did not materially participate in the
SE-4
production or management of the production of farm products on the land. See chapter 12 of Pub. 225 for details. Report this
income on Form 4835. Use two Forms
4835 if you and your spouse made an election to be taxed as a qualified joint venture.
6. Payments you receive from the Conservation Reserve Program if you are receiving social security benefits for
retirement or disability. Deduct these payments on line 1b of Schedule SE.
7. Dividends on shares of stock and interest on bonds, notes, etc., if you did not
receive the income in the course of your
trade or business as a dealer in stocks or
securities.
8. Gain or loss from:
a. The sale or exchange of a capital asset;
b. The sale, exchange, involuntary conversion, or other disposition of property unless the property is stock in trade or other
property that would be includible in inventory, or held primarily for sale to customers
in the ordinary course of the business; or
c. Certain transactions in timber, coal,
or domestic iron ore.
9. Net operating losses from other years.
10. Termination payments you received
as a former insurance salesperson if all of
the following conditions are met.
a. The payment was received from an
insurance company because of services you
performed as an insurance salesperson for
the company.
b. The payment was received after termination of your agreement to perform
services for the company.
c. You did not perform any services for
the company after termination and before
the end of the year in which you received
the payment.
d. You entered into a covenant not to
compete against the company for at least a
1-year period beginning on the date of termination.
e. The amount of the payment depended
primarily on policies sold by or credited to
your account during the last year of the
agreement, or the extent to which those policies remain in force for some period after
termination, or both.
f. The amount of the payment did not
depend to any extent on length of service or
overall earnings from services performed
for the company (regardless of whether eligibility for the payment depended on length
of service).
Statutory Employee Income
If you were a statutory employee, do not
include the net profit or (loss) from Schedule C, line 31 (or the net profit from Schedule C-EZ, line 3), on Short or Long
Schedule SE, line 2. But if you file Long
Schedule SE, be sure to include statutory
employee social security wages and tips
from Form W-2 on line 8a.
Optional Methods
How Can the Optional Methods
Help You
Social security coverage. The optional
methods may give you credit toward your
social security coverage even though you
have a loss or a small amount of income
from self-employment.
Changing Your Method
You can change the method after you file
your return. That is, you can change from
the regular to the optional method or from
the optional to the regular method. To do
this, file Form 1040X.
Farm Optional Method
tional methods may help you qualify for
this credit or give you a larger credit if your
net earnings from self-employment (determined without using the optional methods)
are less than $4,480. Figure this credit with
and without using the optional methods to
see if the optional methods will benefit you.
You may use this method to figure your net
earnings from farm self-employment if
your gross farm income was $6,720 or less
or your net farm profits were less than
$4,851. Net farm profits are:
• The total of the amounts from Schedule F (Form 1040), line 34, and Schedule
K-1 (Form 1065), box 14, code A, minus
• The amount you would have entered
on Schedule SE, line 1b, had you not used
the optional method.
There is no limit on how many years
you can use this method.
Under this method, report in Part II, line
15, two-thirds of your gross farm income,
up to $4,480, as your net earnings. This
method can increase or decrease your net
earnings from farm self-employment even
if the farming business had a loss.
For a farm partnership, figure your share
of gross income based on the partnership
agreement. With guaranteed payments,
your share of the partnership’s gross income is your guaranteed payments plus
your share of the gross income after it is
reduced by all guaranteed payments made
by the partnership. If you were a limited
partner, include only guaranteed payments
for services you actually rendered to or on
behalf of the partnership.
Self-employed health insurance deduction.
Nonfarm Optional Method
Earned income credit (EIC). Using the op-
tional methods may qualify you to claim
the EIC or give you a larger credit if your
net earnings from self-employment (determined without using the optional methods)
are less than $4,480. Figure the EIC with
and without using the optional methods to
see if the optional methods will benefit you.
Additional child tax credit. Using the op-
tional methods may qualify you to claim
the additional child tax credit or give you a
larger credit if your net earnings from
self-employment (determined without using the optional methods) are less than
$4,480. Figure the additional child tax
credit with and without using the optional
methods to see if the optional methods will
benefit you.
Child and dependent care credit. The op-
The optional methods of computing net
earnings from self-employment may be
used to figure your self-employed health
insurance deduction.
Using the optional methods
may give you the benefits described above, but they may
also increase your SE tax.
You may be able to use this method to figure your net earnings from nonfarm
self-employment if your net nonfarm profits were less than $4,851 and also less than
72.189% of your gross nonfarm income.
Net nonfarm profits are the total of the
amounts from:
SE-5
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• Schedule C (Form 1040), line 31,
• Schedule C-EZ (Form 1040), line 3,
• Schedule K-1 (Form 1065), box 14,
code A (from other than farm partnerships),
and
• Schedule K-1 (Form 1065-B),
box 9, code J1.
To use this method, you also must be
regularly self-employed. You meet this requirement if your actual net earnings from
self-employment were $400 or more in 2 of
the 3 years preceding the year you use the
nonfarm optional method. The net earnings
of $400 or more could be from either farm
or nonfarm earnings or both. The net earnings include your distributive share of partnership income or loss subject to SE tax.
Use of the nonfarm optional method
from nonfarm self-employment is limited
to 5 years. The 5 years do not have to be
consecutive.
Under this method, report in Part II, line
17, two-thirds of your gross nonfarm income, up to the amount on line 16, as your
net earnings. But you cannot report less
than your actual net earnings from nonfarm
self-employment.
Figure your share of gross income from
a nonfarm partnership in the same manner
as a farm partnership. See Farm Optional
Method for details.
Using Both Optional Methods
If you can use both methods, you can report
less than your total actual net earnings from
farm and nonfarm self-employment, but
you cannot report less than your actual net
earnings from nonfarm self-employment
alone.
If you use both methods to figure net
earnings, you cannot report more than
$4,480 of net earnings from self-employment.
File Type | application/pdf |
File Title | 2011 Instruction 1040 Schedule SE |
Subject | Instructions for Schedule SE (Form 1040), Self-Employment Tax |
Author | W:CAR:MP:FP |
File Modified | 2011-10-14 |
File Created | 2011-10-14 |