id="en_US_2025_publink1000171554"> Form 1099-INT. Your taxable interest income, except for interest from U.S. savings bonds and Treasury obligations, is shown in Form 1099-INT, box 1. Add this amount to any other taxable interest income you received. See the Form 1099-INT Instructions for Recipient if you have interest from a security acquired at a premium. You must report all of your taxable interest income even if you don’t receive a Form 1099-INT. Contact your financial institution if you don’t receive a Form 1099-INT by February 15. Your identifying number may be truncated on any Form 1099-INT you receive. If you forfeited interest income because of the early withdrawal of a time deposit, the deductible amount will be shown on Form 1099-INT, box 2. See Penalty on early withdrawal of savings in chapter 1 of Pub. 550. Form 1099-INT, box 3 shows the interest income you received from U.S. savings bonds, Treasury bills, Treasury notes, and Treasury bonds. Generally, add the amount shown in Form 1099-INT, box 3 to any other taxable interest income you received. If part of the amount shown in Form 1099-INT, box 3 was previously included in your interest income, see U.S. savings bond interest previously reported , later. If you acquired the security at a premium, see the Form 1099-INT Instructions for Recipient. Form 1099-INT, box 4 will contain an amount if you were subject to backup withholding. Include the amount from box 4 on Form 1040 or 1040-SR, line 25b (federal income tax withheld). Form 1099-INT, box 5 shows investment expenses. This amount is not deductible. Form 1099-INT, box 6 shows foreign tax paid. You may be able to claim this tax as a deduction or a credit on your Form 1040 or 1040-SR. See your tax return instructions. Form 1099-INT, box 7 shows the foreign country or U.S. territory to which the foreign tax was paid. U.S. savings bond interest previously reported. If you received a Form 1099-INT for U.S. savings bond interest, the form may show interest you don’t have to report. See Form 1099-INT for U.S. savings bonds interest , earlier. On Schedule B (Form 1040), Part I, line 1, report all the interest shown on your Form 1099-INT. Then follow these steps. Several rows above line 2, enter a subtotal of all interest listed on line 1. Below the subtotal, enter “U.S. Savings Bond Interest Previously Reported” and enter amounts previously reported or interest accrued before you received the bond. Subtract these amounts from the subtotal and enter the result on line 2. More information. For more information about how to report interest income, see chapter 1 of Pub. 550 or the instructions for the form you must file. 7. Social Security and Equivalent Railroad Retirement Benefits Reminders Lines 1a through 1z on Forms 1040 and 1040-SR. Line 1 was expanded and there are lines 1a through 1z. Some amounts that in prior years were reported on Form 1040, and some amounts reported on Form 1040-SR, are now reported on Schedule 1. Scholarships and fellowship grants are now reported on Schedule 1, line 8r. Pension or annuity from a nonqualified deferred compensation plan or a nongovernmental section 457 plan is now reported on Schedule 1, line 8t. Wages earned while incarcerated are now reported on Schedule 1, line 8u. Form 1040 and 1040-SR have changed line 6. Line 6c includes a checkbox for Lump-Sum Election . See Lump-Sum Election in Pub. 915, Social Security and Equivalent Railroad Retirement Benefits, for details. If you are married filing separately and you lived apart from your spouse for all of 2025, check the box on line 6d. Introduction This chapter explains the federal income tax rules for social security benefits and equivalent tier 1 railroad retirement benefits. It explains the following topics. How to figure whether your benefits are taxable. How to report your taxable benefits. How to use the Social Security Benefits Worksheet (with examples). Deductions related to your benefits and how to treat repayments that are more than the benefits you received during the year. Social security benefits include monthly retirement, survivor, and disability benefits. They don’t include Supplemental Security Income (SSI) payments, which aren’t taxable. Equivalent tier 1 railroad retirement benefits are the part of tier 1 benefits that a railroad employee or beneficiary would have been entitled to receive under the social security system. They are commonly called the social security equivalent benefit (SSEB) portion of tier 1 benefits. If you received these benefits during 2025, you
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