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Connecticut Free Printable  for 2024 Connecticut Claim of Right Credit

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Claim of Right Credit
Form CT-1040CRC

DRAFT 11-30-2023 2023 Form CT-1040 CRC Department of Revenue Services State of Connecticut (Rev. 12/23) Claim of Right Credit Please note that each form is year specific. To prevent any delay in processing your return, the correct year’s form must be submitted to the Department of Revenue Services (DRS). Your first name and middle initial Last name If joint return, spouse’s first name and middle initial Last name Purpose: If you have claim of right income for federal tax purposes and are claiming the federal claim of right credit on your 2023 federal return, you may also be entitled to a claim of right credit for Connecticut income tax purposes. If during your 2023 taxable year you had to repay income you included in your Connecticut adjusted gross income for an earlier taxable year, and the amount you repaid is more than $3,000, you may be able to claim a credit against your Connecticut income tax for your 2023 taxable year. If you are eligible for the Connecticut claim of right credit, complete this schedule to claim a credit equal to the Connecticut income tax you would not have had to pay if the repaid amount had not been included in your Connecticut adjusted gross income in the earlier taxable year. Electronic filers: If you file your return electronically, select the indicator for Form CT-1040 CRC on your Connecticut income tax return. Complete Form CT-1040 CRC and upload as an attachment. Paper filers: Check the box for Form CT-1040 on the front of your Connecticut income tax return. Place this form on top of your completed Connecticut income tax return. Complete in blue or black only. Eligibility for the Connecticut Claim of Right Credit You are eligible for the Connecticut claim of right credit if you meet all of the following conditions: • You were a resident, nonresident, or part-year resident individual who included income in Connecticut adjusted gross income for an earlier taxable year(s) (year(s) of receipt). A trust or estate is not eligible to claim relief for Connecticut income tax purposes; • You were required to repay the income during your 2023 taxable year (year of repayment); • The amount of the repayment exceeds $3,000; and Your Social Security Number •• •• •• •• Spouse’s Social Security Number •• •• •• •• __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ • You determined your federal income tax liability for the year of repayment under IRC § 1341(a)(4) (see Exceptions) or IRC § 1341(a)(5). Exceptions: IRC § 1341(a) requires you to determine your federal income tax liability by whichever of the following two methods results in the lesser federal income tax liability. 1. If you are required to determine your federal income tax liability using the deduction method (IRC § 1341(a)(4)), you may be eligible for the Connecticut claim of right credit. For the deduction method, you deduct the repayment on your federal income tax return for the year of repayment. Depending on the type of income you repaid, you either deduct the repayment in determining your federal adjusted gross income or in determining your federal taxable income. If the repayment is deducted in determining your federal adjusted gross income, you are not eligible for the Connecticut claim of right credit. See Example 2 on the back of this form. If the repayment is deducted in determining your federal taxable income and reported on federal Form 1040, Schedule A, or federal Form 1040‑SR, Schedule A, you are eligible for the Connecticut claim of right credit. See Example 1 on the back of this form. If the deduction results in a net operating loss for federal income tax purposes carried back to a taxable year or years preceding the year of repayment, no claim for refund is allowable for Connecticut income tax purposes for the preceding year or years on account of the loss carryback. 2. If you are required to determine your federal income tax liability using the credit method (IRC § 1341(a)(5)), you are eligible for the Connecticut claim of right credit. See Example 1 on the back of this form. 1. Provide the following information for the item of income repaid during the 2023 taxable year. Taxable Year(s) in Which You Received the Income (Year(s) of receipt) Type of Income Repaid Reason(s) for Repayment Amount of Income Repaid During the 2023 Taxable Year If the total amount repaid is $3,000 or less, stop here and do not file this form. You are not entitled to this credit. 2. Which method did you use to determine your 2023 federal income tax liability? See Exceptions above.  Deduction Method  Credit Method: If you check the credit method, skip Line 3 and go to Line 4. 3. Was the repayment reported as a deduction on Schedule A of the 2023 federal Form 1040, or federal Form 1040‑SR?  Yes  No If No, stop here and do not file this form. You are not entitled to this credit. 4. Enter the Connecticut income tax liability reported on your Connecticut income tax return for the year(s) of receipt.......................................................................................................................... 4. 5. Enter your Connecticut income tax liability for the year(s) of receipt after excluding the income you were required to repay during the 2023 taxable year. ................................................................ 5. 6. Subtract Line 5 from Line 4. This is your 2023 claim of right credit. Include this amount on your 2023 Form CT‑1040, Line 20b; Form CT‑1040NR/PY, Line 22a; or Form CT‑1040X, Line 22b. .... 6. Visit us at portal.ct.gov/DRS for more information. DRAFT 11-30-2023 Nonresidents or Part-Year Residents If you are a nonresident or part-year resident in the year of receipt and repaid income during your 2023 taxable year, you determine the decrease in your Connecticut income tax liability for the year of receipt by excluding the repaid income from your Connecticut adjusted gross income. To the extent the repayment is derived from or connected with sources within this state, you also exclude this repayment from your Connecticut-sourced income. Documentation Needed to Prove Eligibility for the Connecticut Claim of Right Credit You must submit all of the following documentation with your 2023 Connecticut income tax return: • A completed Form CT‑1040 CRC (place this form on top of your completed Connecticut income tax return); • A copy of your completed 2023 federal income tax return, including all schedules and attachments, that you signed and filed for your 2023 taxable year; • Proof you were required to repay income you included in Connecticut adjusted gross income for the year(s) of receipt, such as a letter from your employer requiring you to repay sales commissions; • A copy of your completed federal income tax return, including all schedules and attachments, that you signed and filed for the year(s) of receipt; and • Proof you repaid the income during your 2023 taxable year, such as a copy of your cancelled check. How to Compute the Connecticut Claim of Right Credit Your Connecticut income tax liability for the year of repayment is an amount equal to: • The tax for the year of repayment computed as if there was no Connecticut claim of right credit; minus • The decrease in tax for the year(s) of receipt that would result solely from the exclusion of the amount of income you were subsequently required to repay from your Connecticut adjusted gross income for the year(s) of receipt. Line Instructions Line 1: If you repaid income during your 2023 taxable year that you included in your Connecticut adjusted gross income for an earlier taxable year(s), enter: • • • • The year(s) of receipt; A description of the type of income repaid; The reason for the repayment; and The amount of income repaid. This income must have been included in your Connecticut adjusted gross income for the year(s) of receipt. Line 2: Check the box to indicate if you used the deduction method or the credit method to determine your 2023 federal income tax liability. See Exceptions on the front for more information. If you checked the credit method, skip Line 3 and go to Line 4. Line 3: Check the box to indicate if you reported the repayment as a deduction on Schedule A of your 2023 federal Form 1040, or federal Form 1040‑SR. Line 4: Enter the amount of your Connecticut income tax liability reported on your Connecticut income tax return for the year(s) of receipt. Enter the amount as originally filed, as adjusted by DRS, or as you later amended it. Form CT-1040 CRC Back (Rev. 12/23) Line 5: Compute the amount of your Connecticut income tax liability for the year(s) of receipt after you exclude from your Connecticut adjusted gross income for the year(s) of receipt the income you repaid during your 2023 taxable year. Repayments of Social Security benefits may require the recalculation of your taxable benefits to determine the amount to exclude from Connecticut adjusted gross income. Line 6: Subtract Line 5 from Line 4. Include this amount on your 2023 Form CT‑1040, Line 20b; Form CT‑1040NR/PY, Line 22a; or Form CT‑1040X, Line 22b. This amount is considered a tax payment and will be credited against your Connecticut income tax liability for your 2023 taxable year on the due date for payment of your 2023 Connecticut income tax liability. Check the box for Form CT‑1040 CRC on the front of your Connecticut return. Example 1: In December 2022, James, a Connecticut resident, received advanced commissions from his employer. James included these commissions in his 2022 Connecticut adjusted gross income of $45,000. In May 2023, James’s employer told him that some of his customers had decided to cancel their purchases and James must repay $4,000 of the commissions he received during 2022. If James is required to determine his federal income tax liability for the 2023 taxable year using the deduction method (IRC § 1341(a)(4)), he will deduct the $4,000 as an itemized deduction on federal Form 1040, Schedule A, or federal Form 1040‑SR, Schedule A. Assuming James’s filing status on his 2022 and 2023 Connecticut income tax returns is filing separately and his 2023 Connecticut adjusted gross income is $50,000, he computes his 2023 Connecticut income tax liability as follows: 2023 Connecticut income tax liability on $50,000 $2,186 Minus difference between: 2022 tax payable on $45,000 = $1,846 and 2022 tax payable on $41,000 ($45,000 - $4,000) = $1,666 Claim of right credit – $ 180 2023 Connecticut income tax liability $2,006 If James is required to determine his federal income tax liability for the 2023 taxable year using the credit method (IRC § 1341(a)(5)), he will also compute his Connecticut income tax liability as shown above. Example 2: In February 2022, Donna, a nonresident individual who works in Connecticut, realized a capital gain of $5,000 from the sale of a capital asset. The gain was not derived from or connected with Connecticut sources. Donna included the gain in her 2022 Connecticut adjusted gross income of $35,000. In September 2023, Donna was required to repay the purchaser of the assets $5,000 as a result of failure to fulfill conditions of the purchase agreement. If Donna was required to determine her federal income tax liability for the 2023 taxable year using the deduction method (IRC § 1341(a)(4)), she will deduct the repayment as a capital loss on her federal Form 1040, Schedule D, or federal Form 1040‑SR, Schedule  D. For Connecticut income tax purposes, Donna is not eligible for the claim of right credit because she deducted the repayment under IRC § 1341(a)(4) as a net operating loss in determining her federal adjusted gross income. If Donna was required to determine her federal income tax liability using the credit method (IRC §  1341(a)(5)), she is eligible for the Connecticut claim of right credit to the extent that her 2022 tax liability would be decreased as a result of excluding the $5,000 she subsequently repaid.
Extracted from PDF file 2023-connecticut-form-ct-1040crc.pdf, last modified November 2023

More about the Connecticut Form CT-1040CRC Individual Income Tax Tax Credit TY 2023

We last updated the Claim of Right Credit in February 2024, so this is the latest version of Form CT-1040CRC, fully updated for tax year 2023. You can download or print current or past-year PDFs of Form CT-1040CRC directly from TaxFormFinder. You can print other Connecticut tax forms here.


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Other Connecticut Individual Income Tax Forms:

TaxFormFinder has an additional 85 Connecticut income tax forms that you may need, plus all federal income tax forms.

Form Code Form Name
Form CT-1040 Connecticut Resident Income Tax Return
Tax Instruction Booklet Form CT-1040 Instruction Booklet
Form CT-1040 EXT Application for Extension of Time to File Connecticut Income Tax Return for Individuals
CT-1040NR/PY Instructions Tax Instruction Booklet: CT-1040 for Nonresidents/Part-Year Residents
CT-1040ES (Current Year) Estimated Connecticut Income Tax Payment Coupon for Individuals

Download all CT tax forms View all 86 Connecticut Income Tax Forms


Form Sources:

Connecticut usually releases forms for the current tax year between January and April. We last updated Connecticut Form CT-1040CRC from the Department of Revenue Services in February 2024.

Show Sources >

Form CT-1040CRC is a Connecticut Individual Income Tax form. States often have dozens of even hundreds of various tax credits, which, unlike deductions, provide a dollar-for-dollar reduction of tax liability. Some common tax credits apply to many taxpayers, while others only apply to extremely specific situations. In most cases, you will have to provide evidence to show that you are eligible for the tax credit, and calculate the amount of the credit to which you are entitled.

About the Individual Income Tax

The IRS and most states collect a personal income tax, which is paid throughout the year via tax withholding or estimated income tax payments.

Most taxpayers are required to file a yearly income tax return in April to both the Internal Revenue Service and their state's revenue department, which will result in either a tax refund of excess withheld income or a tax payment if the withholding does not cover the taxpayer's entire liability. Every taxpayer's situation is different - please consult a CPA or licensed tax preparer to ensure that you are filing the correct tax forms!

Historical Past-Year Versions of Connecticut Form CT-1040CRC

We have a total of thirteen past-year versions of Form CT-1040CRC in the TaxFormFinder archives, including for the previous tax year. Download past year versions of this tax form as PDFs here:


2017 Form CT-1040CRC

CT-1040CRC 20170911.indd

2016 Form CT-1040CRC

CT-1040CRC, Claim of Right Credit

2015 Claim of Right Credit 2015 Form CT-1040CRC

CT-1040CRC, 2015 Claim of Right Credit

2014 Claim of Right Credit 2014 Form CT-1040CRC

CT-1040CRC, 2014 Claim of Right Credit

2013 Claim of Right Credit 2013 Form CT-1040CRC

CT-1040 CRC, 2013 Claim of Right Credit

2012 Claim of Right Credit 2012 Form CT-1040CRC

CT-1040CRC, 2012 Claim of Right Credit

2011 Claim of Right Credit 2011 Form CT-1040CRC

CT-1040 CRC, 2011 Claim of Right Credit


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