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New Mexico Free Printable  for 2024 New Mexico Instructions for Form FID-1 Fiduciary Income Tax Return

There are only 19 days left until tax day on April 16th! eFile your return online here , or request a six-month extension here .

Form FID-1-2018 (Obsolete) is obsolete, and is no longer supported by the New Mexico Department of Revenue.

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Instructions for Form FID-1 Fiduciary Income Tax Return
Form FID-1-2018 (Obsolete)

STATE OF NEW MEXICO Taxation and Revenue Department P.O. Box 25127 Santa Fe, New Mexico 87504-5127 2018 New Mexico Instructions for Form FID-1 Fiduciary Income Tax Return READ THE INSTRUCTIONS CAREFULLY. They answer most questions, save time, and may save money. File your return as early as possible. If you have additional questions, visit our website at www.tax.newmexico.gov. Our contact information is: Telephone: (505) 827-0825 in Santa Fe or toll free (866) 809-2335, option 4 E-mail: [email protected] Mailing address: New Mexico Taxation and Revenue Department ATTENTION: Corporate Income and Franchise Tax P. O. Box 25127 Santa Fe, New Mexico 87504-5127 These Instructions Cover the Following Forms: Your Electronic Services FID-1, Fiduciary Income Tax Return  File 2018 Form FID-1 Online. New Mexico's Taxation and Revenue Department made online filing available for Fiduciary Income Tax Returns. Using Taxpayer Access Point (TAP), you may file and pay fiduciary income taxes online. Logon or create a TAP account at https://tap.state.nm.us. If you already have an account, click the Accounts tab then select FID Account. If you have not filed a FID-1 return on TAP before, you will need to add your FID account by selecting the Access Another Account option from the home page. After you complete all your entries and click Submit to file, you will be given options on how to make your payment. FID-B, Computation of New Mexico Percentage FID-CR, Tax Credit Schedule FID-EXT, Extension Payment Voucher FID-PV, Tax Payment Voucher FID-ES, Estimated Tax Payment Voucher FID-D, Fiduciary Pass-Through Entity Withholding Detail Report 2018 Legislative Summary For information about New Mexico tax law changes enacted during 2018, see 2018-B-100.31, Legislative Summary. Legislative summaries are available for each year, providing a brief description of new legislation passed during that year affecting the Taxation and Revenue Department. Visit our web page and click on "Forms and Publications", then search the "Bulletins" for the Legislative Summary for the year in which the legislation passed.  Pay via electronic check or credit card - Taxpayers may pay taxes over the Internet by electronic check at no charge. An electronic check authorizes TRD to debit your checking account in the amount and on the date you specify. You may also pay with a credit card. A convenience fee is calculated on the amount of the transaction and covers costs that the companies bill the state when you use your card.  Calendar filing and payment online - Your return and payment are due on or before the last day of the month in which the entity's corresponding federal calendar return is In general, the federal return that you are required to or due for the taxable year. All other taxpayers must file by elect to file determines the New Mexico income tax return the 15th day of the same month the entity's corresponding that you file. See the chart on the next page. federal calendar return is due for the taxable year. Which Form to File: Fiscal year and short year filers use the FID-1 return ap-  Download forms, publications and brochures - Taxpayers plicable to the tax year in which the fiscal year or short year may access forms, publications and brochures from our begins. For example, if the tax year begins on June 30, website. 2018, use the 2018 FID-1 return, regardless of the ending date of the tax year.  Ask a question - You can ask general questions ab out N ew M ex ic o t a xe s using t he e - mail ad You can download all New Mexico Taxation and dress [email protected] or ask about your Revenue Department (TRD) forms, instructions, t a x r e t u r n a t C I T.Ta x R e t u r n H e l p @ s t a t e . n m . u s and information brochures from the TRD website at www.tax.newmexico.gov or by contacting the Department. FID-1 1 www.tax.newmexico.gov If you file Federal form... You file New Mexico form... 1065 PTE 1120 U.S. Return of Partnership Income U.S. Corporation Income Tax Return Information Return for Pass-Through Entities CIT-1 Corporate Income and Franchise Tax Return 1120S U.S. Income Tax Return for an S Corporation S-Corp Sub-Chapter S Corporate Income and Franchise Tax Return 1040 U.S. Individual Income Tax Return PIT-1 Personal Income Tax Return 1041 U.S. Income Tax Return for Estates and Trusts FID-1 Fiduciary Income Tax Return ______________________________ FIDUCIARIES REQUIRED TO  FILE A NEW MEXICO RETURN ______________________________ Every fiduciary who is required to file a U.S. fiduciary income tax return (federal Form 1041), except a fiduciary of a grantor trust who is required to file federal Form 1041 under the provisions of federal regulation 1.671-4(a), must file a FID-1, New Mexico Fiduciary Income Tax Return, if any of the following is true: • The trustee is a “resident” of New Mexico. • The estate is of a decedent who was a resident of New Mexico. • The estate or trust has income from: a. A transaction of business in, into, or from New Mexico; or b. Property in New Mexico; or c. Compensation in New Mexico. An estate is DOMICILED IN NEW MEXICO if the decedent was domiciled in New Mexico. A trust is DOMICILED IN NEW MEXICO if the trustee is domiciled in New Mexico, or if the principal place from which the trust is managed or administered is in New Mexico. Grantor Trusts Generally, grantor trusts are not required to file a FID-1 return. However, if a grantor trust has become irrevocable upon the grantor's death, the grantor trust must file a FID-1. If the grantor trust, including a living trust, distributes taxable New Mexico net income that exceeds $20,000 in a calendar year, the grantor trust must file a FID-1. A grantor trust is a pass-through entity (PTE) and subject to withholding on New Mexico net income distributed when the income distributed is taxable to the beneficiary. The grantor trust must also file Schedule Fiduciary Pass-Through Entity Withholding Detail Report (FID-D). See Withholding FID-1 for Non-Resident Beneficiaries of a Pass-Through Entity in the next section. Also see special instructions for FID-1, line 1, for grantor trusts who file the FID-1 return. Non-Resident Trusts New Mexico’s law says every person, including an estate or trust, who has income from New Mexico sources and who is required to file a federal income tax return must file an income tax return in New Mexico. This includes non-residents who have income from wages, rents, royalties, businesses, estates, and every other New Mexico source. Even foreign nationals and people who live in states that do not have income taxes must file in New Mexico when they have a federal filing requirement and have income from any New Mexico source whatsoever. ______________________________ WITHHOLDING FOR NON-RESIDENT BENEFICIARIES OF A PASS-THROUGH ENTITY ______________________________ Beginning January 1, 2011, an estate or trust that distributes New Mexico allocable net income taxable to its beneficiaries is a PTE and subject to withholding pursuant to the Oil and Gas Proceeds and Pass-Through Entity Withholding Tax Act (Sections 7-3A-1 through 7-3A-9 NMSA 1978). As a PTE, the estate or trust is required to withhold from the non-resident beneficiary's share of taxable New Mexico net income of the estate or trust. The withholding rate is 4.9%. The required annual withholding is paid with Schedule FID-D. When the income is taxable to the beneficiary, the beneficiary is included on Schedule FID-D, and FID-D is due even if no tax was withheld. When the income distributed is not taxable to the beneficiary, as in the case of some grantor trusts, the distributed income is not included on FID-D. 2 Certain exceptions to the requirement to withhold are allowed, and you must maintain documentation in the PTE's records to establish that the PTE had reasonable cause for not withholding. See Reasonable Cause for Not Withholding for a complete list of exceptions on page 28 of these instructions. If a PTE has 50 or fewer beneficiaries who receive New Mexico taxable net income, the estate or trust may submit the completed Schedule FID-D with the FID-1 return. If a PTE has 51 or more beneficiaries who receive New Mexico taxable net income, the estate or trust is required to electronically file Schedule FID-D through the Department’s website or through approved third-party software. If the PTE has 51 or more New Mexico payees, and is unable to file electronically because a hardship exists, the PTE may request Department approval to file by paper. The PTE may request approval by filing Form RPD-41350, E-File Exception Request Form. The request must be received by the Department at least 30 days before the taxpayer’s electronic report is due. When required to be filed electronically, a paper filed Schedule FID-D will be rejected by the Department. Schedule FID-D, is due on or before the due date of the entity’s federal return for the tax year. If a pass-through entity is not required to file a federal income tax return for the tax year, the entity must file Schedule FID-D with the Department no later than 105 days after the end of its tax year. If a federal automatic extension or a New Mexico extension is obtained for the FID-1 return, the extension also applies to the filing of Schedule FID-D. An extension waives penalty but does not waive interest. www.tax.newmexico.gov Other Reporting Requirements. Estates and trusts are also required to provide sufficient information to allow beneficiaries to comply with the provisions of the Income Tax Act and the Corporate Income and Franchise Tax Act, with respect to the beneficiary’s share of the taxable net New Mexico income. An estate or trust uses federal Forms 1099-Misc, pro forma 1099-Misc, or Form RPD- 41359, Annual Statement of Pass-Through Entity Withholding, to report to the beneficiaries the allocable net income and the New Mexico tax withheld. These forms must be provided to the beneficiary by February 15th of the year following the year for which the statement is made. These forms are not required to be submitted to the Department when reported on the Schedule FID-D. The fiduciary must furnish each beneficiary with a statement detailing the amount of income allocable or apportionable to New Mexico for each type of income shown on Federal Schedule K-1. In addition, this statement is expected to show the amount of each beneficiary’s share of interest from obligations of the U.S. government and federally tax-exempt interest distributed from the estate or trust, and the portion of such items allocable to New Mexico. A Schedule K-1 or equivalent is not sufficient evidence of New Mexico income tax withheld. IMPORTANT: To receive proper credit for withholding, all annual statements must be issued to the entity filing the New Mexico income tax return. ______________________________ ATTACHMENTS TO FID-1 RETURN ______________________________ You must complete and submit all required forms and schedules, including attachments, as indicated in the instructions. Incomplete returns delay processing and may cause the form to be returned to you without processing. Attach the following to your FID-1 in this order: • • If income is received from sources both inside and outside New Mexico, complete and attach Form FID-B Schedules 1 and 2. If tax credits are claimed on line 11 FID-1 or 24, FID-1, attach Schedule FIDCR. Make sure to attach any additional required documentation. • Attach all annual statements of income and withholding issued to the estate or trust. This includes New Mexico Forms RPD-41359, Annual Statement of Pass-Through Entity Withholding, and RPD-41285, Annual Statement of Withholding of Oil and Gas Proceeds; federal Form(s) W-2 and 1099-Misc; and any other income and withholding statement received. • If a credit is claimed for taxes paid to another state, attach a copy of the tax return(s) from the other state(s) and the worksheet(s) on page 8, Worksheet for Computation of Allowable Credit for Taxes Paid to Other States by New Mexico Residents. • Attach federal tax return Form 1041, pages 1 and 2. • If you are an Electing Small Business Trust (ESBT) with taxable income used to compute the tax on the S portion of the ESBT that you included on line 1 of the FID1 return, also attach the ESBT calculation schedule from your federal Form 1041. • • If you have an unused New Mexico net operating loss carryforward amount from a previous year, attach Form RPD-41375, Net Operating Loss Schedule For Fiduciary Income Tax, to your return showing the tax year when each New Mexico net operating loss occurred. The schedule also should list each loss for each tax year for which it was carried forward, including 2018. If the estate or trust, who is also a pass-through entity (PTE), has 50 or fewer beneficiaries who receive New Mexico taxable net income, the estate or trust may submit the completed Schedule FID-D with the FID-1 return. If a PTE has 51 or more beneficiaries who receive New Mexico taxable net income, the estate or trust is required to electronically file Schedule FID-D 3 through the Department’s website or an approved third-party software. When electronically filed, the FID-D is filed separately from the FID-1 return. NOTE: The Department may require any taxpayer to furnish a complete, true and correct copy of the federal fiduciary income tax return, including all attachments and schedules. ______________________________ WHERE TO GET FORMS,  INSTRUCTIONS, AND HELP ______________________________ You can download all New Mexico Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD) forms, instructions, and information brochures from the TRD website at www.tax.newmexico.gov. You can also get forms and help by calling (505) 8270825 in Santa Fe or toll free at (866) 809-2335, option 4. If you prefer, you can contact the Department by email at [email protected]. File Returns Only on Approved State Forms. Always submit Fiduciary Income Tax Returns on official state forms provided by or approved by TRD. Never submit a return with a form that has been photocopied or photo shopped as it will not be accepted. TRD approves forms from companies that follow our specifications and format requirements for the electronic file. Acceptance of a software company and its form does not imply endorsement by TRD or assurance of the quality of the company's services. TRD: • Does not review or approve the logic of specific software programs. • Does not confirm calculations on forms produced by these programs. The accuracy of the sofware program remains the responsibility of the software company, developer, distributor or user. For a list of companies and products with FID forms approved by TRD, follow these steps: 1. Go to www.tax.newmexico.gov. 2. In the black navigation bar at the top, click TAX PROFESSIONALS. 3. On the left under Tax Professionals, click Overview. www.tax.newmexico.gov In the left navigation pane, click Software Developers then select the document named Approved Software for Reproducing of 2018 Income Tax Forms. CAUTION: Submit only high-quality, printed, original FID forms and schedules to TRD. A poor print or photocopy of a form from an approved software product or from our website delays processing your return and your refund, credit or rebate. ______________________________ DUE DATE OF THE  NEW MEXICO RETURN AND TAXES ______________________________ For fiduciaries that file on a calendar year basis, the FID-1, 2018 New Mexico Fiduciary Income Tax Return, is due on or before April 15, 2019 with payment of taxes due. For fiduciaries that file on a fiscal year basis, the FID-1, 2018 New Mexico Fiduciary Income Tax Return, is due on or before the 15th day of the fourth month following the close of the fiscal year with payment of taxes due. Extended Due Date-If you are a calendar year filer and file your return and pay your tax online, your filing deadline April 30, 2019. For fiduciaries that file online on a fiscal basis, your filing deadline is last day of the 4th month after year end. To avoid penalty or interest, you must electronically file your return and electronically pay your tax. A New Mexico income tax return and tax payment are timely if the United States Post Office postmark on the envelope bears a date on or before the due date. If the due date falls on a Saturday, Sunday, state or national legal holiday, the return is timely if the postmark bears the date of the next business day. Delivery through a private delivery service is considered timely if the date recorded or marked by the private delivery service is on or before the due date. _____________________________ EXTENSION OF TIME TO FILE THE RETURN ______________________________ TRD accepts an automatic extension of time granted by the Internal Revenue Service if a copy of the federal extension is attached to a FID-1 return at FID-1 the time of filing. If applicable, attach a copy of the automatic extension request to your FID-1, New Mexico Fiduciary Income Tax Return. If you need an extension of time to file the New Mexico tax return and do not require a federal extension of time to file, Form RPD-41096, Extension of Time to File, must be received by TRD on or before the due date of the return. FID-EXT, Fiduciary Income Tax Extension Payment Voucher. If you expect your return to show a balance due and you have obtained either a federal automatic extension or a New Mexico extension, use the FID-EXT payment voucher to make an extension payment by mail or delivery. Extension payments may also be paid using the Department's website. By obtaining an extension of time to file your return, penalty for failure to file and pay is waived through the extension period, provided you file the return and pay the tax shown on the return by the extended due date. However, interest continues to accrue even if the taxpayer obtains the extension. If you expect to owe more tax when you file your 2018 return, make a payment using the Department's website or using the 2018 FID-EXT payment voucher and avoid the accrual of interest. Mail the payment and voucher to the address printed on the voucher. Write "2018 FID-EXT" and the estate or trust's federal employer identification number on the check or money order. ______________________________ PAYMENT OF YOUR  FIDUCIARY INCOME TAX ______________________________ You may pay the fiduciary income tax due on the Department's website or by mailing a check with the return. If submitting the check with the return, attach the, Fiduciary Income Tax Payment Voucher (FID-PV) with your return. Make the check payable to the New Mexico Taxation and Revenue Department. Mail the return, attachments and payment to the address provided on the FID-PV. Write "2018 FID-PV" and the estate or trust's federal employer identifica4 tion number on your check to avoid a misapplication of funds. When you provide a check as payment, you authorize the Department to use information from your check to make a one-time electronic fund transfer from your account. When we use information from your check to make an electronic fund transfer, funds may be withdrawn form your account as soon as the same day you make your payment. NOTE: Because the Department uses high-speed scanners when processing payment vouchers, a quality form helps ensure accuracy. Do not photocopy. The scanners can read only one page size to process vouchers, therefore it is important that you cut on the dotted line only. When printing the voucher from the Internet or a software product, prevent resizing by setting the printer's page scaling function to none. If your payment voucher has a scanline (a very long row of numbers) within the bottom 1 and 1/2 inch of the voucher do not write in the area around the scanline. A check that is not paid by the financial institution on which it is drawn does not constitute payment. The estate or trust will be assessed a minimum penalty of $20 in addition to other applicable penalties and interest for late payment. ______________________________ INTEREST AND PENALTY ______________________________ Interest. Interest accrues on income tax that is not paid on or before the due date of your return. Interest is a charge for the use of money and by law cannot be waived. Interest is computed on a daily basis at the rate established for individual income tax purposes by the U.S. Internal Revenue Code (IRC). The IRC rate changes quarterly. The IRC rate for each quarter is announced by the Internal Revenue Service in the last month of the previous quarter. The annual and daily interest rates for each quarter are posted on our website at http://www.tax.newmexico.gov/Individuals/penalty-interest-rates.aspx. Important: Interest accrues even if there is an extension of time to file www.tax.newmexico.gov the return. Once your principal tax liability is paid, penalty and interest stops accruing. • When it cannot process your return (described next). Processing Requirements For processing to take place, your return must show your name and social security number, and your return must be signed. Your return must also comply with all the instructions for the return and contain all attachments required by the instructions. The formula for calculating interest is: Tax due x the daily interest rate for the quarter x number of days late = interest due. Refunds and Interest If you are due a refund, you may be entitled to interest on your overpayment at the same rate charged for underpayments, but only under certain conditions. Penalty. If the tax is not paid when due because of negligence or disregard of rules or regulations but without intent to defraud, the fiduciary is liable for a penalty of 2% per month or partial month from the date the return was required to be filed. The penalty cannot exceed 20% of the amount of tax. The penalty does not apply if an extension of time has been approved and if the tax is paid by the extended due date. ______________________________ NET OPERATING LOSSES ______________________________ Unlike a federal net operating loss carryfor ward, a New Mexico net operating loss incurred cannot be carried back and if incurred on or after January 1, 2013, may be carried forward for 19 years or until the total amount of the loss carryover has been used, whichever occurs first. For a net operating loss that was incurred in tax years beginning before January 1, 2013, a New Mexico net operating loss may be carried forward for only five years. Refer to regulation 3.3.1.13(E) NMAC, if the net operating loss was incurred in a tax year beginning prior to January 1, 1991. For a 2018 FID-1, filed in calendar year 2019, the Department pays no interest in these situations: • When it makes the refund within 55 days of the date of your claim for refund; • When the interest is less than $1.00; • When it cannot process your return (see Processing Requirements described next); or • If the interest is for a refund of any credits claimed for the Investment Credit Act, Laboratory Partnership with Small Business Tax Credit Act, Technology Jobs and Research and Development Tax Credit Act, Affordable Housing Tax Credit Act, Rural Job Tax Credit, or High Wage Job Tax Credit. The Department pays no interest in these situations: • When it makes the refund within 120 days of the date of your claim for refund; • When the interest is less than $1.00; or You cannot apply a New Mexico net operating loss carryforward until the following tax year -- provided you have filed a timely return -- or until the first tax year that begins after the date you file a return establishing the loss. Use New Mexico Form RPD-41375, Net Operating Loss Schedule For Fiduciary Income Tax, to compute your New Mexico net operating loss and carryforward. Attach Form RPD41375 to your return showing the tax year when each New Mexico net operating loss occurred. The schedule also shows how the loss for each tax year for which it was carried forward, was used. ______________________________ CHANGES IN FEDERAL OR NEW MEXICO TAXABLE INCOME DUE TO AN IRS AUDIT OR AN AMENDED RETURN ________________________________ If the IRS changes the trust's or estate’s taxable income for any tax year, an amended New Mexico Fiduciary Income Tax Return and a copy of the Revenue Agent’s Report must be filed with the New Mexico Taxation and Revenue Department within 180 days of the date the federal adjustment becomes final. If the fiduciary files an amended New Mexico return because of an amended federal return, the fiduciary must attach a copy of the federal amended return. If an amended return is filed because of a change in New Mexico taxable income, a statement giving the reason for amending the return must be attached. To file an amended New Mexico Fiduciary Income Tax Return, use the form for the year being amended. Mark the Amended box, at the top of the form. Payment for any additional amount of tax due should be attached. 2018 TAX RATE TABLE To be used for determining the amount of tax to be entered on FID-1, page 1, line 5 If the amount on line 4 is... over but not over $ 0 $ plus of excess over 5,500 $ 0 1.7% $ 0 5,500 $ 11,000 $ 93.50 3.2% $ 5,500 $ 11,000 $ 16,000 $ 269.50 4.7% $ 11,000 $ 16,000 ------------ $ 504.50 4.9% $ 16,000 FID-1 $ tax shall be 5 www.tax.newmexico.gov ______________________________ YOUR RIGHTS UNDER THE TAX LAW ______________________________ The Tax Administration Act governs how the Income Tax Act is administered by TRD and gives you specific rights and responsibilities. Enacted in 2003, the Taxpayer Bill of Rights adds provisions to the Tax Administration Act on confidentiality, hearings, recovery of costs by a taxpayer who prevails in litigation against the Department, timeliness of the Department's audit completion and approval of credits, and administrative hearings. The Bill of Rights also requires that all taxpayers receive a copy of their rights in each fiduciary income tax packet. See page 33. ______________________________ FID-1, FIDUCIARY INCOME TAX RETURN, PAGE 1 LINE INSTRUCTIONS ______________________________ • Type or print the name of the estate or trust, the name and title of the fiduciary and the address of the fiduciary in the spaces provided. The best ways to avoid tax problems are to keep accurate tax records and to keep abreast of changes in the tax law. These instructions and other Department publications contain information that can help you do both. • Enter the federal employer identification number of the estate or trust. Returns can not be processed without this number. While most tax problems can be resolved informally, it is important to understand that certain rights provided to you under law must be exercised within specific time frames. If an adjustment is made to your return, a notice will be sent to you explaining the adjustment with a description of procedures you may use if you disagree with the Department's adjustment. At any time after filing your return, the return may be subject to further review, verification or correction. If your tax return is adjusted or an assessment of additional tax is issued, you will receive a copy of Publication FYI-406, Your Rights Under the Tax Laws, describing in detail how to dispute a Department action through either the claim for refund procedure or the protest procedure. Read these procedures carefully to ensure you take the necessary steps to protect your rights. Publication FYI-406 is available on the Department's internet home page at www.tax.newmexico.gov. Click on "Forms and Publications" then select the "Publications" folder. Click on "FYIs" to access all 400 SeriesTax Administration publications. FID-1 If you have a foreign address, enter the street address, city name and postal code in the appropriate line. Also complete the spaces for the foreign province and/or state and country. Follow the country’s practice for entering the foreign postal code, the province or state, and country. Do not abbreviate the country name. • Mark the appropriate reporting period - calendar year or fiscal year. If the return is based on a fiscal year, enter the beginning and ending dates. • Mark the appropriate boxes for the type of return. • Mark the box to indicate if the entity is a New Mexico resident estate or trust. • Complete lines B through D. • Round all dollar amounts to the nearest whole dollar. • Computerized schedules will not be accepted in lieu of completing the appropriate line items on FID-1, page 2, FID-B, Schedule 1 and 2, FID-CR, or FID-D. • Line E. Mark this box only if you have elected to use an alternative method of computing estimated tax due. If you do not elect to use an alternative method, do not mark this box and the Department will compute your liability, if any, using the standard method. See the instructions for the FID-ES payment voucher on page 31 of these instructions for more information on the alternative methods. 6 To elect to use an alternative method of calculating estimated tax, you must enter 1, 2, 3, 4 or 5 in the checkbox to indicate the method used and attach Form RPD-41272, Calculation of Estimated Personal Income Tax Underpayment Penalty, to your FID-1 return. Enter 1 if you wish to compute estimated payments based on the actual dates on which all amounts of withholding tax were withheld for the applicable tax year. If you have annualized income and are required to file estimated payments beginning with the 2nd, 3rd or 4th quarter estimated installment due date, enter 2, 3 or 4, respectively. If you qualify for special rules because you have farm or ranch income, enter 5. Line G1-G6. Please refer to your federal Form 1041. Line 1. Federal taxable income of fiduciary. Enter the federal taxable income of the estate or trust from federal Form 1041. For electing small business trusts (ESBT), federal taxable income also must include the federal taxable income used to compute the tax on the S portion of an ESBT, included on the federal Form 1041, Schedule G. Enter the federal taxable income on the S portion of an electing small business trust (ESBT) in the space provided to the right of line 1, preceded by "Sec. 641(c) federal taxable income". Include the amount in the federal taxable income of the fiduciary reported on line 1. Attach the ESBT calculation schedule from your federal Form 1041. The S portion of an ESBT is the portion of the trust that consists of stock in one or more S corporations and is not treated as a grantor trust. For federal tax purposes, the tax on the S portion is figured separately from the tax on the remainder of the ESBT. For New Mexico state tax purposes, the tax on the S portion income is calculated in the same manner as all other federal taxable income of the fiduciary. If the trust is a grantor trust not required to file a federal fiduciary return but files a New Mexico FID-1 because it distributed taxable New Mexico net income in excess of $20,000 in the current tax year, the grantor trust completes the www.tax.newmexico.gov q If you computed tax on lump-sum distributions, retain this worksheet for your records q WORKSHEET FOR COMPUTING TAX ON LUMP-SUM DISTRIBUTIONS 1. New Mexico taxable income from line 4 of the FID-1 return........................ 1. 2. Amount of lump-sum income reported for purposes of 10-year tax option or capital gains election on federal Form 4972................................. 2. 3. Multiply line 2 by 0.20 and enter the total .................................................. 3. 4. Add lines 1 and 3......................................................................................... 4. 5. Enter the tax from the tax rate tables for the amount on line 4 of this work sheet............................................................................................................ 5. 6. Enter the tax from the tax rate tables for the amount on line 1 of this worksheet..................................................................................................... 6. 7. Subtract line 6 from line 5 and enter the difference.................................... 7. 8. Multiply the amount on line 7 by 5. (This is the additional averaged tax due on the lump-sum income.) .............................................................. 8. 9. If a New Mexico percentage is computed on line 16, Schedule FID-B, multiply that percentage by the amount on line 8 of this worksheet and enter here. If line 16, FID-B is zero or no New Mexico percentage is computed, enter the amount from line 8 on this worksheet. Also enter this amount on line 8, FID-1 return.............................................................. 9. Attach federal Form 4972 to the FID-1 return. top section of the FID-1 return, enters zero in line 1, and records tax withheld information on lines 14 through 18. The remainder of the form is left blank. Be sure to attach annual withholding statements, 1099-Misc, Form RPD-41285, Annual Statement of Withholding of Oil and Gas Proceeds, or Form RPD-41359, Annual Statement of Pass-Through Entity Withholding. Line 2. Additions to federal income. Enter additions to federal taxable income from FID-1, page 2, line 3 (federal net operating loss and non-New Mexico municipal bond interest). Line 3. Deductions from federal income. Enter deductions from federal taxable income from FID-1, page 2, line 7 (New Mexico net operating loss, interest income from U.S. government obligations, and net capital gain deduction). Line 5. Tax. Using the tax rate table on page 5 of these instructions, calcuFID-1 late and enter the tax on the income reported on line 4. Enter the tax computed on line 5. Line 6. New Mexico percentage. An estate or trust which has income from both within and outside New Mexico should complete and file FID-B, Schedules 1 and 2. Enter the New Mexico percentage from line 16 of the FID-B Schedule 1. Line 7. New Mexico income tax. Multiply line 5 by the percentage on line 6. If FID-B is not required, enter the amount from line 5. Line 8. Tax on lump-sum distributions. If the estate or trust is a resident New Mexico estate or trust which received a lump-sum distribution and used the federal special 10-year averaging tax option on federal Form 4972, it must complete the worksheet at the top of page 8 to compute the New Mexico averaged additional tax. 7 Line 10. Credit for taxes paid to another state(s). A resident, New Mexico estate or trust who must pay tax to another state on income that is also taxable in New Mexico may take a credit against New Mexico tax for tax paid to the other state. The credit is for tax that another state imposes on any portion of income that by law is included in New Mexico net income. Do not include tax withheld when calculating the allowable credit. If the specific item of income is not subject to taxation in both states, no credit is available. The credit may not be more than: • The New Mexico tax liability due on the return, • The tax paid to the other state, and • The amount of New Mexico income tax liability computed on that portion of income that is taxed in both states. www.tax.newmexico.gov Worksheet for Computation of Allowable Credit for Taxes Paid to Other States by New Mexico Residents NOTE: Complete a separate worksheet for each state that imposed tax on income also taxed in New Mexico. Column 1 Column 2 From the New Mexico return From the other state’s return 1. Enter amount of tax due to the state on the return..................... 1._____________ 1.____________ 2. Enter taxable income on which you calculated the tax on line 1. If applicable, enter the state’s taxable income after applying the state’s allocation and apportionment percentage. For New Mexico, this is from FID-1, line 4 (New Mexico Taxable Income) multiplied by the New Mexico percentage, if any, on FID-1, line 6............................................................................... 2._____________ 2.____________ 3. DIVIDE line 1 by line 2. This is the average effective tax rate on the state’s income. Calculate to four decimal places (e.g., 0.0463)............................................................................... 3._____________ 3.____________ 4. From each state’s return, enter the portion of income subject to tax in both states, but not more than the amount on line 2. Note:The amount in column 1 will be the same as the amount in column 2...................................................................................... 4._____________ 4.____________ 5. MULTIPLY line 3 by line 4............................................................ 5._____________ 5.____________ 6. Enter the lesser of line 5, column 1 and line 5, column 2, but not more than the amount in Column 1, line 1. This is the credit allowed for tax paid to the other state.............. 6._____________ Name of other state___________________ Enter the amount from line 6 of this worksheet on the 2018 FID-1 return, line 10. If you claim a credit for tax paid to multiple states, sum the amounts on line 6 from the worksheets you completed for each state, and enter the amount on the 2018 FID-1 return, line 10. Please attach this worksheet(s) to your 2018 FID-1 return if you are claiming credit for taxes paid to another state on page 1, line 10 of the FID-1 return. FID-1 8 www.tax.newmexico.gov Complete the worksheet on page 8 and attach a copy of the worksheet and the income tax return from the other state to the FID-1 return. Do this for each state for which you wish to claim a credit. • Cancer Clinical Trial Tax Credit, • Electronic Card-Reading Equipment Tax Credit, • Foster Youth Employment Tax Credit, "State" includes the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, any territory or possession of the United States, and states and provinces of foreign countries. Do not include in the calculation of the credit those income taxes paid to any municipality, county or other political subdivision of a state or to any central government of a foreign country. "State" does not include central governments. • Geothermal Ground-Coupled Heat Pump Tax Credit, • Job Mentorship Tax Credit, • Land Conservation Incentives Credit, • Preservation of Cultural Property Credit, • Rural Job Tax Credit, • Line 11. Total tax credits applied against the income tax liability on line 9. If you may claim any of the tax credits listed next, complete Schedule FID-CR and attach the applicable form(s), statements or other required back-up. Enter the sum of the credits claimed and applied against tax due from Schedule FID-CR, line A. The supporting documentation required to claim any of the tax credits is described in the section "Line Instructions For Completing Schedule FID-CR" beginning on page 16 of these instructions. The required documentation must accompany the return, or the claim for the credit will not be allowed. To calculate the amount that may be claimed for any tax year, refer to the claim form or supporting instructions for the tax credit. The sum of credits claimed on Schedule FID-CR may not exceed the income tax claimed on FID-1, line 9 less the amount in line 10. Rural Health Care Practitioners Tax Credit, • Solar Market Development Tax Credit, • New Sustainable Building Tax Credit, • Technology Jobs (Additional) Tax Credit, • Technology Jobs and Research and Development (Additional) Tax Credit, • Veterans Employment Tax Credit • Film Production Tax Credit, and • Renewable Energy Production Tax Credit. An estate or trust with income subject to New Mexico income tax may be eligible for the following income tax credits: For more information on business related credits, see Publication FYI106, Claiming Tax Credits for CRS & Businsess-Related Income. FYI-106 is available on the Department's internet home page at www.tax.newmexico.gov Click on "Forms and Publications" then select the "Publications" folder. Click on "FYIs" to access all 100 Series- Tax Administration publications. • Affordable Housing Tax Credit, • Angel Investment Credit, • Agricultural Water Conservation Tax Credit, • Advanced Energy Tax Credit, • Agricultural Biomass Income Tax Credit, • Business Facility Rehabilitation Credit, • Blended Biodiesel Fuel Tax Credit, FID-1 You may also claim on this form any portion of approved Film Production Tax Credit or Renewable Energy Production Tax Credit that may be refunded. Any refundable portion of the renewable energy production tax credit or the film production tax credit is reported on line 24 of the FID-1 return. Line 12. Net New Mexico income tax. Add lines 10 and 11, then subtract the total from line 9. Net New Mexico income tax cannot be less than zero. 9 Line 13. Payments. Enter the total amount of payments made for 2018. These payments are submitted to the Department with a FID-ES, FID-EXT, a FID-PV payment voucher, or applied from a prior year. Please check the appropriate box that corresponds to the reported payments. The payments may also be made electronically through the Department's website. Line 14. New Mexico income tax withheld not included on lines 15 and 16. Excluding the tax withheld from oil and gas proceeds or pass-through entity income reported on line 15 or 16, enter the total of all other New Mexico income tax withheld as shown on your annual withholding statements Form(s) W-2, 1099, 1099-Misc. Include a copy of the forms with your FID-1 return. Line 15. New Mexico income tax withheld from oil and gas proceeds. Enter the total of all New Mexico income tax withheld from oil and gas proceeds received as shown on your annual withholding statements, 1099Misc, or Form RPD-41285, Annual Statement of Withholding of Oil and Gas Proceeds. Be sure to include a copy of the forms with your FID-1 return. An entity, including a grantor trust, that has had tax withheld cannot pass a withholding statement directly to any other taxpayer. Generally, the beneficiary must file and report the tax withheld on its New Mexico income tax return. However, if the beneficiary is also a remitter, the tax withheld on the oil and gas proceeds may be passed to the remittees by issuing the remittees an annual withholding statement, Form RPD-41285, Annual Statement of Withholding of Oil and Gas Proceeds, or a pro forma 1099-Misc. The remittees may then claim the withholding on their income tax return. Line 16. New Mexico income tax withheld from a pass-through entity. Enter the total of all New Mexico income tax withheld on pass-through entity allocable net income as shown on Forms 1099-Misc or Form RPD41359, Annual Statement of PassThrough Entity Withholding. Be sure to include a copy of the forms with your FID-1 return. www.tax.newmexico.gov An entity, including grantor trusts, that has had tax withheld cannot pass a withholding statement directly to its owners, members, partners or beneficiaries (owners). Generally, the beneficiary must file and report the tax withheld on its New Mexico income tax return. However, if the beneficiary is also a pass-through entity, the tax withheld may be passed to the owner of the beneficiary by issuing the owner an annual withholding statement, Form RPD-41359, Annual Statement of Pass-Through Entity Withholding or a pro forma 1099-Misc. The owner may then claim the withholding on their income tax return. Line 17. Amount from lines 15 and 16 passed to beneficiaries and reported on FID-D. Enter the amount of tax withheld from lines 15 and 16, which was subsequently passed on to the beneficiaries of the estate or trust. The fiduciary reports withholding that is passed to beneficiaries by issuing them Form RPD-41359, Annual Statement of Pass-Through Entity Withholding, Form 1099-Misc or a pro-forma Form 1099-Misc. The beneficiaries may then take credit for the withholding on their corporate or personal income tax return. When an estate or trust that is a PTE passes tax withheld to its beneficiaries, the income tax withheld is also reported on Schedule FID-D. Line 18. Total payments and tax withheld. Subtract line 17 from the sum of lines 13 through 16. Line 19. Tax Due. If line 12 is more than line 18, enter the tax due. Line 20. Penalty. Add penalty if you file late and owe tax, or you do not pay the tax on or before the date the return is due. Calculate penalty by multiplying the unpaid amount on line 19 by 2% then by the number of months or partial months for which the payment is late, not to exceed 20% of the tax due. You may leave this line blank if you wish the Department to compute the penalty for you. The Department will send you a bill for any penalty due. Line 21. Interest. Add interest if the amount of tax due on line 19 was not FID-1 paid by the original due date, even if an extension of time to file was obtained. You may leave this line blank if you wish the Department to compute the interest for you. The Department will send you a bill for any interest due. Interest is computed on a daily basis at the rate established for individual income tax purposes by the U.S. Internal Revenue Code (IRC). The IRC rate changes quarterly. The IRC rate for each quarter is announced by the Internal Revenue Service in the last month of the previous quarter. The annual and daily interest rate for each quarter will be posted on our website at www.tax.newmexico.gov. In the black navigation bar at the top, click INDIVIDUALS. Under FILE YOUR, TAXES select Penalty & Interest Rates. Calculate interest at the daily interest rate for the quarter of the unpaid amount for each day the payment is late. The formula for calculating daily interest is: Tax due x the daily interest rate for the quarter x number of days late = interest due. Important: Once your principal tax liability is paid, interest and penalty stops accruing. Lines 23 through 23b. Overpayment If line 18 is more than line 12, you have an overpayment. Enter the difference on line 23. Your overpayment can be: • Applied to your 2018 tax liability (enter on line 23a), or • Refunded to you (enter on line 23b), or • A combination of these. Line 24. Refundable part of film production and renewable energy production tax credits claimed. Enter the amount of approved refundable renewable energy production tax credit claimed on Form RPD-41227, Renewable Energy Production Tax Credit Claim Form, that you wish to have refunded to you. Any portion of the credit to be applied to the tax due on this return must be entered 10 on Schedule FID-CR. See also "Line Instructions for Completing Schedule FID-CR" beginning on page 16 of these instructions. Line 25. Total refund of overpaid tax and refundable credit due to you. Enter the sum of lines 23b and 24. This is your total refund of overpaid tax and refundable credit due to you. ______________________________ FID-1, FIDUCIARY INCOME TAX RETURN, PAGE 2 LINE INSTRUCTIONS ______________________________ ADDITIONS TO FEDERAL INCOME FOR FIDUCIARY (NON-DISTRIBUTED SHARES): Line 1. Federal net operating loss carryover. Enter that portion of the federal net operating loss deduction claimed on the federal return which has not been distributed to beneficiaries. Line 2. Non-New Mexico municipal bond interest. You may exclude only federally tax-exempt interest or dividend income from municipal obligations from the State of New Mexico, its agencies, institutions, instrumentalities or political subdivisions, or income from the obligations of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, Guam, Virgin Islands, American Samoa or Northern Mariana Islands. Enter that portion of municipal bond income from sources other than those listed above which has not been distributed to beneficiaries. DEDUCTIONS FROM FEDERAL INCOME FOR FIDUCIARY (NONDISTRIBUTED SHARES): Line 4. New Mexico net operating loss. Enter the New Mexico net operating loss (NOL) carryover that may be applied to the liability on your FID-1 return. Use New Mexico Form RPD41375, Net Operating Loss Schedule For Fiduciary Income Tax, to compute your New Mexico net operating loss and carryforward. Attach Form RPD-41375 to your return showing the tax year when each New Mexico net operating loss occurred. The schedule also shows how the loss for each tax year for which it was carried forward, was used, including 2018. www.tax.newmexico.gov Unlike a federal net operating loss carryforward, a New Mexico net operating loss incurred cannot be carried back and if incurred on or after January 1, 2013, may be carried forward for 19 years or until the total amount of the loss carryover has been used, whichever occurs first. For a net operating loss that was incurred in tax years beginning before January 1, 2013, a New Mexico net operating loss may be carried forward for only five years. Refer to regulation 3.3.1.13(E) NMAC 1978, if the net operating loss was incurred in a tax year beginning prior to January 1, 1991. You cannot apply a New Mexico net operating loss carryforward until the following tax year -- provided you have filed a timely return -- or until the first tax year that begins after the date you file a return establishing the loss. To compute the carryforward amount from a New Mexico net operating loss recognized in a previous year, add together the federal net operating loss as defined by Section 172(c) of the Internal Revenue Service for the tax year of the loss and any interest received on U.S. Government obligations less related expenses and reported on the New Mexico tax return for the tax year of the loss. Subtract out any loss used in prior tax years. Line 5. Interest income from U.S. government obligations. Interest on obligations of the United States may be deducted only if the interest was included in federal taxable income reported on FID-1, page 1, line 1. Line 6. Net Capital Gain Deduction. You may deduct all or a portion of your net capital gains deduction reported and claimed on your federal tax return. You may deduct the greater of: • 100% of your net capital gains deduction, not to exceed $1,000; or • 50% of your net capital gains deduction Line 8. Total Distributions of Income to Beneficiaries. Enter the total distributions of taxable New Mexico net income to beneficiaries or other FID-1 beneficiaries for the tax year of this return. The amount of total distributions of taxable New Mexico net income to beneficiaries must match the total New Mexico net income, reported on line 1 of Schedule FID-D. On line 1 of Schedule FID-D, you must enter the New Mexico net income that was distributed to the beneficiaries, not the net income of the estate or trust. If the income distributed is not taxable to the beneficiary, as in the case of some grantor trusts, including living trusts, the distributed income is not included on Schedule FID-D. See also "Withholding for Non-Resident Beneficiaries of a Pass-Through Entity" on page 2 of these instructions. Do not complete or attach Schedule FID-B if the estate or trust does not have income from activities both within and outside New Mexico. However, if you file FID-B, continue with the instructions on page 12. Refund Express If you request an amount to be refunded to you on line 25, you may wish to have your tax refund deposited directly into your bank account through Refund Express. To choose Refund Express, complete the “Refund Express” portion on page 2 of the FID-1 return. All fields are required. Complete the bank routing number and the account number. You must indicate the type of account and you must answer "No" to question 4. Failure to complete all fields correctly will cause your Refund Express request to be denied, and the Department will mail you a paper check. The Department will mail you a paper check if your bank does not accept your Refund Express information. NOTE: See the instructions for the film production tax credit claim form for information regarding choosing refund express for the refundable portion of the film production tax credit on line 24. Refund Express is available for deposits to the taxpayer’s account only. Taxpayers may not request the funds to be deposited into the account of another payee. TRD is not responsible for the misapplication of a 11 direct deposit refund that is caused by the error, negligence or malfeasance on the part of the taxpayer. Important Changes Affecting Refund Express - Direct Deposit A direct deposit of your refund, "Refund Express", may not be made to a bank account located at a financial institution outside the territorial jurisdiction of the United States. In order to comply with new federal banking rules, anyone wishing to have their refund directly deposited into their account must answer an additional question when completing the Refund Express portion of their return. If you do not answer the question, your refund will be mailed to you in the form of a paper check. If you answer the question incorrectly, your refund may be delayed, rejected or frozen by the National Automated Clearing House Association (NACHA) or the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC). The question will ask whether the refund will go to or through an account located outside the United States. The question also warns you that if the answer is "yes", you should not choose the Refund Express method of delivering your refund. Your options are to use a different bank account or to leave the Refund Express portion of your return blank and a paper check will be mailed to the address on the return. A financial institution is located within the territorial jurisdiction of the United States if it is located: • within the United States; • on a United States military base; or • in American Samoa, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico or the U.S. Virgin Islands. REMINDER: The Department will mail you a paper check if your bank does not accept your Refund Express information. Why Use Refund Express? • Avoid delays that may occur in mailing a check. Refund Express does not guarantee that you will receive your refund check earlier, however — only that when the check is issued, it will reach the bank more quickly. • Payment is more secure. There is no check to get lost. • More convenient. No trip to the www.tax.newmexico.gov NAME OF ESTATE OR TRUST 123 Main Street Anyplace, NM 87000 1540 15-000000000 SA M PL PAY TO THE ORDER OF ___________________________________________________________________________ E $ _________________________________________________________________________________________________ DOLLARS ANYPLACE BANK Anyplace, NM 87000 Routing Number Account Number For _____________________________________ Do not include the check number _______________________________________________ A211500151 A 2015551517 C 1540 bank to deposit your check. • Saves tax dollars. A refund by direct deposit costs less than a check. officer representing the fiduciary. Complete all information, including a phone number and e-mail address. What is the Routing Number? The routing number is for bank identification and must be nine digits. If the first two digits are not 01 through 12 or 21 through 32, the system will reject the direct deposit and you will receive a check. On the sample check on page 12, the routing number is 211500151. Your check may state that it is payable through a bank different from the financial institution where you have your checking account. If so, do not use the routing number on that check. Instead, contact your financial institution for the correct routing number to enter on this line. Any person, other than an employee of the fiduciary, preparing the return for compensation must also sign and date the return. A preparer other than an employee of the entity must enter the paid preparer's identifying information in the section, "Paid preparer's use only", next to the taxpayer's signature. Enter the preparer’s New Mexico CRS identification number, if the preparer has one, and the Federal Employer Identification Number (FEIN), if applicable. All paid preparers must enter their Preparer's Taxpayer Identification Number (PTIN). Entering Your Account Number Your account number can be up to 17 characters. Include hyphens, but omit spaces and special symbols. Enter the number from left to right. Leave unused boxes blank. On the sample check on the previous page, the account number is 2015551517. Do not include the check number. You must indicate whether the account is a checking or a savings account by entering an "X" in the appropriate box. Caution: Verify that the information you enter is correct and that your financial institution will accept a direct deposit made payable to the name on the FID-1 return. NOTE: TRD is not responsible if a financial institution refuses a direct deposit. SIGNATURE. The return must be signed and dated by a fiduciary or FID-1 An improperly signed or unsigned return will be considered invalid for filing purposes, and penalty and interest may be assessed. ______________________________ GENERAL INSTRUCTIONS FOR FID-B, COMPUTATION OF NEW MEXICO PERCENTAGE AND BUSINESS INCOME APPORTIONMENT FORMULA ______________________________ FID-B should be used by fiduciaries who are filing returns for trusts or estates having income from activities both within and outside New Mexico. For purposes of these instructions, an estate is DOMICILED IN NEW MEXICO if the decedent was domiciled in New Mexico. A trust is DOMICILED IN NEW MEXICO if the trustee is domiciled in New Mexico or if the principal place from which the trust is managed or administered is in New Mexico. 12 ______________________________ FID-B, SCHEDULE 1 GENERAL INSTRUCTIONS FOR COLUMNS 1-4, LINES 1-7 ______________________________ You must complete columns 1 through 4 as instructed or the amounts in columns 3 and 4 may be denied. Column 1, Gross: Amounts entered in this column are the same as those from federal Form 1041, except for line 2 and line 6, which include amounts reported on lines 2 and 3 of FID-1. Column 2, Less Related Expenses/ Distributions: Amounts entered in this column include deductions and exclusions from federal Form 1041 that apply to the specific types of income reported in column 1 on lines 1-7. Subtract these deductions from the type of income (lines 1-7) to which they apply. Related expenses in column 2 must include distributions to beneficiaries. If the deduction cannot be applied to a specific type of income, enter it on line 11, "Other deductions". EXAMPLES: • Taxes on rental property are deducted from rents and royalties, line 4. • State income taxes, fiduciary fees, attorney fees and accountant fees are included as other deductions, line 11. • Charitable deductions arising from a specific type of income such as capital gains are subtracted from profit or loss from the sale or exchange of assets, line 5. If it is a charitable deduction arising from general income, it is subtracted on line 11. • Income distribution deductions should be subtracted from either dividends, interest or profit or loss from the sale or exchange of assets (capital gains) according to the allocations on federal Form 1041, Schedule K-1. Other taxable income distributions on Schedule K-1 are included in the deductions on line 11. Amounts for depreciation and depletion from Schedule K-1 are subtracted from the type of income to which they apply, lines 3-7. • Dividend and interest exclusions are www.tax.newmexico.gov subtracted from gross dividends, line 1, and gross interest, line 2. Column 3, Net: The net amounts in this column equal column 1 less column 2. Column 4, Allocation to New Mexico: Use this column to allocate net income to New Mexico according to the following line instructions. The amount in column 4 cannot be greater than the amount in column 3. ______________________________ FORM FID-B, SCHEDULE 1 LINE INSTRUCTIONS ______________________________ NOTE: If you have a net operating loss or net operating loss carryforward, attach a separate statement identifying the name and operating location of the business or property creating the loss, and a complete copy of your federal tax return. Lines 1 and 2. Dividends and Interest. Dividend and interest income is allocated in column 4 to New Mexico if the estate or trust is domiciled in New Mexico. Line 3. Income From Other Fiduciaries, S Corporations, Partnerships and Limited Liability Entities: An estate or trust receiving income from another estate, trust, or other passthrough entity that allocated and apportioned its New Mexico income must obtain copies of all allocation and apportionment schedules. The income from these sources must be allocated and apportioned in the same way each estate, trust, or other pass-through entity allocated and apportioned its income. Enter the amount of income allocated or apportioned in column 4. Example: X, a New Mexico trust, reports $4,000 of net income as its distributed share from a partnership. Since the partnership allocated and apportioned 50% of its taxable income to New Mexico, the fiduciary will allocate 50% of the $4,000 amount, or $2,000, to New Mexico in column 4. Line 4. Rents and Royalties. Allocate to New Mexico in column 4 the following rent and royalty income: • from real property in New Mexico, • from tangible personal property FID-1 • located or used in New Mexico, or from intangibles used in New Mexico. Trusts or estates that are domiciled in New Mexico and receive income from real property, tangible personal property or intangibles located or used in New Mexico (including rents and royalties from oil and gas interests) must allocate that income to New Mexico in column 4. Intangibles are copyrights, patents, franchises, trademarks and licenses. In addition to the above, trusts or estates domiciled in New Mexico must allocate income from intangible and tangible personal property used in another state if the estate or trust is not subject to tax in the other state. A patent is used in New Mexico to the extent it is employed in production, fabrication, manufacturing or other processing in New Mexico or when a patented product is produced in New Mexico. A copyright is used in New Mexico when the printing or other production is accomplished in New Mexico. Line 5. Profit or Loss From the Sale or Exchange of Assets. Allocate to New Mexico in column 4 profits or losses from the sale or exchange of: • Real property in New Mexico, • Tangible personal property located in New Mexico at the time it was sold, • Tangible personal property if the estate or trust is domiciled in New Mexico and the gain was not taxable in the state where the tangible personal property was located, • Intangible personal property if the estate or trust is domiciled in New Mexico. Line 6. Net Business and Farm Income. An estate or trust reporting business and farm income earned solely within New Mexico enters in column 4 the entire amount of net income from column 3. If the business and farm income is from activities within and outside New Mexico, complete lines 1-5 on FID-B, Schedule 2 to determine the percentage of income apportionable to New Mexico. If the fiduciary’s records do not reflect the extent to which tangible personal property is used within New Mexico, use the following calculation: Calculate the business and farm income apportioned to New Mexico by multiplying the amount of net business and farm income in column 3, line 6, by the average percent from line 5 of FID-B, Schedule 2. Compute the percentage of time the property was located in New Mexico during the tax year by dividing the number of days the property was physically located in New Mexico during the rental or royalty period by the total number of days the property was physically located everywhere during the rental or royalty period. Separate Accounting Method for Business Income. The separate accounting method may not be used by any business. Businesses beginning before January 1, 1991 who elected the separate accounting method were required to elect another method for taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 1995. Multiply the net rents or royalties received for the taxable year by the percentage calculated above. The result is the amount of rental or royalty income allocable to New Mexico. Line 7 - Other Income. All income from sources other than those already described is allocated to New Mexico in column 4 if the estate or trust is domiciled in New Mexico. Attach a schedule of other income. If the physical location of the tangible personal property during the rental or royalty period is unknown or unascertainable, enter the amount of rental or royalty income from property delivered to a lessee in New Mexico. If the estate or trust is not domiciled in New Mexico, other income is allocated to New Mexico when it is from transacting business in, into or from New Mexico or when income is received from prop- 13 www.ta
Extracted from PDF file 2019-new-mexico-form-fid-1-2018.pdf, last modified September 2018

More about the New Mexico Form FID-1-2018 (Obsolete) Corporate Income Tax

Obsolete

We last updated the Instructions for Form FID-1 Fiduciary Income Tax Return in April 2021, and the latest form we have available is for tax year 2019. This means that we don't yet have the updated form for the current tax year. Please check this page regularly, as we will post the updated form as soon as it is released by the New Mexico Taxation and Revenue Department. You can print other New Mexico tax forms here.


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Related New Mexico Corporate Income Tax Forms:

TaxFormFinder has an additional 80 New Mexico income tax forms that you may need, plus all federal income tax forms. These related forms may also be needed with the New Mexico Form FID-1-2018 (Obsolete).

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Form FID-1 NM Fiduciary Income Tax Return

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Form Sources:

New Mexico usually releases forms for the current tax year between January and April. We last updated New Mexico Form FID-1-2018 (Obsolete) from the Taxation and Revenue Department in April 2021.

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About the Corporate Income Tax

The IRS and most states require corporations to file an income tax return, with the exact filing requirements depending on the type of company.

Sole proprietorships or disregarded entities like LLCs are filed on Schedule C (or the state equivalent) of the owner's personal income tax return, flow-through entities like S Corporations or Partnerships are generally required to file an informational return equivilent to the IRS Form 1120S or Form 1065, and full corporations must file the equivalent of federal Form 1120 (and, unlike flow-through corporations, are often subject to a corporate tax liability).

Additional forms are available for a wide variety of specific entities and transactions including fiduciaries, nonprofits, and companies involved in other specific types of business.

Historical Past-Year Versions of New Mexico Form FID-1-2018 (Obsolete)

We have a total of eight past-year versions of Form FID-1-2018 (Obsolete) in the TaxFormFinder archives, including for the previous tax year. Download past year versions of this tax form as PDFs here:



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