Taxable and Non-Taxable Income

The following are examples of Taxable and Non-Taxable Income:

7 Things You Should Include in Taxable Income

  1. Wages & Salaries (Form W-2)
    That’s your regular pay, overtime, bonuses, and most fringe benefits.
    Example: You receive a $3,000 year-end bonus—yes, it’s taxable just like your paycheck.
  2. Tips, Freelance & Side-Hustle Income (1099-NEC/1099-K or no form at all)
    Cash tips, Venmo/Cash App payments, Etsy/Uber/Fiverr income—all taxable even if no form arrives.
    Example: You earn $5,200 cutting hair on weekends. Report it on Schedule C, even if you didn’t get a 1099.
  3. Interest & Dividends (1099-INT/1099-DIV)
    Bank interest, CDs, corporate bond interest, and stock dividends are taxable. Reinvested dividends are still income.
    Example: Your brokerage reinvests a $450 dividend—you still report $450 of dividend income.
  4. Capital Gains (Assets, Stocks, Crypto, Property)
    Profit from selling investments or personal capital assets. Holding period determines short- vs long-term rates.
    Example: You bought stock for $4,000 and sold for $6,700. The $2,700 gain is taxable (minus any basis adjustments).
  5. Unemployment Compensation (1099-G)
    Federal law generally treats it as taxable income (state rules vary).
    Example: You received $8,000 in unemployment benefits—include the full amount on your return.
  6. Cancellation of Debt (Form 1099-C)
    When a lender forgives a debt, that “free money” is usually taxable unless an exclusion applies (e.g., insolvency).
    Example: A bank settles a $9,000 credit-card balance for $3,000; the $6,000 forgiven is typically taxable.
  7. Prizes, Awards & Gambling Winnings (W-2G)
    Lottery winnings, raffle prizes, game-show awards, and casino/betting wins are income.
    Example: You win $2,200 at the casino. Report the full $2,200 (losses may be deductible if you itemize, up to winnings).

7 Things You Should Not Add to Taxable Income

  1. Gifts You Receive
    The recipient doesn’t pay income tax on a gift (the giver may need a gift-tax filing if large).
    Example: Your aunt gives you $7,000 to help with moving costs—not taxable to you.
  2. Inheritances
    Inherited cash or property isn’t income to you (though future earnings from it are, and basis rules matter).
    Example: You inherit $30,000 from a grandparent—no income tax; interest you later earn on it is taxable.
  3. Life Insurance Death Benefits
    Paid to beneficiaries upon the insured’s death are generally tax-free.
    Example: You receive $100,000 as a beneficiary—no income tax owed on that payout.
  4. Child Support Received
    Not taxable to the recipient and not deductible by the payer.
    Example: You receive $6,000 in child support—do not include it in your income.
  5. Tax-Exempt Municipal Bond Interest (but report it as tax-exempt)
    Muni interest is typically federally tax-free (may affect other calculations and state rules vary).
    Example: Your muni fund pays $900 in interest—report it as tax-exempt interest, not taxable income.
  6. Qualified Scholarships/Fellowships (Tuition & Required Fees Only)
    Amounts used for tuition, required fees, books, and supplies are tax-free; room and board is taxable.
    Example: A $5,000 scholarship covers tuition and required books—excluded from income. The extra $1,000 used for housing is taxable.
  7. Excluded Gain on Sale of Your Principal Residence (Section 121)
    Own-and-use test met? You may exclude up to $250,000 of gain ($500,000 if married filing jointly).
    Example: You bought your home for $300,000 and sell for $575,000 after living there 2 of the last 5 years. Up to $275,000 of gain may be excluded; any leftover gain could be taxable.

Why this matters (and where people slip up)

  • Mixing taxable vs. non-taxable items changes your AGI, which affects credits, deductions, and thresholds.
  • “I didn’t get a form” is not a safe test—lots of taxable income arrives without a 1099.
  • Some items can be partially taxable (e.g., Social Security benefits depending on your other income, state tax refunds if you itemized last year). Nuance matters.

Make the smart move: have RDA Tax Services check your return

With every client we:

  • Map all income streams (W-2s, 1099s, apps, side gigs) so nothing gets missed—or misclassified.
  • Flag exclusions (gifts, inheritances, muni interest, home-sale gain) so you don’t overpay.
  • Plan ahead for capital gains, debt forgiveness, and scholarship splits to minimize tax legally.

Bottom line: Accurate reporting + smart exclusions = less tax and fewer headaches.
👉 Book your FREE Tax Checkup with RDA Tax Services and file with confidence this year.