Bank bonus tax prep checklist
A pre-filing checklist for reconciling bank bonuses against 1099s and getting your return right at tax time.
Bank-bonus tax filing is mechanical when the records are in order and miserable when they're not. The checklist below assumes you've kept a tracker through the year (see offer tracker template). If you haven't, the reconciliation is harder but the same steps apply — you'll just be reconstructing some of the data from emails and statements.
Step 1 — Gather all 1099s
- Open your offer tracker and list every bank or brokerage where you held a bonus-eligible account at any point during the tax year, including accounts that opened and closed within the year.
- For each institution, log into the online portal and navigate to the tax-documents section. Common locations: "Statements & Documents," "Tax Forms," "eDelivery." Save any 1099 forms posted for the relevant tax year to a dedicated folder.
- Some institutions email a notification when forms are available; others quietly post without notice. Don't assume "no email = no form." Check every portal.
- Forms are typically available by January 31 (for 1099-INT) or by early February (for 1099-MISC, which has a slightly later filing deadline in some years). Wait until at least mid-February before assuming a form isn't coming.
Step 2 — Cross-check against your tracker
- For each bonus that posted in the tax year (per the Bonus Posted Date in your tracker), confirm whether a 1099 was issued by the same institution.
- If the bonus is on a 1099, verify the amount matches. Banks occasionally include or exclude items unexpectedly — confirm before relying on the form.
- If a bonus posted but no 1099 was issued, that's expected if the bonus was below the bank's filing threshold ($10 for interest under 1099-INT, $600 for miscellaneous income under 1099-MISC). The income is still reportable — flag it on your tracker as "self-report."
- If a 1099 was issued for a bonus you don't recognize (or for an amount higher than expected), investigate before filing. Contact the bank to verify. Common explanations: account interest you forgot about, a corrected amount, a referral payment, or in rare cases, a mistake by the bank.
Step 3 — Reconcile missing 1099s
Two scenarios to handle carefully:
A 1099 should have been issued but wasn't
If a bonus was above the bank's filing threshold and the form is missing past mid-February:
- Contact the bank in writing (secure message, email, or letter) to request the form.
- Wait for response. If the form is delivered, use it.
- If the bank says no form will be issued (sometimes banks recategorize unexpectedly), include the income on your return as self-reported. Keep the bank's response in your records.
- File on time even if the form is missing. Extending the return is an option if you genuinely can't determine the amount, but the income obligation isn't affected by the form's presence or absence.
A bonus was below the filing threshold
No 1099 will be issued, but the income is still reportable. Sum the small bonuses across institutions for the year and include the total on your return — typically as "other income" on Schedule 1 (Form 1040) for non-interest bonuses, or aggregated with interest income for interest-coded bonuses below the bank's $10 reporting threshold.
Step 4 — Confirm state tax treatment
- If your state has a broad income tax, the bonus income flows into your state return through federal AGI — no separate filing step usually required.
- States without a broad income tax (Alaska, Florida, Nevada, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Washington, Wyoming, and New Hampshire's limited regime) don't tax this income at the state level.
- If you moved between states during the year, the residency-allocation rules of each affected state govern. Income received while a resident of a tax state is generally allocable to that state.
- Some states have add-backs or modifications that differ from federal treatment. If your state's instructions reference modifications to interest or miscellaneous income, check that bank bonuses don't trip an unexpected line.
Step 5 — Document bonuses promised but not received
Bonuses that were owed but never paid are not income for the unpaid amount. Document:
- The offer (terms screenshot from application day).
- The qualifying activity completed (with dates).
- The dispute history with the bank.
- The status as of filing (still in dispute, denied with reasons, etc.).
If a disputed bonus is later paid in a subsequent year, it becomes income in that subsequent year. Don't accrue.
Step 6 — File and archive
- Include the totals in the correct lines of your return: interest on Schedule B (or directly on Form 1040 if under the threshold for Schedule B), miscellaneous income on Schedule 1 line for "other income" or business-return equivalents.
- File the return.
- Archive: all 1099s, the tracker as it stood at filing, the tax return itself, and any correspondence about disputed bonuses. Retain per IRS retention guidance — generally three years minimum, longer in specific circumstances.
Common pitfalls in the workflow
- Filing before all 1099s are received. Wait until mid-February. Filing in late January risks an amended return when a late 1099 surfaces.
- Double-counting. A 1099-INT that already includes the bonus amount shouldn't be reported a second time as separate bonus income. Trust the form unless it's wrong.
- Ignoring small below-threshold bonuses. They're reportable in aggregate even if no form was issued for any individual bonus.
- Treating a clawed-back bonus as still income. If a bank clawed back a bonus in the same year it was paid, the net result on the 1099 should already reflect that. If the clawback spans tax years, the prior-year income may need to be adjusted.
- Misallocating between 1099-INT and 1099-MISC on the return. Bank software for tax filing usually maps each 1099 to its correct line; if doing the return manually, follow the form's instructions.
When to involve a CPA
Most readers with a handful of bonuses can handle the reporting in DIY tax software. Bring in a professional if any of the following apply: total bonus income is large enough to affect estimated-tax-payment obligations; you had a clawback spanning tax years; you received a 1099 with what you believe is an incorrect amount and the bank won't correct it; you're filing in multiple states; bonuses were tied to a business entity; or you're uncertain how a specific bonus is classified.