
Schedule D (Form 1040) + AI Agent Skill: Capital Gains and Losses Guide 2026
Schedule D aggregates every capital gain and loss for the year. Complete 2026 guide with LTCG brackets, the $3,000 loss limit, NIIT, carryovers, and worked examples.

Form 1095-A, the Health Insurance Marketplace Statement, reports the coverage you bought through healthcare.gov or a state exchange, and its three monthly columns feed Form 8962 to reconcile the Premium Tax Credit. You do not attach Form 1095-A to your return. You copy Column A (your enrollment premium), Column B (the benchmark silver plan), and Column C (the advance credit paid to your insurer) onto Form 8962, which then figures whether you are owed more credit or must repay part of the advance. The Marketplace must send Form 1095-A by January 31.
Key takeaways:
Official IRS resources: Form 1095-A (PDF) · Instructions (PDF) · About Form 1095-A
If you bought health insurance through the federal Marketplace at healthcare.gov or a state-run exchange such as Covered California or NY State of Health, you receive Form 1095-A by January 31. The form itself is informational; you do not attach it to your return. The numbers on it drive Form 8962, which reconciles the Premium Tax Credit and either lowers your tax or raises it.
Form 1095-A (officially "Health Insurance Marketplace Statement") is the information return the Marketplace sends to anyone who enrolled in a qualified health plan through healthcare.gov or a state-based exchange during the year. It reports three monthly numbers — the premium you paid, the benchmark premium for the second-lowest cost silver plan (SLCSP) in your area, and the advance Premium Tax Credit (APTC) the Marketplace paid directly to your insurer on your behalf.
You use those three columns to fill out Form 8962, which calculates the actual Premium Tax Credit you qualified for based on your final household income and family size. The difference between the actual credit and the advance credit either becomes a refund (if you under-took the advance) or a tax due (if you over-took it).
Legal Basis: IRC §36B governs the Premium Tax Credit; IRC §6055 requires Marketplaces to report coverage on Form 1095-A by January 31. IRS Publication 974 provides the comprehensive Premium Tax Credit guidance.
You receive Form 1095-A if any of these are true for any month of the year:
You do not receive 1095-A if your only health coverage was:
If you had Marketplace coverage for even one month of the year, you'll get 1095-A and you must file Form 8962 with your return — failure to reconcile blocks future APTC eligibility.
The American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) expanded the Premium Tax Credit in 2021, and the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) extended that expansion through 2025. Those enhancements expired on December 31, 2025. For 2026 coverage, unless Congress restores them, the pre-2021 rules apply again: the credit phases out entirely above 400% of the Federal Poverty Line, and the applicable percentages that determine your required contribution are higher. Confirm the current rules in IRS Publication 974 and the Form 8962 instructions before filing, because any legislative fix can be retroactive.
| Item | 2025 (final enhanced year) | 2026 (enhancements expired) |
|---|---|---|
| Premium Tax Credit (PTC) | Refundable credit | Refundable credit (statutory) |
| Income eligibility floor | 100% FPL (or 0% in non-expansion states) | 100% FPL |
| Income eligibility ceiling | No cap (enhanced) | 400% FPL cliff returns |
| Applicable-percentage scale | 0% to 8.5% of household income | Higher pre-2021 scale returns (verify Pub 974) |
| Excess APTC repayment cap (single, under 200% FPL) | $375 | Inflation-adjusted; verify 2026 instructions |
| Excess APTC repayment cap (single, 200–300% FPL) | $975 | Verify |
| Excess APTC repayment cap (single, 300–400% FPL) | $1,625 | Verify |
| Excess APTC repayment (over 400% FPL) | No cap (full repayment) | No cap (full repayment) |
| Form 1095-A deadline | January 31 (IRC §6055) | January 31 |
| Form 8962 attachment | Required if any APTC received or PTC claimed | Required |
Note: the repayment caps above are the tax-year-2025 figures from Table 5 of the Form 8962 instructions and apply only when household income is under 400% FPL. At 400% FPL or more there is no cap, so excess advance credit is repaid in full.
Legal Basis: IRC §36B (Premium Tax Credit); IRC §6055 (Marketplace reporting); IRS Publication 974; Form 8962 instructions (Table 5, tax year 2025); KFF and Congressional Research Service on the 2025 expiration of the enhanced credits.
Form 1095-A has three parts. Part I and Part II are identifying information; Part III is the monthly premium and credit data that drives Form 8962.
The Marketplace identifies the person who's responsible for reconciling the Premium Tax Credit on the tax return.
If anything in Part I is wrong (especially the SSN, name spelling, or policy issuer), call the Marketplace immediately to request a corrected 1095-A. Filing Form 8962 with mismatched identifying info triggers a delay or rejection.
Each person enrolled under the policy gets a row showing their name, SSN, date of birth, coverage start date, and coverage end date.
This part matters for two reasons:
This is the table that drives Form 8962. Three columns, twelve rows (one per month):
| Column | What It Reports | Where It Goes on Form 8962 |
|---|---|---|
| Column A: Monthly enrollment premium | The full premium your insurer charged for the plan you enrolled in (before any subsidy) | Form 8962 Line 11(a) (annual) or Lines 12–23 column (a) (monthly) |
| Column B: Monthly second-lowest cost silver plan (SLCSP) premium | The benchmark plan premium the Marketplace uses to calculate your PTC. Note: this is not the plan you bought — it's the benchmark for your coverage area and family. | Form 8962 Line 11(b) or Lines 12–23 column (b) |
| Column C: Monthly advance payment of premium tax credit (APTC) | The credit the Marketplace paid directly to your insurer each month, lowering what you owed at the time | Form 8962 Line 11(f) or Lines 12–23 column (f) |
If Column B shows $0 in any month when you had coverage, the Marketplace failed to calculate the SLCSP. You must look it up using the healthcare.gov Tax Tool or the equivalent state Marketplace tool. Don't leave Column B at zero — it produces an incorrect PTC.
If you had no coverage in a given month, all three columns should be blank or zero for that month.
Form 8962 is where the actual reconciliation happens. The 1095-A numbers populate Form 8962, which then computes whether you owe back excess APTC or are owed additional PTC.
1. Compute household income (Form 8962 Lines 1–5)
2. Determine annual or monthly calculation (Line 10)
3. Fill in 1095-A amounts
4. Compute the PTC
5. Reconcile
To claim PTC or have APTC reconciled, all of these must be true for the months you had Marketplace coverage:
If your final household income at year-end is below 100% FPL but you received APTC based on a higher estimate, the IRS will not require repayment as long as you weren't ineligible for other reasons (Pub 974, "Below 100% FPL" rules). This is a narrow safe harbor — don't rely on it.
Legal Citation: IRC §36B(c)(1) defines the applicable taxpayer; §36B(c)(2)(C) defines minimum essential coverage for affordability tests; Pub 974 Chapter 1 covers eligibility comprehensively.
The Marketplace must mail 1095-A by January 31. If you don't have it by mid-February:
Common errors: incorrect SLCSP in Column B, wrong APTC amounts, wrong covered individuals, wrong start/end dates. To correct:
This usually means the Marketplace didn't apply for a benchmark plan calculation (often happens if you applied late or had eligibility issues). Use the healthcare.gov Tax Tool for federal Marketplace, or your state's equivalent, to look up the SLCSP for your zip code, family size, and ages. Manually enter the correct number on Form 8962.
This is rare but indicates either identity theft (someone enrolled using your SSN) or a Marketplace data error. Contact the Marketplace immediately and IRS identity theft hotline (1-800-908-4490).
If two tax households share a single 1095-A policy, the amounts must be allocated. Form 8962 Part IV (Lines 30–34) handles this. Without an agreement, the default allocation is 50/50. If you and the other party can agree on a different split, document it (file with both returns): but the total across both returns must equal the 1095-A amounts.
To make this concrete, here's how Lisa's 2025 tax year reconciliation works.
Background:
The Marketplace sends Lisa a 1095-A showing the same amounts every month (no mid-year changes):
| Column | Monthly | Annual |
|---|---|---|
| A: Monthly enrollment premium | $480 | $5,760 |
| B: Monthly SLCSP premium | $420 | $5,040 |
| C: Monthly APTC paid to insurer | $380 | $4,560 |
Lisa's actual income places her at 279% FPL ($42,000 ÷ $15,060 = 279%). At 279% FPL under the ARPA/IRA-extended applicable figures (2025), her contribution percentage is roughly 4% (interpolated from Table 2 of Form 8962 instructions — verify exact 2025 figure).
Form 8962 Annual Calculation (Line 11):
| 8962 Line | Description | Amount |
|---|---|---|
| Line 1 | Tax family size | 1 |
| Line 2a | Modified AGI | $42,000 |
| Line 3 | Household income | $42,000 |
| Line 4 | FPL (HH of 1, 2024 table) | $15,060 |
| Line 5 | Income % of FPL | 279% |
| Line 8a | Applicable Figure | ~0.04 (verify) |
| Line 8b | Annual contribution | $1,680 |
| Line 11(a) | Annual enrollment premium | $5,760 |
| Line 11(b) | Annual SLCSP premium | $5,040 |
| Line 11(c) | Annual contribution | $1,680 |
| Line 11(d) | Max premium assistance ($5,040 − $1,680) | $3,360 |
| Line 11(e) | PTC allowed (lesser of $5,760 or $3,360) | $3,360 |
| Line 24 | Total PTC | $3,360 |
| Line 25 | Total APTC paid | $4,560 |
| Line 27 | Excess APTC | $1,200 |
In this scenario, APTC ($4,560) exceeded the allowed PTC ($3,360), so Lisa actually owes back the difference. With Lisa at 279% FPL, the excess APTC repayment limit (single, 200–300% FPL) caps her repayment at $975 (2025 figure from Pub 974 Table 5; verify for the actual year).
Result: Lisa repays $975 (capped). The remaining $225 of excess APTC is forgiven under the repayment limit. The $975 flows to Schedule 2 Line 1a and increases her tax due.
If Lisa's actual income matched her estimate at 200% FPL, her applicable figure under ARPA/IRA was 0%. Her annual contribution would be $0, allowed PTC would be $5,040 (full SLCSP), but capped at the actual premium of $5,760 — so PTC = $5,040.
Comparing PTC ($5,040) to APTC ($4,560), Lisa is owed an additional $480 net Premium Tax Credit (Form 8962 Line 26): this flows to Schedule 3 Line 9 as a refundable credit.
Key takeaway: the difference between estimating $30,000 vs. earning $42,000 cost Lisa $1,455 in tax outcome ($480 refund she didn't get + $975 she had to repay). Updating income estimates with the Marketplace mid-year — every time you get a new client, raise your rates, or take a side gig — minimizes year-end surprises.
Problem: Filer receives 1095-A, didn't get APTC (Column C is all zeros), and figures they don't need to reconcile.
Impact: If you had any Marketplace coverage and want to claim the Premium Tax Credit, you must file Form 8962 even if APTC was zero. Filing without it forfeits the credit. If you did receive APTC and skip 8962, the IRS rejects the return and blocks future APTC eligibility until you reconcile.
Solution: Always attach Form 8962 if you have a 1095-A. Even with zero APTC, Form 8962 establishes whether you qualify for net PTC.
Problem: Filer uses the current-year FPL table to compute Line 4 instead of the prior year's FPL table.
Impact: Wrong income percentage, wrong applicable figure, wrong PTC. Underclaim or overclaim the credit.
Solution: Form 8962 instructions specify which year's FPL applies to each tax year. For tax year 2025, use the 2024 FPL (released January 2024). For tax year 2026, use the 2025 FPL. The IRS publishes both in the Form 8962 instructions appendix.
Problem: Married couple files MFS and each tries to claim the full 1095-A on their separate return.
Impact: Combined total exceeds the 1095-A amounts, IRS rejects both returns or assesses penalties.
Solution: Generally, MFS filers can't claim PTC at all (limited exceptions for domestic abuse or spousal abandonment per Form 8962 instructions). If the exception applies, file Form 8962 and check the box. Otherwise, switch to MFJ if both want to access the credit.
Problem: Filer files the return using the original 1095-A, then gets a "corrected" 1095-A in March or April.
Impact: Original return has wrong PTC. IRS will eventually receive the corrected 1095-A and issue a CP2000 notice with proposed adjustment plus interest and penalties.
Solution: File Form 1040-X (Amended Return) with the corrected Form 8962. Note "1095-A corrected" in the explanation. Doing it proactively avoids notice penalties.
Problem: Divorced parents share a single 1095-A policy that covers their child. Each parent files separately and each claims the full Column A and Column B amounts.
Impact: Combined total reported on Forms 8962 is double the actual 1095-A. IRS rejects or audits both returns.
Solution: Allocate per Form 8962 Part IV. If parents agree, document the percentage split. If not, the default is 50/50. Each parent's 8962 Line 11 amounts get multiplied by their allocation percentage.
For self-employed filers, the year-end true-up on Form 8962 turns on one number: your final AGI. Jupid connects to your bank and tracks self-employment income as it arrives, so when your year-to-date earnings drift from the estimate you gave the Marketplace, you can update it before December 31 and avoid a surprise APTC repayment. It categorizes business expenses at 95.9% accuracy, and because a lower AGI means a lower required contribution and a larger credit, an accurate expense record is worth real dollars here. Ask your AI accountant in WhatsApp or iMessage "If I earn $45,000 instead of $30,000, how much APTC do I repay?" and get an answer with the IRS citation attached.
Form 1095-A is informational, but the reconciliation it triggers on Form 8962 is consequential. For self-employed filers especially — where final AGI is hard to predict at the start of the year — the gap between estimated and actual income is the difference between getting a refund and owing money back.
The strategies that actually move the needle:
The Marketplace handles the paperwork. Form 8962 handles the math. Your job is to keep the income estimate honest throughout the year so the year-end true-up is small.
If you're using Claude, ChatGPT, or another AI agent to help fill out Form 8962 from your 1095-A, we've published an open-source skill that gives the agent exact line-by-line instructions, validation checks, ask-don't-guess prompts, and worked examples — the same logic Jupid uses internally.
→ jupid-tax/jupid-skills on GitHub — forms/form-1095-a/SKILL.md
For Claude Code: cp -r jupid-skills/forms/form-1095-a ~/.claude/skills/. For the Anthropic SDK, load SKILL.md into the system prompt and the references/ files on demand. For browser-automation runtimes, filing.md covers the e-file or paper-file workflow.
Disclaimer
This article provides general information about Form 1095-A and the Premium Tax Credit and should not be considered tax or financial advice. Premium Tax Credit rules are complex and depend heavily on household income, family size, coverage details, and applicable legislation. The ARPA/IRA-enhanced subsidies expired on December 31, 2025; for 2026 the pre-2021 rules, including the 400% FPL cliff, apply unless Congress restores the enhancements. Verify the current Form 8962 instructions and IRS Publication 974 before filing, since any legislative change can be retroactive. For advice specific to your situation, consult with a qualified tax professional.
Tax Year: 2026 (enhanced PTC subsidies expired 12/31/2025; worked example reconciles a 2025 return) Last Updated: July 7, 2026

CEO & Co-Founder
Fintech CEO with 10+ years building accounting and financial technology products. Previously co-founded and scaled an AI-powered accounting platform to $30M revenue and 100K+ business users, achieving 30,000 customers per accountant through automation — recognized by CNBC as a top fintech company. Holds a Master's in Management Information Systems. At Jupid, he leads the development of AI-native bookkeeping, tax, and compliance tools designed for freelancers and small business owners.

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