 Okay, so the most of the information next is going to be coming from the 2022 instructions for Schedule B. The Schedule B is a schedule that you might have to use if your interest goes above a certain threshold. So that's the interest and ordinary dividends. And this is the line item on the first page of the Form 1040, where we have Line 2A, where we have the tax exempt interest here, and then we have B, the taxable interest. And then if your interest is above a certain threshold, you might have to have the Schedule B as well. We're focused on the Schedule B with the interest portion, which is Part 1, as opposed to what we'll look at later, the second part, the dividend part. Okay, so we're going to use Schedule B, Form 1040, if any of the following applies. So this means that if you have interest, you're typically going to have to take that 1099 and report it as income. If you have interest income. If your interest income goes above a certain threshold, then you're going to have to report it not only on the first page of the 1040, but you'll also have the Schedule B. You can test this out, and we will test this out using tax software as we start to populate interest income. If it goes over a certain threshold, then you've got this second schedule. So we would use Schedule B. You had over 1500 taxable interest or ordinary dividends. You received interest from a seller finance mortgage, and the buyer used the property as a personal residence. You have accrued interest from a bond. You are reporting original issue discount. That's an OID of less than the amount shown on Form 1099 OID, possibly more of an unusual situation for most investors. You are reporting interest income of less than the amount shown on a Form 1099 due to amortized bond premium. So it got some special kind of circumstances with regards to the functioning of different types of bond type of investments. And you are claiming the exclusion of interest from series EE or IUS saving bonds issued after 1989. You received interest or ordinary dividends as a nominee. You had a financial interest in or a signature authority over a financial account in a foreign country. Or you received a distribution from or were a grantor of a transfer or to a foreign trust. So Part 1, Interest, Line 1. Report on Line 1, all of your taxable interest. So obviously this would typically be from the 1099 interest. Taxable interest generally should be shown on your form's 1099 INT, form 1099 OID or substitute statements. Include interest from EE, HHH and IUS savings bonds. Also include any accrued market discount that is includeable in income and any gain on the contingent payment debt instrument. That is includeable in income as interest income. So it gets a little bit kind of messy on the certain kind of bond calculations. So usually it's a fairly straightforward situation. But you can imagine a weird kind of situations in the accruing and the interest of the bond due to the way the purchasing and the interest calculations of the bonds work. If you buy them at a premium or discount, for example, and so on. So don't report on Line 1 any tax exempt interest. So we're not including the tax exempt portion there because this is going to be the taxable line item. So the tax exempt interest later for more information. So for more information on stated interest, original issue discount, that's the OID, market discount, contingent payment, debt instrument and premium. You can see publication 550 and publication 1212.