 Also add the home mortgage interest, the thing that usually kicks us over. So I'm gonna say deductions and let's go to the itemized deductions, interest. And let's say the interest was at like 15,000. So now schedule A's populated and now I can say, okay, we're over the threshold of the 15,000 and then it's pulling in that 2,900. So the 2,900 is basically taking the 4,684 and we were at the 7,000, the 7,900 minus the 10% of the AGI, which is 50,000 times 10%, 5,000, gets us to the 2,900, which is pulling over to the schedule A and it's pulling it into the category of the casualty and theft losses. So now let's imagine that it was a qualified disaster situation. And again, I'm just giving like a general idea of how these are populated and you wanna look up the actual issue that's in your particular location, but let's go back on over and say that we have a qualified, we would need the address of the place that it took place in order to populate it as well. But let's pick now, let's say it was a California. Wildfire disaster, now let's say it's a federally declared qualified disaster. So a generic federally declared qualified. I'm gonna say California, let's just pick a California code. I'm just picking one here and let's say, I'll pick, I'm not sure the code matches, but I'll pick one there and then everything else will remain the same. So now it's qualified is what I'm trying to point out as being the difference. So now it's pulling in here. It went from a casualty and theft loss to other itemized deductions. And now it says net qualified disaster loss. It's calculated a little bit differently over here on the form 4684, where it had the $500 deduction and you don't have that same 10% thing that's happened at the bottom of AGI, which was a big issue. In other words, if I go back on over and say, there's the 7,500, if I bring my net income back up to 100,000, I go to my wages, my net income is at 100,000 again, then it's still at the 7,500. I don't have that AGI kind of thing. And also now, what if I wasn't itemizing? What if I didn't own my home and I wasn't paying this 15,000 of interest? I don't get that deduction. So I can go then, let's bring that back off the table and then I'm gonna go back on over. And so now on the scale, I still have a schedule A, you can see, but now it's a schedule A with the standard deduction kind of thing embedded in it. So now once again, it's not on the casualty side, it's in the other itemized deductions. So these things are kind of linked together now because this is one of the big ones that would be in either of these categories depending on the situation. But now it's a net qualified disaster and you can see it pulled in the 7,500 from the 4684 just like before, but we wouldn't have got a benefit from it because we weren't itemizing and that's not gonna kick us over the threshold in and of itself of the 12,950 to itemize. So it gives us the 12,950. So now notice what it's doing. There's the itemized or the standard deduction plus the 7,500. So you see, right, we're taking the 12,950 plus the 7,500 forcing us to basically get a benefit from this at the 20,450 and that's what's pulling over to the schedule A. So it's a little bit tricky how they kind of work that schedule A in these disasters. So it's gotta be a federally declared disaster, is it a qualified disaster that could impact where it goes on the schedule A and then you may not have the same kind of threshold requirements if it's a qualified type of disaster. So you wanna kind of dive into those qualified or those federally declared disaster areas and do more research on them to make sure you're up to date on the rules related to them. This is just a general conceptual overview of what might happen on the tax software side.