How to properly complete Columns A, B, and C on Form 1040-X
If you are filing an amended return using Form 1040-X, the single most common mistake that causes rejection, delays, and processing confusion is filling out the three-column section incorrectly.
This portion — Columns A, B, and C — is the financial heart of the amendment.
If it’s wrong, the entire return stops.
Let’s walk through exactly how these columns must be completed and why Column B is where most taxpayers go wrong.
Understanding the Three Columns
Each column has a specific purpose:
Column A — Original amount
This should match exactly what you reported on your original return (or as the IRS adjusted it).
Column B — Net change
This is the adjustment — the difference. It must show the increase (+) or decrease (-), not the final number.
Column C — Corrected amount
This is the new total after the change has been applied.
The Most Common Error: Mixing Up Columns B and C
Many taxpayers mistakenly put the corrected number into Column B.
Example of incorrect entry:
Column A: 40,000
Column B: 41,000 (incorrect)
Column C: 41,000
This is WRONG because Column B is not for the new amount.
Column B should show ONLY the amount of change.
Correct version:
Column A: 40,000
Column B: +1,000
Column C: 41,000
Column B is always the difference, never the final amount.
How to Fill Out Columns Properly (Step-by-Step)
Step 1: Start with Column A
Enter the values exactly as originally filed.
Step 2: Enter the change in Column B
- If your income increases → use a positive number
- If your deduction increases → use a negative number
- If your withholding changes → use the net difference
Column B should always represent only the delta — the adjustment.
Step 3: Calculate Column C
Column C = Column A + Column B
This must mathematically reconcile.
Real Example: Tip Deduction Adjustment
Let’s say you forgot to claim $1,500 in deductible tip income adjustment.
Correct entries:
Column A: 50,000 (original taxable income)
Column B: -1,500 (reduction from tip deduction)
Column C: 48,500 (new corrected taxable income)
Column B shows the change only — not the end result.
If You Received a CP Notice Before the Amendment
If the IRS made adjustments to your original return (for example via a CP12 or CP2000), Column A should reflect the IRS-adjusted numbers — not the ones you originally filed.
This is crucial.
If you ignore IRS adjustments and put the wrong amount in Column A, your 1040-X will be rejected.
Why the IRS Rejects Incorrect Columns
When Columns A, B, and C are wrong:
- math doesn’t reconcile
- IRS cannot confirm change reason
- manual review gets triggered
- the amended return stalls
- refund adjustments freeze
- refund processing time increases
This is one of the top causes of Form 1040-X delay.
Additional Best Practices When Filing Form 1040-X
- attach supporting documentation for all changes
- include corrected W-2 or 1099 if applicable
- ensure explanation section is detailed (Part III)
- avoid handwritten corrections in margins
- keep numbers consistent across all fields
And most importantly:
Do not skip explaining Column B changes in the explanation section.
The IRS is not rejecting amended returns because they’re skeptical — they’re rejecting them because the numbers don’t mathematically connect.
Column A: original numbers
Column B: amount of change
Column C: corrected totals
If you get this right, the rest of the return flows smoothly.
If you get this wrong, your amendment enters the slow lane of manual review.
