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North Carolina 1099-C Cancellation of Debt [2026]: IRC 108, Form 982, and NC State Tax

State-specific rules, federal court data, and practical guidance for North Carolina residents.

What Is a 1099-C in North Carolina?

When a creditor cancels $600 or more of your debt, they are required by 26 U.S.C. 6050P to issue IRS Form 1099-C "Cancellation of Debt." Cancelled debt is generally treated as ordinary income under IRC 61(a)(11) - unless you qualify for an exclusion.

North Carolina follows federal guidance, but the state tax treatment depends on whether North Carolina's income tax code conforms to IRC 108.

Federal IRC 108 Exclusions (Apply in North Carolina)

ExclusionCode SectionNotes
Title 11 bankruptcyIRC 108(a)(1)(A)Debts discharged in Ch 7, 11, 13 are excluded. Use Form 982 box 1a.
Insolvency (outside BK)IRC 108(a)(1)(B)Excluded to extent liabilities exceed FMV of assets immediately before cancellation. Form 982 box 1b + worksheet.
Qualified farm indebtednessIRC 108(a)(1)(C)Narrow.
Qualified real property businessIRC 108(a)(1)(D)Narrow.
Qualified principal residenceIRC 108(a)(1)(E)Extended through 2025 by CAA; up to $750K principal mortgage forgiveness.
Student loan discharge (TPD / death / certain programs)IRC 108(f)ARPA extended through 2025 for most discharge contexts.

For most consumer credit card forgiveness / debt settlement outside bankruptcy, the insolvency exclusion is the workhorse. You calculate your total liabilities and total FMV of assets the day before cancellation and exclude up to the insolvency amount.

North Carolina State Income Tax Treatment of 1099-C Income

North Carolina posture: Static conform

What this means in practice:

  • If North Carolina conforms to IRC 108 (rolling or static), your bankruptcy or insolvency exclusion on the federal return flows through to your North Carolina return.
  • If North Carolina has no income tax, you owe no state tax on 1099-C income regardless of federal outcome.
  • If North Carolina is decoupled or static-conforming to an older IRC, you may need to add back or adjust on your North Carolina return. North Carolina DOR published guidance is the source of truth.

Form 982 Filing Guidance for North Carolina Taxpayers

Form 982 ("Reduction of Tax Attributes Due to Discharge of Indebtedness") is how you claim the exclusion on your federal return. Key boxes:

  • Box 1a - Discharge in a Title 11 case (bankruptcy). Always use this box if the debt was discharged in your North Carolina bankruptcy case.
  • Box 1b - Insolvency. Attach a worksheet showing total liabilities and total FMV of assets immediately before the cancellation.
  • Box 1e - Qualified principal residence indebtedness (QPRI).
  • Line 10a-10b - Reduction of basis in property (complex; often applies to QPRI).

For most North Carolina consumer-debt settlements, the 1b insolvency worksheet is the document that does the work. Preserve proof of liabilities and asset values as of the cancellation date.

1099-C Common Pitfalls in North Carolina

  1. Received a 1099-C for old charged-off debt. Sometimes creditors issue 1099-Cs years after charge-off. The IRS "identifiable event" rules (Treas. Reg. 1.6050P-1) list eight triggering events. You may be able to contest the issuance if no true "discharge" occurred.
  2. Zombie 1099-C. Debt buyer issues 1099-C then later tries to collect. IRS has informally indicated creditors cannot treat a debt as both cancelled (1099-C) and collectible, but courts are split.
  3. Settled-debt 1099-C after North Carolina bankruptcy filed. If the debt was listed in your bankruptcy schedules, the Title 11 exclusion applies; creditor may still issue the 1099-C in error.
  4. Spouse liability. Joint account 1099-C allocation can affect the insolvency worksheet; document separately-titled assets.

North Carolina Federal Bankruptcy Data

North Carolina filers frequently use bankruptcy specifically to avoid 1099-C tax exposure. Debts discharged in Title 11 are excluded from gross income under IRC 108(a)(1)(A) regardless of state conformity.

Numbers below come from the Federal Judicial Center Integrated Database covering 827 consumer bankruptcy cases from North Carolina's federal bankruptcy courts.

ChapterCases FiledDischarge RateDismissal Rate
Chapter 7273n/an/a
Chapter 13554n/an/a

Rates computed on resolved cases only. Source: FJC Integrated Database.

When North Carolina Bankruptcy Beats Settlement for Tax Reasons

Example: North Carolina household with $39,720 in unsecured debt. Settlement at 50% = roughly $19,860 forgiven = potential ordinary income of the same amount. At 22% federal + North Carolina bracket, that is real money.

If the household is insolvent, the insolvency exclusion may cover most or all of it. But if the household has meaningful equity (home, retirement), insolvency exclusion may be limited - and the 1099-C tax exposure can exceed what bankruptcy legal fees would have cost.

The Title 11 exclusion is unconditional: any debt discharged in a North Carolina Chapter 7 or 13 case is excluded regardless of solvency.