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Retirement tax questions
If I understand your question, your employer did not withhold 401(k) contributions from your pay in previous years. In 2024, your employer did withhold 401(k) contributions. The amount you had withheld in 2024 included the amounts that should have been withheld in previous years, but wasn't. Your W-2 shows your 401(k) withholding by year on your W-2 and your employer made a matching contribution in 2024 for the current year and the previous years when nothing was withheld. If that is correct, you don't need to do anything other than report the total amount of 401(k) withholding reported on your W-2. There is no way, and no reason to identify it by the year it should have been withheld because it wasn't. There won't be any problem as long as your total 401(k) withholding is not more than the contribution limit of $23,000 for 2024. If you're age 50 or older, the additional $7,500 in catch-up contributions, would raise your employee deferral limit to $30,500.
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