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Level 3
posted Apr 3, 2021 11:25:22 AM

Advice on reporting Roth IRA excess contributions + earnings when 1099-R will have conflicting info.

I’m receiving contradictory info on how excess contributions I made in 2019 & 2020 should be filed with the IRS. While brokerage firms technically do not provide tax advice, they do compile my 1099-R on returned contributions + earnings and/or normal distributions taken on Roth IRA’s including the excess contribution correction I completed in Jan 2021. So if I file my return with info that doesn’t line up I suspect the IRS will flag it.

 

It would be highly appreciated if I could get some clarity on this as it’s honestly becoming a nightmare and monopolizing all my time. And for what it’s worth, I’ve sought professional assistance from CPA's on this topic offering to pay them to complete my taxes, and none seem to know how to handle the situation, which is shocking to be honest. I’m hoping to put this to bed once & for all with this post, and any advice with supporting tax code documentation would be appreciated.

 

So here are the details:

 

In Jan 2020, I opened a Roth IRA (my only one). Added $6k for 2019, and $6k for 2020. Earnings were accumulated via stocks that appreciated. In Jan 2021, realized I over-contributed based on my MAGI, then immediately liquidated my stocks and completed a single excess contribution correction form to withdrawal ALL funds in my Roth IRA account (that covered 2019 AND 2020 allowed contributions + excess contributions + associated earnings). Funds finished transferring over to my individual brokerage account Feb 2021, which is before the 2020 tax deadline. 

 

note: I worked w/ 2 different reps at the brokerage firm; the first initially to complete the excess correction form in Jan 2021, then a second to get the 1099-R info just now in April 2021 to help me fill out my 2020 amended federal where I would report earnings on my excess contributions.

 

A. My brokerage firm provided the following guidance:

 

Since your contributions for 2019 & 2020 were both made in the 2020 tax year (Jan 2020), and the excess contribution correction form was completed before the 2020 tax deadline (Jan 2021), this is considered a timely withdraw of both. Your earnings from both will be added to your MAGI & taxed in the 2020 tax year. You will not need to pay the 6% penalty for 2019, nor 2020, but will have to pay the 10% penalty on earnings in the 2020 tax year since you’re under 59 1/2. Since a single excess correction form was completed, you will get a single 1099-R in Jan of 2022 that will have the following info on it:

 

In Box 1, will be the gross distribution of $12000 + earnings from it.

In Box 2a, will be the earnings from it only.

In Box 7, will be two codes “P” & “J”. 

 

I mentioned that based on my MAGI, some of the contributions, and thus earnings, were actually considered “allowed” and not excess so wouldn’t those earnings be taxed in 2021 as a normal distribution added to my MAGI? To which the rep replied, since I claimed everything as excess, the earnings would be added to my 2020 MAGI and taxed in that year. And that if I would have split it up correctly, I’d still be paying taxes on the earnings, just in two different years.

 

The rep even bounced this off his colleagues that came to the same conclusion.

 

B. The advice I’ve gotten on the forum are in the two following links. One of the links is from a post of mine, while the second was posted by another member.

 

My post w/ answer on p.1:

https://ttlc.intuit.com/community/retirement/discussion/re-made-excess-contribution-for-new-roth-ira-in-jan-2020-withdrew-via-excess-contribution-form-in/01/1888444#M123380

 

Similar post w/ comparable answer on p.2:

https://ttlc.intuit.com/community/retirement/discussion/excess-roth-ira-contribution-made-in-2017-and-withdrawn-before-filing-in-2018-when-and-how-do-i-pay/00/559250

 

Questions:

 

1. Are the brokerage firm reps or the advice from professionals on this forum, correct and why? For instance, is there any IRS documentation to support the advice provided? The brokerage rep indicated his reasoning is outlined in Form 8606, but didn’t cite any specific sections, and told me to provide it to the tax professional. That's a start but it's still vague. So, if it's spelled out somewhere that would give me the confidence to lean one way or the other.

 

2. The info that will be included in my 2021 1099-R for 2019 / 2020 with doesn't line up with how tax professionals on this forum are asking me to report my excess contributions + earnings. Let's assume that the guidance on this forum is the correct way to report everything. Would that mean I would need to speak with my brokerage firm to have them amend my 1099-R to reflect that?

 

Tacking on some additional context to the end that’s important:

Based on the advice in the links above, I started amending my returns in early March 2021. I submitted a 2019 amended federal return on March 1 reporting the $6k contributions & paying the 6% penalty. The IRS cashed the checked, but I’m still waiting to hear back on if it was accepted / rejected. No 2019 amended state hasn’t been filed yet as I still need to wait on the federal status. 

 

For 2020, both my federal / state were accepted in mid Feb 2021, but the excess contributions + earnings were not reported on them, nor was a second 2019 6% penalty (e.g. b/c I didn’t withdraw the 2019 excess contributions by Dec 31, 2020). 

 

My orig 2020 fed / state returns were submitted w/out them b/c that’s the I guidance I was given early on by my brokerage firm AND some TurboTax reps I spoke to over the phone. Only when I later learned of the newer info in the links above did I start amending my 2019 2020 returns. And I only made this last post about conflicting info when I was amending my 2020 federal return and called my brokerage firm to get my 1099-R info, and they informed the info on my 1099-R was different than how I was reporting it on my amended returns.

 

 

 

0 33 3602
24 Replies
Level 15
Apr 3, 2021 3:05:24 PM

The answer I gave you previously is correct.

 

Your 2019 and 2020 contributions are separate and handled differently.

 

Your 2020 contribution was removed before the due date of your 2020 tax return so as long as the earnings attributed to the 2020 contribution was also returned then the 1099-R code PJ entered in the 2020 tax return will make it penalty free and only the earnings will be taxable income.

 

For the rules on this see https://www.irs.gov/publications/p590a

What if You Contribute Too Much?

A 6% excise tax applies to any excess contribution to a Roth IRA.

Withdrawal of excess contributions.

For purposes of determining excess contributions, any contribution that is withdrawn on or before the due date (including extensions) for filing your tax return for the year is treated as an amount not contributed. This treatment only applies if any earnings on the contributions are also withdrawn. The earnings are considered earned and received in the year the excess contribution was made.

 

If you timely filed your 2020 tax return without withdrawing a contribution that you made in 2020, you can still have the contribution returned to you within 6 months of the due date of your 2020 tax return, excluding extensions. If you do, file an amended return with "Filed pursuant to section 301.9100-2" written at the top. Report any related earnings on the amended return and include an explanation of the withdrawal. Make any other necessary changes on the amended return.

 

Your 2019 contribution (even though it was made in 2020 is still a 2019 contribution)  must be reported on your 2019 tax return. 

 

The due date for 2019 was April 15 (extended to July 15 because of COVID) 2020.   Because the 2019 contribution was not removed until 2021, it was beyond both the 2019 due date and extended due date so is cannot get the treatment quoted above for 2020 and the 6% excise penalty applies for 2019 that requires that a 2019 5329 be filed with the penalty.

 

That 2019 excess was also not removed in 2020 and it was NOT a 2020 contribution so the "remove by due date" rules do not apply.   Because that 2019 excess remained in the IRA the entire 2020 year then there is another 2020 excess that must be reported on another 2020 5329 form for the same 6% penalty a second time.

 

However, you do not report the earnings on the 2019 excess since removing the earnings only applies to the timely return of excess by the due date.   Earnings are not a contribution and when the 6% penalty is applied the earnings are immaterial.

 

(What many financial institutions seem to overlook is that a 2019 contribution made *in* 2020 is still a 2019 contribution so the 2019 excess rules apply and not the 2020 rules.)

 

I hope that explains it.

Level 3
Apr 3, 2021 7:07:39 PM

Thanks, @macuser_22.

 

Where I think some of the confusion lies is with the wording of Publication 590-A, which says “The earnings are considered earned and received in the year the excess contribution was made”. If interpreted literally it would mean earnings returned on excess contributions made in 2020 but attributed to 2019 would be associated with 2020. I think that’s where the brokerage firms and others like myself are being tripped up.

 

So if your conclusion that “a 2019 contribution made *in* 2020 is still a 2019 contribution so the 2019 excess rules apply and not the 2020 rules.”  is the correct way forward, I do have some additional questions:

 

1. Since this has caused confusion for so many, I’m just curious how you were able to get clarity on this over the years. Is it just experience filing similar returns, interacting with the IRS, etc.?

 

2. Do I need to contact my brokerage firm to update my 1099-R? In other words, does the IRS care if what I report in my amended returns differs from what my brokerage firm reported in the 1099-R b/c they will differ and I’m concerned this will spell red flags for them (a rejected return and/or an audit). I also imagine I’ll need to make good use of the interview section as well.

Level 15
Apr 3, 2021 7:49:18 PM


@uk05 wrote:

Thanks, @macuser_22.

 

Where I think some of the confusion lies is with the wording of Publication 590-A, which says “The earnings are considered earned and received in the year the excess contribution was made”. If interpreted literally it would mean earnings returned on excess contributions made in 2020 but attributed to 2019 would be associated with 2020. I think that’s where the brokerage firms and others like myself are being tripped up.

 

 


That is correct.    But it is not referring to a calendar year, it refers to the tax year.    The tax law allows 2019 contributions until the due date of the tax return so any 2019 contribution made before that due date is a 2019 contribution. 

 

It also says:

 

Earnings Includible in Income

You must include in income any earnings on the contributions you withdraw. Include the earnings in income for the year in which you made the contributions, not the year in which you withdraw them.

 

The year "in which you made the contributions" is 2019.

 

The wording is confusing because they do not explicitly say "calendar year" or "tax year".

 

The 1099-R instructions are more clear for reporting the excess.  The return of excess Roth contribution in 2020 requires a 1099-R with a code PJ in box 7 that means "taxable in 2019".   The taxable amount is in box 2a which is the earnings.   That can ONLY be reported on a 2019 tax return.

 

Roth IRA.

For a distribution from a Roth IRA, report the total distribution in box 1 and leave box 2a blank except in the case of an IRA revocation or account closure and a recharacterization, earlier. Use Code J, Q, or T as appropriate in box 7. Use Code 8 or P, if applicable, in box 7 with Code J. Do not combine Code Q or T with any other codes.

However, for the distribution of excess Roth IRA contributions, report the gross distribution in box 1 and only the earnings in box 2a. Enter Code J and Code 8 or P in box 7.

Level 3
Apr 3, 2021 8:44:02 PM

I'm confused now by your comment:

 

The 1099-R instructions are more clear for reporting the excess.  The return of excess Roth contribution in 2020 requires a 1099-R with a code PJ in box 7 that means "taxable in 2019".   The taxable amount is in box 2a which is the earnings.   That can ONLY be reported on a 2019 tax return.

 

I thought I wasn't reporting any earnings for my 2019 allowed or excess contributions on my 2019 amended return b/c the 2019 tax deadline had already past (e.g. the excess correction form that triggered the distribution of all contributions + earnings for 2019 & 2020 was completed in Jan 2021). Thus, the distribution of 2019 earnings in 2021 would be taxed in 2021 as income.   Also, I amended my 2019 federal & added my 2019 allowed + excess contributions, which figured out the 6% penalty, which I sent in as a check w/ it. I'll then pay the same 2019 6% penalty once more on my amended 2020 federal since 2019 excess contributions weren't removed before Dec 31 2020.

 

Also, the other question I posed was does my brokerage firm need to update my 1099-R to reflect the guidance you're giving me?  What Fidelity is reporting is at the top of my original post.

Level 15
Apr 3, 2021 9:44:29 PM

Your previous comment confused me - I was answering your comment and not the original question. Your quote from the IRS pub refers to a "timely removal".  Your 2020 contribution was a timely removal so the earnings on the 2020 excess are reported in 2020 not 2021.

I was responding to that.  

 

Your 2019 excess was not removed until 2021 so it was not a "timely removal" so my above comment does not apply  to it.    The 2019 excess can only be removed as a regular distribution and not the earnings. 

New Member
Apr 4, 2021 7:44:12 AM

@macuser_22 

I'm in a similar situation. Made a roth contribytion for 2020 in January 2021. It was an excess contribution. I withdrew it and gain. Do I report it in 2021 or 2020?

I found this online: https://www.wolterskluwer.com/en/expert-insights/ira-reporting-excess-contributions-and-recharacterizations

It says report in 2021 is this wrong?

Thank you!

Level 15
Apr 4, 2021 8:12:09 AM


@Confusedtax12345 wrote:

@macuser_22 

I'm in a similar situation. Made a roth contribytion for 2020 in January 2021. It was an excess contribution. I withdrew it and gain. Do I report it in 2021 or 2020?

I found this online: https://www.wolterskluwer.com/en/expert-insights/ira-reporting-excess-contributions-and-recharacterizations

It says report in 2021 is this wrong?

Thank you!


That article does not say to report it in 2021 - it says: If a contribution is made during one calendar year but removed in the following calendar year (before the tax-filing deadline, including extensions), report using Code P.    And code P on a 2021 1099-R means "taxable in 2020".       (A Roth will have code JP - J meaning Roth).

 

If a 2020 contribution returned in 2021 as a "return of contribution and earnings" then it will be reported to you on a 2021 1099-R box 7 code PJ that means taxable in 2020.  It would be entered on your amended 2020 tax return when you receive the 1099-R next January.

 

Entering a 2021 code JP in the 2021 TurboTax will tell you to amend 2020.

New Member
Apr 4, 2021 8:30:26 AM

@macuser_22 

Thank you. It was confusing because the article said for the example to use code 8 on the 1099R not P.

 

"John Johnson, age 45, made a $7,000 traditional IRA contribution for 2020 on January 10, 2021....removed it in 2021....

In our example of John Johnson’s $1,000 IRA excess contribution, the contribution was made and removed in the same calendar year and therefore the appropriate distribution code in box 7 of the 2021 IRS Form 1099-R is “8”. "

Level 15
Apr 4, 2021 8:49:52 AM


@Confusedtax12345 wrote:

@macuser_22 

Thank you. It was confusing because the article said for the example to use code 8 on the 1099R not P.

 

"John Johnson, age 45, made a $7,000 traditional IRA contribution for 2020 on January 10, 2021....removed it in 2021....

In our example of John Johnson’s $1,000 IRA excess contribution, the contribution was made and removed in the same calendar year and therefore the appropriate distribution code in box 7 of the 2021 IRS Form 1099-R is “8”. "


The wording is confusing.    Tax law allows you to make a 2020 IRA contribution *in* 2020 up to the due date of the 2020 tax return which is April 15 (now extended to May 17) 2021.    The law treats it as a 2020 contribution made in 2020.   Nothing about a 2020 contribution goes on a 2021 tax return. 

 

 

 

 

Level 3
Apr 4, 2021 9:24:48 AM

@macuser_22 

 

I only mentioned the quote from publication 590-A b/c you had mentioned it as supporting documentation for what I interpreted as both my 2019 & 2020 contributions in the orig post, but you're saying said publication is for a "timely" return only so that only applies my 2020 contribution only, which I understand.

 

Moving forward, the question I last posed, which still stands, is do I need to contact my brokerage firm & ask that they update the 1099-R they will send me AND the IRS in 2022? Or does the 1099-R not matter as long as I explain why I’m reporting my 1099-R a different way in the interview section?

 

As noted in the original post, the brokerage firm will report both the 2020 & 2019 contribution earnings as “timely”. As their retirement rep said, they think 2019 is also timely b/c the contribution was made in the 2020 calendar year (which you’ve already mentioned is incorrect and explained why) and I completed the excess contribution form before the 2020 tax deadline for it. They then provided the box 1, 2a & 7 details which I also listed in the original post. 

 

Thanks for your help on this one.

Level 15
Apr 4, 2021 9:56:14 AM

I apologize - I believe you are correct - if a contribution is made AND removed in the same calendar year use a code 8,  if made in one year and removed in the next year use code P.

 

@dmertz can you review this thread and straighten me out - I am finding conflicting information .

Level 15
Apr 4, 2021 12:21:26 PM

Since the contributions were made in 2020 and were not returned until 2021, nothing about this is reportable with code 8.

 

The amount that you can request to be distributed as a return of contribution can be up to the entire amount of the contribution, not just the amount of the contribution that is excess.  If all of the contribution is returned, all of the associated earnings are part of the distribution of the returned contribution and are to be included in the gross and taxable amounts of the Form 1099-R that reports the distribution of the returned contribution.

 

To my knowledge, the IRS has never resolved the ambiguity that exists with regard to whether the deadline for obtaining a return of the 2019 contribution made in 2020 is the due date of the 2019 tax return or the due date of the 2020 tax return.  Over the years I've come to opposite conclusions on this, so I generally leave it up to the IRA custodian to decide.  Because section 219(f)(3) creates the legal fiction that a contribution made for the previous year is deemed to have been made on the last day of the previous year, my current leaning is that the deadline was the due date of the 2019 tax return, which differs from the treatment being provided by the IRA custodian in this case.  However, it's not clear that this legal fiction applies to section 408(d)(4) for a return of contribution.

Level 15
Apr 4, 2021 5:40:54 PM

The moral of the story is, wait until after Dec 31 to know your exact income, and avoid excess contributions !

Level 15
Apr 4, 2021 8:44:09 PM


@dmertz wrote:

  Because section 219(f)(3) creates the legal fiction that a contribution made for the previous year is deemed to have been made on the last day of the previous year, my current leaning is that the deadline was the due date of the 2019 tax return, which differs from the treatment being provided by the IRA custodian in this case.  However, it's not clear that this legal fiction applies to section 408(d)(4) for a return of contribution.


Thanks.  That IRC reference is what I was looking for.    That seems to make it clear that  Congresses intent was that contributions made by the due date are to be treated as if they were made in the prior tax year. 

 

The IRS really needs to clearly say so in the pubs since even professionals get it wrong.  (Not everyone reads the actual law that is much clearer than the IRS.)

Level 15
Apr 5, 2021 7:58:55 AM

The closest thing I've found to IRS guidance is in the IRS discussion of the Tax Reform Act of 1986 where it states in the discussion of the newly allowed ability to make nondeductible traditional IRA contributions:

 



C2: What is the rule for removing excess contributions?

 

A: Prior to the Act, section 408(d)(4)of the Code permitted individuals who had made excess contributions to an IRA to withdraw such excess IRA contributions with earnings by April 15 of the year following the year for which the contribution was made. By withdrawing the excess in such manner, the individual was able to avoid the excise tax under section 4973 of the Code applicable to excess IRA contributions. Under the Act, amounts contributed to an IRA for an individual's taxable year (both deductible and nondeductible contributions) may be treated as excess contributions and withdrawn by the individual by April 15 of the following year. Generally, if an individual is not yet 59-1/2 at the time of the withdrawal, upon withdrawing such amounts the individual will be required to pay the early withdrawal tax under section 72(t) on the earnings (if any) for the year for which the contribution was made.


This refers to removing the contribution by April 15 of the year following the year for which the contribution was made.

Level 2
Apr 28, 2021 1:40:45 PM

I have this situation as well and wanted to confirm that I should wait to include the earned income and the associated withheld FIT when the 1099-R is generated which will require an amended return since these type of 1099-R forms are generated usually in January.  I have no 1099-R form to support the recognition of the passive earned income that was transferred back to my taxable account from my IRA account, thus the need for an amended return. I returned the net earned income and the contribution of 7000 back to my taxable account prior to the deadline for filing the 2020 tax return, now May 17th.

 

Thanks

WK

Expert Alumni
Apr 28, 2021 2:31:11 PM

If you have already filed your 2020 tax return, you will need to amend it when you received Form 1099-R next year.   However, if you have not filed your 2020 tax return, you can report the earnings before you file which will save you from having to amend it later.   You can enter a substitute Form 1099-R to report the earnings.   Then when you received the form next year, you will enter it and can ignore the message to amend.   The FIT will be correctly applied to the 2021 tax return, but the codes in Box 7 will reference 2020, so the entries will not be applicable to the 2021 return.   If you have already filed the 2020 return, then you should wait and amend when you receive the form next year.   

 

To use Form 4852 to prepare a substitute Form 1099-R, you go through the Form 1099-R section itself.    Then, check the box showing you need to prepare a substitute Form 1099-R and follow the instructions on the screen.  

 

@WEK       See the picture below for a visual reference:

 

 

 

Level 2
Apr 28, 2021 4:03:28 PM

Thanks Dawn C,

 

I am working on my return as your timely email response came in.  I will try and use the software which will take you through the Form 4852.  I would prefer to do this over amending a return later.  I provided all the numbers to the Investment Firm so I know all the inputs just concerned about any special codes.

 

Another question related to this is, currently I have not entered in the IRA contribution for tax year 2020 because I had put it in in early 2020 and removed in March 2021 before I filed my return so in a literal answer to the software question in No because I removed the contribution and the earnings associated with it back to my taxable account.  I think this will align with the late 1099-R for 2020 to be received in January 2021, and it will not require an amendment because it has already been incorporated into the 2020 return.

 

Let me know if I am proceeding properly.

 

Thanks

WEK

Expert Alumni
Apr 28, 2021 8:28:22 PM

Yes, you performed these steps correctly as I can see.

Level 3
Apr 29, 2021 2:12:25 PM

@DawnC 

 

I noticed you suggested that for those that will need to amend their 2020 return, its best to wait until the 1099-R is provided early next year.

 

"If you have already filed the 2020 return, then you should wait and amend when you receive the form next year."

 

I've already filed my 2020 federal / state returns and both were accepted. I'll need to amend my 2020 federal to account for the earnings gained from excess contributions that were returned in Jan 2021 for 2020 tax year.

 

While my IRA custodian did provide my 1099-R info in a custom doc that I requested (includes payer info, box 1, 2a, 7 info), I'm evaluating the pros / cons of filing now vs waiting until next year. I'm interested to know what factors you looked at when making the suggestion.

 

Amend now

- Ability to e-file, which is much faster (pro)

- Pay taxes & penalties immediately to get it over with (pro)

- 1099-R doc is not available yet. Must use IRA custodian provided info, which leaves room for error that could lead to me having to amend again (con)

 

Amend next year

- E-file option may not be available; would have to mail, which takes longer up to 16 weeks (con). Further amendments could push that out even further.

- Waiting to pay taxes & penalties (con)

- 1099-R will be available with official info (pro)

- Are there any penalties for waiting?

 

Any insight to make the decision easier would be appreciated. Thank you!

Level 15
Apr 29, 2021 2:33:39 PM

@uk05  The ONLY reason to report it now is to avoid the inconvenience of amending.     Since you already filed then you should not amend until you have the actual 1099-R - there is no advantage  to amend now whatsoever.   Amended returns reguardless of how they are filed are currently taking about 6 months to process.   The only tax is on the box 2a amount.

 

If between now and next year there is another reason to amend or if the actually 1099-R is different from what you expect then you would need to amend the amended return which can lead to many problems and delays.

Level 3
Apr 29, 2021 3:56:14 PM

@macuser_22 

 

Thank you!

New Member
Oct 15, 2021 9:04:54 AM

Hi @DaveF1006 

 

I have a similar situation but want to confirm 3 things (below).

 

Summary:

In early 2021 I funded a Roth IRA with $6000 for tax year 2020. Before filing taxes, I realized I had already maxed out my Traditional IRA so I took a return of excess contribution and earning (about $10,400). I applied for an extension and am about to file today. I understand the earnings are taxable in 2020 and I'm trying to include them in my income. 

 

1) I do NOT enter the excess contribution in the deductions section since I removed it (and earnings on it) in a timely manner, correct?

2) What code should I use on the 1099-R I am filling myself (since broker will not send me one until next year) - 8 or T or something else? 

3) Should I enter entire distributed amount (excess contribution and earnings) in box 1 and just the taxable earning in box 2? 

 

Thank you!

Level 15
Oct 15, 2021 10:42:12 AM


@Yavor wrote:

Hi @DaveF1006 

 

I have a similar situation but want to confirm 3 things (below).

 

Summary:

In early 2021 I funded a Roth IRA with $6000 for tax year 2020. Before filing taxes, I realized I had already maxed out my Traditional IRA so I took a return of excess contribution and earning (about $10,400). I applied for an extension and am about to file today. I understand the earnings are taxable in 2020 and I'm trying to include them in my income. 

 

1) I do NOT enter the excess contribution in the deductions section since I removed it (and earnings on it) in a timely manner, correct?

2) What code should I use on the 1099-R I am filling myself (since broker will not send me one until next year) - 8 or T or something else? 

3) Should I enter entire distributed amount (excess contribution and earnings) in box 1 and just the taxable earning in box 2? 

 

Thank you!


*IF* you requested a return of contributions due to an excess contribution and the excess was removed before the extended due date of the 2020 tax return and the earnings were also returned and you know that the IRA custodian will report this as a return of contribution and not as a normal Roth distribution but as a return of contribution with a code "JP" in box 7 - then:

You can just report it now and ignore the 1099-R when it comes unless there is Box 4 Federal Tax withholding and/or box 14 State withholding. Then you must also enter the 2021 1099-R into the 2021 tax return since the withholding is reported in the year that the tax was withheld.

The 2021 code JP will not do anything in 2021 but the withholding will be applied to 2021.

You would enter the 1099-R with the total distribution in box 1 (the contribution plus the earnings),

The earnings in box 2a,

Enter code "P" in box 7 (Top) - don t worry that it will say "taxable in 2019 "

Enter code "J" in box 7 (Bottom).

On the "Which year" screen say that this is a 2021 1099-R. - That makes it taxable in 2020 and not 2019

After the 1099-R summary screen press continue.

If you are over 59 1/2 then on the "Lets see if we can lower your tax bill" enter the box 2a amount in the "Another Reason" box to eliminate the 10% early withdrawal penalty on the earnings.

Enter the explanation for the excess contribution and that you are reporting a 2021 1099-R on your 2020 tax return to avoid having to amend in 2021.

The box 2a earnings will be taxable income reported on line 4b on the 1040 form and if under age 59 1/2 will also be subject to a 10% penalty on a 5329 form that will be reported on line 59 on the 1040 Schedule 4 form.