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No, if you took a distribution from your retirement account then they are supposed to give you a 1099-R. Did you maybe get a loan instead of a distribution?
If it is a loan from a 401(k) account then this is not reported on a federal tax return. If you default on the loan or are separated from the company without paying off the loan, then it is a distribution and you will receive a Form 1099-R.
Please check with your company about the details.
IT was not a cares act, but rather an old employment retirement account. I have just a letter showing the monthly payments. It is not a form
@martijett wrote:
IT was not a cares act, but rather an old employment retirement account. I have just a letter showing the monthly payments. It is not a form
ANY distribution from a retirement account requires a 1099-R. Contact the plan administrator for copy. Perhaps it was lost in the mail.
The only forms you enter regarding retirement account distributions (whether related to the Cares Act or not) are 1099-R forms. Request a copy, but don't try to enter any distributions from a letter - it won't work out. @martijett
The provisions of the Cares Act allow you to waive the penalty and spread the tax over 3 years, but the penalty and tax are based on data from the 1099-R.
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