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I contributed to Roth IRA by mistake. I did not invest the amount.I realized the mistake and removed the excess contribution with in a week. Brokerage firm sent 1099R with J8 CD code.
IRS sent me letter about 1099R J8 and it keeps as showing the withdrawal amount as income and asks me to pay the tax difference. I sent letter explaining the reason for withdrawal and Roth acc statement with Roth contribution and withdrawal details. IRS still sent me letter back asking me to pay the tax difference. I also called and spoke with them before. I am not sure how to how to make IRS understand that this is withdrawal of excess contribution. Any guidance please?
Is there a form# we need to use? Or do I need to file amendement to the tax returns?
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The only reason that the IRS might legitimately treat a code J8 Form 1099-R with a zero in box 2a as entirely taxable is if they did not receive any explanation indicating the original contribution that was returned; without explanation mentioning the Roth contribution that was being returned the IRS might assume that the Roth IRA custodian incorrectly reported the distribution and that it constituted a regular distribution instead.
The explanation that you are reiterating to the IRS should be sufficient to convince them that the distribution is not taxable or subject to penalty, but IRS examiners sometimes still get it wrong. Sometimes the help of a Taxpayer Advocate is needed to convince the IRS of the IRS's error.
The only reason that the IRS might legitimately treat a code J8 Form 1099-R with a zero in box 2a as entirely taxable is if they did not receive any explanation indicating the original contribution that was returned; without explanation mentioning the Roth contribution that was being returned the IRS might assume that the Roth IRA custodian incorrectly reported the distribution and that it constituted a regular distribution instead.
The explanation that you are reiterating to the IRS should be sufficient to convince them that the distribution is not taxable or subject to penalty, but IRS examiners sometimes still get it wrong. Sometimes the help of a Taxpayer Advocate is needed to convince the IRS of the IRS's error.
I am over 60 years old. I contributed $7,000 to Roth IRA in 2022 by mistake. I withdrawal the same amount ($7,000) several days later-as soon as I realized I was not qualified.
Last week, the bank sent me form 1099 R. In Box 1: Gross distribution $7,000. Box 7: Distribution code J8; the rest of boxes on 1099 R form are: 0.00.
Please tell me how do I avoid state tax (Pennsylvania) for this returned contribution?
Thanks!
It should not be taxable on your Pennsylvania return based on your Form 1099-R entry on your federal return, assuming you did not have any earnings on the funds contributed, which I assume you didn't since it was only there for seven days.
Thank you so much!
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