1077685
When filling my 2018 taxes I found I was ineligible for roth and had made excess contributions. I worked with the brokerage house to remove the excess. The excess was removed to a traditional in early 2019. I have 1099's for this but they state 2019 on the top.
Late in 2019 I made a traditional ira contribution that I later rolled over to a roth IRA. I have 1099's for these. How do i report the 2018 excess? Do i even add the 1099r's to my 2019 filing or just amend the 2018 return?
You'll need to sign in or create an account to connect with an expert.
You will enter the excess ROTH 1099-R this year on the 2019 return. The codes in Box 7 will correctly report it so you only pay tax on the earnings. The directions for entering the Backdoor ROTH can be found at Solved: Backdoor Roth IRA contribution
@tange1 wrote:
When filling my 2018 taxes I found I was ineligible for roth and had made excess contributions. I worked with the brokerage house to remove the excess. The excess was removed to a traditional in early 2019. I have 1099's for this but they state 2019 on the top.
What is the code in box 7?
If a code "P" or "JP" then:
A 2018 1099-R with a code "P" in box 7 is taxable in 2018, not 2019
You must amend 2018 to report it. The 2018 1099-R interview will say that code P means "Return of contribution taxable in 2017", but the interview will ask if this it a 2018 1099-R or a 2019 1099-R. Say 2019 and the "taxable in 2017" becomes "taxable in 2018" (the year advances by 1 each year).
The returned contribution is not taxable, but any earnings reported in box 2a are taxable and also subject to an 10% penalty of you are under age 59 1/2.
Still have questions?
Questions are answered within a few hours on average.
Post a Question*Must create login to post
Ask questions and learn more about your taxes and finances.
soccerfan1357
Level 1
xiaochong2dai
Level 3
user17545166365
New Member
in [Event] Ask the Experts: Tax Law Changes - One Big Beautiful Bill
march142005
New Member
jliangsh
Level 2