In 2018 I accidentally contributed too much to my Roth IRA. When I filed 2018 taxes I paid the 6% penatly. Fast forward to now (March 2020), when I just discovered the error.
Getting ready to file 2019 taxes I noticed the 6% tax on the excess. Can I avoid the 6% excess penalty on my 2019 taxes if I remove the excess contribution before the 2019 tax deadline of April 15th 2020?
If yes I understand that I have my brokerage remove the excess. However I assume that I will not get back anthing
that actually verifies I removed the excess (1099-R?) before I file my 2019 taxes. How do I prove to the IRS I removed the excess before the 2019 tax deadline.
I guess I just need an understanding on if I can remove the excess in calendar year 2020 (before tax deadline) and not pay the 6% tax. IE how to report the excess plus interest was removed.
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Get the custodian of the Roth to return the excess contribution and the earnings from the excess contribution. You will either wait and amend your 2019 return when you receive your 1099-R for 2019. Or you can enter a 1099-R with the information from the custodian with the excess contribution returned in box 1 and the earnings in box 2 which will be taxable along with codes JP on box 7. Then you will ignore the 1099-R you will receive next year. This way, you won't have to amend your 2019 return.
Thanks. I read something that said the earnings are taxable as income in the year the contribution excess was made. The excess contribution was made in 2018. I am removing it in 2019. Confusing part is will I receive 1099-R for 2019 or 2018?
Because your excess contribution was made for 2018, VictorW9's answer is incorrect. That answer is only correct for an excess contribution made for 2019.
Because the excess was not corrected in 2019, unless you are eligible to apply the excess as part of a 2019 Roth IRA contribution, you owe another 6% penalty for 2019 and, if you are not eligible to apply it as part of your 2020 Roth IRA contribution, you must obtain a regular distribution of exactly the amount of the excess, with no adjustment for gain or loss, before the end of 2020, otherwise you'll own another 6% penalty for 2020..
So you only have until the tax due date on the year the mistake was made to correct the Roth IRA over contribution. Every year after that you either pay the 6% or make the correction in the same calendar year?
Correct. You had only until the due date of your 2018 tax return, including extensions, to obtain a return of contribution that would have avoided a 6% penalty for 2018 and avoided carrying an excess into 2019. We are now close to 5 months beyond that October 15, 2019 extended deadline with respect to your 2018 excess contribution.
Thanks for your help. One last question, when I pull the excess contribution this year 2020 to avoid another 6% penalty, do I also pay 10% on the entire amount of excess that I pull since I am younger than 59?
No. Withdrawing your own Roth contribution is not taxable or subject to the penalty.
When you get your 2020 1099-R next year, enter it this way.
You can always withdraw your own Roth contributions tax and penalty free.
Enter a 1099-R here:
Federal Taxes,
Wages & Income
I’ll choose what I work on (if that screen comes up),
Retirement Plans & Social Security,
IRA, 401(k), Pension Plan Withdrawals (1099-R).
OR Use the "Tools" menu (if online version under My Account) and then "Search Topics" for "1099-R" which will take you to the same place.
Be sure to choose which spouse the 1099-R is for if this is a joint tax return.
Be sure to pick the correct 1099-R type: Standard 1099-R, CSA-1099-R, CSF-1099-R, RRB-1099-R.
[NOTE: When you get to the "Your 1099-R Entries" screen where you can add another 1099-R, use "continue" to keep going as there are additional interview questions after that screen in most cases. You can always return as shown above.]
One of the followup questions will ask for your prior year** contributions not previously withdrawn. Those contributions that still remain in the Roth will not be taxed or subject to a early withdrawal penalty. That will add a 8606 form to your tax return with the Roth contribution and tax calculation in part III.
Note: **Prior year - any current year Roth contributions should be entered into the IRA contributions section. They will not show up in the prior years contributions but will be accounted for on the 8606 form that calculates the taxable amount.
I have a similar question but different specifics. Here's my info:
Based on this feed, it seems that my transaction is taxable for 2018 even though the transaction actually took place in 2019. Therefore I will need to ammend my 2018 taxes. My specific questions are as follows:
Thanks!
You can enter a code JP 2019 Form 1099-R into 2019 TurboTax, but if it shows no tax withholding 2019 TurboTax knows to ignore it other than to remind you that the transaction was reportable on your 2018 tax return.
Entering the code JP 2019 Form 1099-R into 2018 TurboTax and telling 2018 TurboTax that it's a 2019 Form 1099-R will cause TurboTax to properly treat the amount in box 2a as taxable and subject to an early distribution penalty. If the box 2a amount was not already handled this way on your 2018 tax return, you must amend your 2018 tax return to add this.
Thanks for the response to my first question. Very helpful.
Can you please respond to my second question as well?
The result would have been no different had you entered the Roth IRA contribution, allowed TurboTax to indicate that it was an excess contribution and told TurboTax that you had the contribution returned. (Ideally TurboTax would prompt for an explanation of the return of contribution upon doing this, but TurboTax doesn't.)
Thanks so much for the info.
Just curious. If i had taken a loss on my excess contribution instead of making a gain, would that loss then be a deduction in my 2018 taxes (just like it was a taxed gain when i had a gain)?
I ask because i overcontributed this year too (for 2019 tax), and therefore i wanted to proactively enter the transaction when doing my 2019 taxes so i don't have to ammend later when i recieve the 1099-R. Would i just enter a negative number in box 2b since it was a loss?
" If i had taken a loss on my excess contribution instead of making a gain, would that loss then be a deduction in my 2018 taxes (just like it was a taxed gain when i had a gain)?"
In the case of an return of excess contribution from an IRA, unfortunately, no. No box on a Form 1099-R is permitted to contain a negative number.
If you contribute less in one year than you are allowed to, that is the same as taking a distribution with regard to correcting a previous year over funding. So, you could just contribute an amount equal to your maximum contribution allowed for the year, minus the previous year's over payment, that would equalize the over payment without having to deal with a distribution.
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