I contributed to my Roth IRA in 2022 without knowing that my income was too high for me to contribute anything. I withdrew the initial contribution and earnings just after filing my taxes for 2022 (funds withdrawn after the filing due date). For 2023, I received a 1099-R that indicated the withdrawal was an early disbursement, rather than a removal of excess contribution. Fidelity claims they cannot recode this withdrawal, so I have to fix it some other way.
I understand that I should file Form 5329 to correct this issue. Can this be done through TurboTax? If so, how should I complete the form?
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To confirm the Form 1099-R only has code J in box 7 and not code P and J? Did you withdraw the earnings with the excess contribution or only the excess contribution?
If you withdrew the excess contribution plus earnings then you could file a substitute Form 1099-R with codes P and J on your 2022 amended tax return:
Please be aware, code P will say in the drop-down menu "Return of contribution taxable in 2021" but you can ignore that since the follow-up question will tell TurboTax that it will be taxable in 2022.
If you withdrew only the excess contribution without earnings then you will have to report the Form 1099-R with code J on your 2023 tax return.
You will have to amend your 2022 tax return to pay the 6% penalty. Enter the Roth IRA contribution under IRA deductions in the Deductions & Credit section and TurboTax will calculate the penalty on Form 5329.
Thank you! A few follow-ups:
Yes, you will answer "Yes" to "Did you get a 1099-R in 2022?" and then you can enter the 2023 Form 1099-R as a substitute Form 1099-R with the steps I mentioned in my previous answer.
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