I have an HSA and my wife has an HSA both are single accounts. I contributed $2840 and my wife contributed $1060. The distributions were mine $1586 and wife $1275. with deductions showing mine $810 and wife $1060. Once all is entered it states I have an excess contribution of $2030 and must be withdrew to prevent being taxed 6%. My HSA account only has $2936.50 in it. I'm confused as to why I am showing an excess contribution? If I withdraw the $2030 that only leaves me less than 1K for medical expenses. I was under the impression that having an HSA was like a retirement account that could be helpful as you get older to cover medical expenses.
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Make sure that if your W-2 shows in box 12 with code W any contributions made through your employer that you do not also report those as personal contributions. Doing so would cause you to be claiming on Form 8889 that you made contributions of twice what you actually did.
Make sure that if your W-2 shows in box 12 with code W any contributions made through your employer that you do not also report those as personal contributions. Doing so would cause you to be claiming on Form 8889 that you made contributions of twice what you actually did.
were you covered under medicare during the year? review your form 8889.
The HSA is handled in 3 parts in the TT program :
First the contribution:
https://ttlc.intuit.com/replies/4557768
https://ttlc.intuit.com/replies/4785646
Next the limitations screen to confirm you are eligible to make the contributions:
Until you complete the HSA portion of the TurboTax interview to establish your eligibility for an HSA contribution, TurboTax will treat the amount entered on the W-2 form as an excess HSA contribution.
https://ttlc.intuit.com/replies/4788059
And lastly any distribution:
I have completed the full interview 3 times. I've deleted the 1099-SA and re-entered. I have looked at my 2021 taxes and do not show a 5329 form. I have never had this issue in the past 16 years that I have used TT Home and Biz
No, I do not use Medicare
The amount you or any other person can contribute to your HSA depends on the type of HDHP coverage you have, your age, the date you become an eligible individual, and the date you cease to be an eligible individual. For 2022, if you have self-only HDHP coverage, you can contribute up to $3,650. If you have family HDHP coverage, you can contribute up to $7,300.
See HERE how you may correct the deficiency in Turbotax for overcontributed contributions. Make sure you indicated Family Plan for your HDHP coverage.Very important that you read the Section II
from this linkhttps://ttlc.intuit.com/community/tax-credits-deductions/discussion/hsa-excess-contribution/00/12041...
and scroll to the bottom HSA Overcontribution.
Good Luck.
Turbotax and Form 8889-T continually reflect that I've an excess HSA contribution of $8300. The family limit for 2022 was $7300 and the IRS allowed folks 55+ to contribute an additional $1,000, which gets me to the $8300 figure in my W2. I'm not including any personal HSA contributions. I can't figure out why the error message indicating that I've an excess.
"continually"
Does "continually" mean that you have an excess contribution year after year? Or are you referring only to year 2022, not matter what you enter?
This is a lengthy response, but it does cover the most common user input errors that cause TurboTax to think that you have excess contributions.
It is possible to accidentally indicate to TurboTax that you made excess HSA contributions when perhaps you haven't.
I understand that the following list is long, but these are all reasons that taxpayers get excess contribution messages.
If you find that your situation is not one of these cases, then please make a new post in which you indicate:
***main answer***
One of the purposes of the HSA interview is to determine your annual HSA contribution limit.
As you probably know, the maximum limits in 2022 are:
However, these limits assume that you were in an HSA all year. If you left the HSA during the year or started Medicare or had one of a number of change events, then the limit is reduced.
There are several major culprits for excess contributions (other than just actually contributing more than the limit).
First, if you did not complete the HSA interview - that is, go all the way until you are returned to the "Your Tax Breaks" page - the limit still might be set to zero, causes a misleading excess contribution message.
There are questions all the way to the end of the interview that affect the annual contribution limit.
Second, it is not unusual for taxpayers to accidentally duplicate their contributions by mistakenly entering what they perceive to be "their" contributions into the second line on the "Let's enter your HSA contributions" screen.
Normally, any employee who made contributions to his/her HSA through a payroll deduction plan has the contributions included in the amount with code "W" in box 12 on the W-2. This is on the first line on this screen (above). Don't enter the code W amount anywhere on the return other than on the W-2 page.
Third, if you weren't in HDHP coverage all 12 months, then the annual contribution limit is reduced on a per month ratio. NOTE, this means that you have to indicate when and under what type of HDHP plan you were. Be sure to answer the questions on the screen entitled "Was [name] covered by a High Deductible Health Plan in 2022?".
Fourth, if you had a carryover of excess contributions from 2021, then this carryover is applied to 2022 as a reduction to the 2022 HSA contribution limit, which could cause an excess condition in 2022 as well. But note: if you had an excess contribution in 2021 but cured it by withdrawing the excess in early 2022, then do NOT report an "overfunding" on your 2022 return.
Fifth, the Family limit ($7,300) is for the aggregate of contributions by both taxpayers, even if both taxpayers have their own HSAs. That is, one taxpayer can’t contribute $7,300 to his/her HSA and the other contribute $3,650 to the other HSA – the $7,300 limit applies to the aggregate of all HSA contributions credited to the family (in this case, the excess contributions would be $3,650).
same issue here.
I am over 55 years and contributed $8,300 in 2022. W2 was imported by Turbo tax. Colum 12c W is $8,300.00.
I am getting the same error message. Seems like an application bug.
Please share if you were able to find a way out.
The source of the excess contribution error, in my case, was that I did not indicate that my healthcare plan is a high cost deductible plan. I searched my employer's extensive benefits website and nothing indicated that it is or it isn't a high deductible plan. That said, I do have a high deductible to cover my family and me.
So, once I confirmed that my employer and I did not contribute over the permissible $8300 for 2022, I was able to determine the source of the error, i.e., if you don't indicate that you've a high deductible healthcare plan, and you contribute to an HSA, then the application identifies this as excess contribution.
Again, this worked for me. It might not apply to everyone.
The HSA is handled in 3 parts in the TT program :
First the contribution:
https://ttlc.intuit.com/replies/4557768
https://ttlc.intuit.com/replies/4785646
Next the limitations screen to confirm you are eligible to make the contributions:
Until you complete the HSA portion of the TurboTax interview to establish your eligibility for an HSA contribution, TurboTax will treat the amount entered on the W-2 form as an excess HSA contribution.
https://ttlc.intuit.com/replies/4788059
And lastly any distribution:
Same for me. I didn't realize that 2022 listed an excess that is now carrying over to 2023. I do not have a form 5329 from 2021, so obviously 2022 should not have said that. And TT should have realized their software was incorrect & had an error. I spent hours on with TT yesterday. They said it is their software issue, but they say they are investigating.
TT software issue ... I spent hours on the phone with them yesterday. They say they are investigating but cannot advise what to do. However, they advised the taxpayer is ultimately responsible for any TT form mistakes. I'm not going to use them any longer. This is ridiculous to have to file an amendment for their mistake. I have never had to file an amendment. I have used them for many years, and they import data from W-2 and previous tax years.
also, if they know an error exists on 2022 forms, why have they not notified us about it? or fixed their 2023 software so it doesn't happen again? This is negligent on their part.
I had the same thing this year…2024…where employer correctly reported a W in box $7750, within my limits as head of household, then said on form 5329 on line 47 I had an EXCESS of $7200. Did NOT separately enter ANY other figure then the imported W-2 correct figure of $7750. I see folks reported last year a glitch caused their system to grab and add to current year the year before. Seems to have happened again. HOPEFULLY the Fed will catch as the rest of my 1099 correctly reflects the single year figure. IF they don’t, we are ALL gonna be stuck filing amended 1099!
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