It's the lesser of 100% of your includable compensation or the $22,500. Is your includable compensation higher than $7800?
Assuming that it is are you entering the contributions through a payroll deduction on your W2 or as a retirement plan contribution. If it is not through a W2 the system may be assuming that you are contributing to a traditional IRA. You will have to go back through the entries that you have made in order to make sure that you have told it what type of retirement plan this is correctly.
Not sure of the definition of includable compensation. I did make sure that the 7800.00 is listed as a W2 entry Box 12 EE 457B. Thanks for the help
Make sure that you have entered amount shown in box 12 of your W-2 only in box 12 of TurboTax's W-2 form, nowhere else in TurboTax. Make sure that you have not entered it under Deduction & Credits as an IRA contribution. A 457(b) is not an IRA.
I listed it on my W2 entries, Box 12 EE Roth Contribution to 457 (b). IRS Publication states my maximum to be 22,500 pus a 7,500.00 catch up for people over 50, which I am. Turbo tax software kicks it out as a 300.00 over contribution at 7800.00. I talked to a CPA and he tells me I am correct, I will not be able to use Turbo tax to file my taxes.
Thanks
@joebair wrote:
I listed it on my W2 entries, Box 12 EE Roth Contribution to 457 (b). IRS Publication states my maximum to be 22,500 pus a 7,500.00 catch up for people over 50, which I am. Turbo tax software kicks it out as a 300.00 over contribution at 7800.00. I talked to a CPA and he tells me I am correct, I will not be able to use Turbo tax to file my taxes.
Thanks
Are you 100% certain that you did not also enter a Roth contribution in the Roth IRA section? That's the only explanation I can think of, because the W-2 interview works correctly for this situation and Turbotax applies the correct limits for qualified workplace plans. Remember that workplace plans should only be entered through your W-2 and never later in the program. A workplace plan is NOT the same thing as an IRA, even though they are similar.