I mistakenly deposited ROTH IRA securities litigation check to my joint checking account. How do I correct or report this? Is it taxable now if account is more than 5 years old and I am over 70? Is there a way to have it corrected?
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If this is money that was supposed to be in your Roth IRA (because some security lost money due to fraud etc, and this is the settlement for growth you would have had), then:
If you want to put the money back into the Roth, I believe you have 60 days from receiving the check. It is not required that you endorse and forward the exact same check, you can write a check or make an electronic transfer from your bank account as long as it within 60 days. However, I don't know the magic words to tell the IRA to accept it as something that is not a regular contribution -- I will ask for another expert. @dmertz
If you want to keep the money, or it is after 60 days from when you got the check, then I would consider it to be equivalent to a regular withdrawal, which is non-taxable in your situation. Don't report it on your tax return, but keep the paperwork explaining the money for 3 years in case of audit. (**If you get a 1099-R or 1099-INT you may need to report it and then zero it out, you can post back later and ask for instructions if you get a 1099.)
Facts and circumstances determine whether the deposit of some or all of these funds to the Roth IRA would be considered to be a "restorative payment." Only compensatory amounts can be treated as restorative payments. If deposited directly to the Roth IRA, the amount that qualifies as a restorative payment would not involve the limit on the frequency of rollovers or the 60-day rollover deadline. (A proper restorative payment should be made payable to the Roth IRA, not the Roth IRA owner.) It's possible that depositing into an account other than a Roth IRA the amount that would otherwise be a restorative payment effectively resulted in a Roth IRA distribution that would have to be treated as such, subject to the one-rollover-per-12-months rule and the 60-day rollover deadline, but I can't say for sure.
Thank you for the response. In the worst case scenario, if I do nothing to fix the erroneous deposit, I have to report this as a Roth IRA distribution? And would it be taxable? Not sure how much it matters since it's a small amount, and I don't want it to get more complicated than it has to be.
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