I have a question regarding how to fill out Form 1099-R for the removal of my excess Roth IRA contribution.
Here is the timeline of events:
January 2024 – Contributed $7,000 to my Roth IRA.
December 2024 – Recharacterized $8,539 from my Roth IRA to a Traditional IRA.
March 2025 – The excess contribution amount was determined to be $7,000. The total applicable earnings/loss for the computation period was (-$250.06), and the total amount to be returned to me was $6,749.94.
I received a 1099-R for the recharacterization in January 2025, and I will received a separate 1099-R for the excess contribution removal in early 2026. Instead of amending my 2024 tax return, I plan to report this on my 2024 tax return.
Here are my questions regarding how to properly fill out Form 1099-R for the excess contribution removal:
Box 1 – Should I enter $7,000 (the original excess contribution amount) or$6,749.94 (the amount actually returned after accounting for the loss)?
Box 2a – Since I had a loss, should I enter $0?
Box 7 – Should I use codes J and P?
I would appreciate any clarification on how to report this correctly.
Fidelity informed me that although there is still a remaining balance in my Traditional IRA after the excess contribution removal, that portion is not considered an excess contribution and therefore was not withdrawn. They also stated that as long as the remaining amount stays in the Traditional IRA and is not withdrawn, it does not affect my tax return.
Is this correct?
Thank you!
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You will get a 2025 Form 1099-R with code P and 1 since you recharacterized he contribution and therefore removed the excess from the Traditional IRA.
To create a Form 1099-R in your 2024 return please follow the steps below:
Please be aware, code P will say in the drop-down menu "Return of contribution taxable in 2023" you can ignore that since the follow-up question will tell TurboTax that it will be taxable in 2024.
To clarify, was your Traditional IRA empty before you recharacterized the Roth IRA contribution as a Traditional IRA contribution? If you requested the return of the excess $7,000 contribution plus earnings then the financial institute should remove the correct amount and consider the earnings or losses. Please note, since you recharacterized the Roth IRA contribution the earnings are deemed to have been earned in the Traditional IRA. Maybe you need to check with Fidelity if they are aware of this fact and considered this when they processed the return of excess contribution plus earnings.
You will get a 2025 Form 1099-R with code P and 1 since you recharacterized he contribution and therefore removed the excess from the Traditional IRA.
To create a Form 1099-R in your 2024 return please follow the steps below:
Please be aware, code P will say in the drop-down menu "Return of contribution taxable in 2023" you can ignore that since the follow-up question will tell TurboTax that it will be taxable in 2024.
To clarify, was your Traditional IRA empty before you recharacterized the Roth IRA contribution as a Traditional IRA contribution? If you requested the return of the excess $7,000 contribution plus earnings then the financial institute should remove the correct amount and consider the earnings or losses. Please note, since you recharacterized the Roth IRA contribution the earnings are deemed to have been earned in the Traditional IRA. Maybe you need to check with Fidelity if they are aware of this fact and considered this when they processed the return of excess contribution plus earnings.
Thank you for your response @DanaB27 .
So, when using "P and J" in Box 7, it applies when removing an excess contribution from a Roth IRA, while "P and 1" is used when removing an excess contribution from a Traditional IRA.
In my case, the excess contribution amount was $8,000, and I incurred a loss of $250.06, so the total amount returned to me was $6,749.94.
Box 1: $6,749.94 – Total Distribution (Contribution $8,000 minus the loss)
Box 2a: $0
Box 7: P and 1
(1: Early distribution (except Roth), no known exception
P: Excess contributions plus earnings/excess deferrals (and/or earnings) taxable in 2023)
Check the "IRA/SEP/SIMPLE" Box: I received a distribution from a Traditional IRA.
Which year on Form 1099-R? 2025
I received a 2024 1099-R form with the amount of my recharacterized contribution listed in Box 1 and 'N' in Box 7, which seems to be related to a Recharacterized IRA contribution.
N – Recharacterized IRA contribution made for 2024 and recharacterized in 2024.
When filing my 2024 tax return, should I report the 1099-R with 'N' in Box 7 and the 1099-R with 'P and 1' in Box 7 together? Or just the 1099-R with 'P and 1' in Box 7?
Yes, since I opened a Traditional IRA for the purpose of recharacterizing my Roth IRA contribution, it was empty at first. I requested the return of the excess contribution of $7,000 from the Traditional IRA, but since there was a loss, I only received $6,749.94. I’ve been told that the remaining amount, the earnings from the recharacterization process, is not part of the return and is not being refunded.
The remaining balance in the Traditional IRA is part of the recharacterized amount, and since it is not an excess contribution, there is no need for a return. It stays in the Traditional IRA. This part is not subject to a return, and I believe this is the correct understanding, but I’m not completely sure.
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