This post is about an excess deferral (contribution) to my 401k retirement accounts in 2019.
It is now January 2022. I am doing my taxes for 2019 now, but have not yet filed (I made big tax payments before so the IRS actually owes me money, so I'm filing to collect the refunds).
In 2019, I switched jobs and contributed too much money to my two 401k accounts. The IRS limits for contribution to 401k for 2019 per individual was $19,000.
I discovered this mistake when I started doing my taxes in January 2022.
My questions:
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Please review the answers after each question you asked below.
You should report the excess contributions on Line 1 of your 2019 Tax Return by following these steps:
You should report the excess contributions on Line 1 of your 2019 Tax Return using the steps above.
Finally, it would seem that if you requested a distribution of an excess contribution the plan administrator should comply with your request. If you do take a distribution of the excess be sure to include the earnings on that amount. Your plan administrator can calculate that amount for you. At that time you would report the income using the Form 1099-R that you would receive.
NOTE: TurboTax will alert you to the fact that you have an excess contribution to your 401(k), and provide a way to enter via Form 1099-R, but you will not be getting that form as we have discussed so be sure to follow the steps above to include that excess.
Thanks @Opus 17 for the assist.
[Edited: 01/03/2022 | 9:35PM PST]
Please review the answers after each question you asked below.
You should report the excess contributions on Line 1 of your 2019 Tax Return by following these steps:
You should report the excess contributions on Line 1 of your 2019 Tax Return using the steps above.
Finally, it would seem that if you requested a distribution of an excess contribution the plan administrator should comply with your request. If you do take a distribution of the excess be sure to include the earnings on that amount. Your plan administrator can calculate that amount for you. At that time you would report the income using the Form 1099-R that you would receive.
NOTE: TurboTax will alert you to the fact that you have an excess contribution to your 401(k), and provide a way to enter via Form 1099-R, but you will not be getting that form as we have discussed so be sure to follow the steps above to include that excess.
Thanks @Opus 17 for the assist.
[Edited: 01/03/2022 | 9:35PM PST]
The very simple answer is that it is over and done with, you are stuck with a result, and there is nothing you can do about it.
You must report the excess deferral on your 2019 tax return. Because the deferrals were reported on your W-2s, this should already have been done for you by your tax preparer or by the software that you used in 2019. Check to see if the line 1 taxable wages are equal to the total of your two box ones from your W-2s, or is more than your box 1 total by the amount of the excess.
then, there is nothing else you could or can or should you do. You will pay income tax on the total amount of any withdrawals you make. If you make withdrawals before age 59 1/2, or before age 55 if you’ve separated from service, you will also pay a 10% penalty. There are no ongoing penalties (you may have been reading about a Roth IRA) and there is no way to make a corrective distribution.
Thank you @Opus 17 and @DianeW777 for your thorough and quick answers! Really appreciate it.
Really appreciate your insights - every day I learn something new from you all!
The deadline to make a corrective distribution for 2019 deferred wages was April 15, 2020. Although this IRS document is an audit guide rather than an instruction, it contains the same information.
Since you can't make a corrective distribution, the excess deferral is taxed on your 2019 tax return AND your withdrawals will be taxed, you do not get a basis in the 401(k). In this way, a 401(k) plan is quite different from an IRA, where making non-deductible contributions gives you a basis in future withdrawals.
Please tell me where you are seeing a 6% additional penalty in reference to a 401(k) excess deferral. This is subject to much confusion because IRAs have a 6% penalty for excess contributions but a 401(k) is not an IRA, they are covered under completely different tax codes even though their overall purpose is similar. I see several internet articles (and even a few other answers on this forum, unfortunately) that get the two confused. Further, the rules that limit deferrals by "highly compensated employees" apply to the plan, not to the individual. The plan may be required to return your excess contributions if you are subject to a reduced limit as an HCE, but that burden is not on you. There is no additional 6% penalty for uncorrected excess deferrals as far as I can tell. If there was, it would be calculated on form 5329, which does not have a section for excess deferrals to a 401(k). @dmertz is my go-to expert, in case they want to weigh in further.
https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/f5329.pdf
Remember that excess contributions to an IRA are covered by completely different rules than excess deferrals to a 401(k).
Bottom line: it is too late to make a corrective distribution for 2019. The excess deferral is added to your box 1 taxable wages and you pay income tax on it. There are no further taxes or penalties. Then, when you withdraw the money in retirement, all your distributions will be subject to regular income tax, even though a portion of your contributions were already taxed.
As to how to report the excess deferral on your 2019 tax return, print your return before you file and double check. I would expect that turbotax would advise you to take a corrective distribution before April 15, 2020, and if you indicate you can't or won't do it, turbotax would automatically add the income to line 1. Therefore, I expect that adding more income to line 1 will result in a double entry. I may be wrong about how Turbotax works in this situation. So, before you mail your return, print it and review it carefully, and make sure that the total taxable income on line 1 is correct; it should be job 1 plus job 2 plus the excess deferral, but the excess deferral should not be doubled.
And in any case, you would not be considered an HCE for 2019, because that is based on what you were actually paid, and not your annualized income.
Thank you @Opus 17 for the further clarification! I've learned a lot today from this thread! Happy New Year to you and @DianeW777 !
I do not believe that is necessarily true. I am stuck in a similar quagmire, with the added complication that I closed out the errant 401K after I left that employer and rolled the entire 401K amount (much more than the excess deferral) into my rollover IRA at Fidelity. What I was told by the former employer is that the definition of a HCE is based upon the employee's income from the prior tax year, in this case 2018.
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