turbotax icon
cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 
Announcements
Close icon
Do you have a TurboTax Online account?

We'll help you get started or pick up where you left off.

Excess HSA from 2023 Next steps

I had made excess $1035 HSA contribution in 2023. Identified it in March 2025. My HSA custodian returned my excess amount $1035 in March 2025 itself. My understanding is that i need to pay 6% penalty for 2023 and since i removed excess before April 15 2025 does not have to pay penalty for 2024.

  1. Do I need to amend my 2023 taxes?

  2. Which Tax year my $1035 excess distribution fall into for other income Tax in schedule 1(2023 or 2024 or 2025)?

  3. Do i need to file Form 5329 for both 2023 and 2024?

  4. Which year 8889 Forms captures the $1035 excess distribution?

x
Do you have an Intuit account?

Do you have an Intuit account?

You'll need to sign in or create an account to connect with an expert.

1 Best answer

Accepted Solutions

Excess HSA from 2023 Next steps

Unfortunately, the deadline to correct a 2023 excess was April 15, 2024 (or in some cases, October 15, 2024).  It is too late to use this procedure to remove the excess contribution.

 

For 2023, you need to report the excess contribution and pay a 6% penalty.  Why was this not done on your 2023 return, what software did you use and how was this missed?  (Are you sure you even have an excess contribution?)

 

For 2024, you file a normal return and report the excess carryover of the $1035 excess from 2023.  What happens next depends on whether or not you were eligible to make contributions in 2024, and how much you contributed.

  • If you are not eligible to contribute in 2024, then you pay another 6% penalty on the excess that was carried forward.
  • If you were eligible to make contributions in 2024, you can "use up" the 2023 excess by applying it to your 2024 limit.  For example, if you are covered by a single HDHP and are under age 55, your limit for 2024 would be $4150.  That means you can contribute up to $3115, and the $1035 excess from 2023 will be considered a 2024 contribution and that will remove the excess (but it needs to be properly reported.

If you already contributed the full amount of $4150 for 2024, then you can remove $1035 of excess 2024 contributions before the April 15, 2025.  (This is an important difference.  You can remove 2024 contributions before April 15, 2025, if you made any.  But you can't remove 2023 contributions because its too late.)

 

If you remove 2024 contributions before April 15, 2025 so that your excess from 2023 will be rolled into 2024, you also need to report any earnings (interest) that are attributed to the excess contribution (the bank will calculate the amount for you).  This is reported as bank interest not reported on a 1099-INT in the Interest Income section.  If you contributed by payroll deduction, the excess contribution is added back to your taxable income and this is done automatically by Turbotax. 

 

For 2025, it depends on what you can do for 2024.  We can talk about that after you tell us about your 2024 contributions. 

 

Your 2023 return will show a 5329 for the penalty and an 8889 that calculates the excess.

 

Your 2024 return will have an 8889 that either calculates the new excess, or calculates the resolution of the excess, and a 5329 that either pays a new penalty or reconciles the excess and shows no further penalty owed. 

View solution in original post

16 Replies
MinhT1
Expert Alumni

Excess HSA from 2023 Next steps

1. Yes, you'll need to amend your 2023 tax return to report the excess contribution on form 8889 and pay the excise tax of 6% on form 5329.

 

2. The excess contribution will appear income on your amended 2023 tax return, not in 2024, as you have withdrawn it before April 15, 2025.

 

3. Form 5329 is needed on your amended 2023 return, not in 2024.

 

4. Form 8889 for 2023 shows the excess contribution.

 

 

**Say "Thanks" by clicking the thumb icon in a post
**Mark the post that answers your question by clicking on "Mark as Best Answer"

Excess HSA from 2023 Next steps

@MinhT1 Will form 8889 need to show distribution of 1035 in 14 a even thought it was received in March 2025?

If we show 1035 in 14a then that spills to Taxable HSA distributions line 16 as 14b limits excess Distributions by tax due date of 2023

Excess HSA from 2023 Next steps

Unfortunately, the deadline to correct a 2023 excess was April 15, 2024 (or in some cases, October 15, 2024).  It is too late to use this procedure to remove the excess contribution.

 

For 2023, you need to report the excess contribution and pay a 6% penalty.  Why was this not done on your 2023 return, what software did you use and how was this missed?  (Are you sure you even have an excess contribution?)

 

For 2024, you file a normal return and report the excess carryover of the $1035 excess from 2023.  What happens next depends on whether or not you were eligible to make contributions in 2024, and how much you contributed.

  • If you are not eligible to contribute in 2024, then you pay another 6% penalty on the excess that was carried forward.
  • If you were eligible to make contributions in 2024, you can "use up" the 2023 excess by applying it to your 2024 limit.  For example, if you are covered by a single HDHP and are under age 55, your limit for 2024 would be $4150.  That means you can contribute up to $3115, and the $1035 excess from 2023 will be considered a 2024 contribution and that will remove the excess (but it needs to be properly reported.

If you already contributed the full amount of $4150 for 2024, then you can remove $1035 of excess 2024 contributions before the April 15, 2025.  (This is an important difference.  You can remove 2024 contributions before April 15, 2025, if you made any.  But you can't remove 2023 contributions because its too late.)

 

If you remove 2024 contributions before April 15, 2025 so that your excess from 2023 will be rolled into 2024, you also need to report any earnings (interest) that are attributed to the excess contribution (the bank will calculate the amount for you).  This is reported as bank interest not reported on a 1099-INT in the Interest Income section.  If you contributed by payroll deduction, the excess contribution is added back to your taxable income and this is done automatically by Turbotax. 

 

For 2025, it depends on what you can do for 2024.  We can talk about that after you tell us about your 2024 contributions. 

 

Your 2023 return will show a 5329 for the penalty and an 8889 that calculates the excess.

 

Your 2024 return will have an 8889 that either calculates the new excess, or calculates the resolution of the excess, and a 5329 that either pays a new penalty or reconciles the excess and shows no further penalty owed. 

Excess HSA from 2023 Next steps

Update on Scenario:

  • I had change of job and used W2 12 W for HSA contribution calculation.
  • All of the contribution are payroll deductions
  • In 2025, realize that an addition contribution of 1035 was made in 2024 for 2023. I am eligible to contribute in HSA in 2024 and 2025.
  • Contributed to max limit in 2024 so removed excess 1035 in March 2025. 
  • As of now I do not see any earning removed along with excess.  

Questions:

  1. Paying penalty for 2023 make sense. Will the excess contribution be shown in Line 9 of 8889 (Employer contributions made to your HSAs for 2023)?
  2. So I have to amend my 2023 Tax returns and add Form 5329 showing excess contribution and penalty?
  3. For 2024 where do we report  reconciliation of the excess in 8889( 14a and 14b) or 5329?

Excess HSA from 2023 Next steps

For 2023, if you were eligible for all of 2023, your limit was $3850 for a single plan.   You would show the $1350 contribution on line 2, $3850 limit on line 3, line 8 will be $3850, your employer contributions on line 9, line 13 zero, then see the instructions because you over-contributed so you have to go to form 5329 Part VII.   The excess itself is not shown on form 8889.  The excess is on line 48 of form 5329.

 

Did you ask the plan for a removal of excess, or just a regular withdrawal?  If you asked for a removal of excess and they did not return any earnings, then I would assume they don't pay interest?  If you asked for a regular withdrawal, that needs to be corrected.

 

On your 2024 return, you're going to report just the employer contributions, and the form will calculate that you get no additional tax deduction (because the employer contributions were already excluded from your taxable income).  The excess is reconciled on form 5329.

 

 

Excess HSA from 2023 Next steps

Hi @Opus 17 - I am seeing mixed answers regarding a similar situation for me (or maybe I just misunderstood).

 

I interpreted that the earnings on 2023 excess contributions that were not removed by April 2024, but instead December 2024, are not taxable in 2024 and essentially become tax-free. The logic being this:

 

Form 5329, Line 42 - Excess from 2023: $3,850

I only need $3,850 on Line 44 (2024 distributions) to eliminate this prior year excess, which comes from Line 16 of Form 8889, Taxable HSA Distributions. But if my total distribution was $4,098 on Line 14a, I can state $248 of qualified medical expenses on Line 15 to not have to pay tax & penalty on the $248. I assumed this $248 would wind up somewhere else on the return to be taxed. Is this not the case?

Excess HSA from 2023 Next steps

@Opus 17 I asked HSA custodian to have the excess removed and in my account activities transaction is marked as an excess removal with Earnings on Excess Contributions as $0.0

For 2024

How is the excess reconciled on form 5329.

On Line 42 I will have $1035

On Line 43 is 0 as i maxed HSA 

On Line 44 is 0 as (In 8889 14a 1350 and 14b 1350 result in 0 for line 16)

Excess HSA from 2023 Next steps


@HSAQuestion1 wrote:

Hi @Opus 17 - I am seeing mixed answers regarding a similar situation for me (or maybe I just misunderstood).

 

I interpreted that the earnings on 2023 excess contributions that were not removed by April 2024, but instead December 2024, are not taxable in 2024 and essentially become tax-free. The logic being this:

 

Form 5329, Line 42 - Excess from 2023: $3,850

I only need $3,850 on Line 44 (2024 distributions) to eliminate this prior year excess, which comes from Line 16 of Form 8889, Taxable HSA Distributions. But if my total distribution was $4,098 on Line 14a, I can state $248 of qualified medical expenses on Line 15 to not have to pay tax & penalty on the $248. I assumed this $248 would wind up somewhere else on the return to be taxed. Is this not the case?


*If you have a taxable distribution (not used for medical care) it is subject to income tax plus a 20% penalty, you do not want to go that route.

 

No, you are misunderstanding about the 6% penalty.  If you have excess contributions in 2023, and you do not remove them, you will pay 6% every year for the rest of your life or until the HSA balance is spent down to zero.  

 

You can't remove the 2023 excess contribution by any special procedure.  Instead you have 2 ways to remove it.

A. Withdraw it as a regular contribution not for medical expenses, and pay income tax plus a 20% penalty.

B. "Remove" the 2023 excess by considering it part of your 2024 limit.

 

To remove the 2023 excess of $1035 by considering it part of your 2024 limit, you can only contribute an additional $3115 for 2024.  If you contribute more than $3115, you now have an excess for 2024, not an excess for 2023.  If you do the removal of excess procedure, you are removing excess from 2024 (so you can "make room" under the cap to use up the 2023 excess).  Since this is a removal of excess 2024 contribution carried out in 2025, the earnings are taxable in 2024, if there are any earnings.  Maybe there are not. 

Excess HSA from 2023 Next steps


@ramNAM wrote:

@Opus 17 I asked HSA custodian to have the excess removed and in my account activities transaction is marked as an excess removal with Earnings on Excess Contributions as $0.0

For 2024

How is the excess reconciled on form 5329.

On Line 42 I will have $1035

On Line 43 is 0 as i maxed HSA 

On Line 44 is 0 as (In 8889 14a 1350 and 14b 1350 result in 0 for line 16)


No.

 

Line 42 is $1035.

 

If you remove $1035 as an excess contribution for 2024 before the deadline of April 15, 2025, then per the instructions, you will enter $1035 on line 43.  (Your max $4150 minus your net contributions of $3115.  Excess contributions removed before the deadline are considered never to have been made.)

 

Line 44 is taxable distributions, that's distributions not used for medical care, that should be zero, because you don't want to be paying tax and a 20% penalty.

 

Line 45 is $1035, line 46 is zero.  Line 47 and 48 are zero.  That's how the 2023 excess gets removed by applying it toward the 2024 limit, as long as you remove some 2024 contributions to "make room" under the limit. 

Excess HSA from 2023 Next steps

Sorry @Opus 17 I jumped into this thread and probably made it confusing. I am not OP, I just had a different question that was related.

 

I had $3,850 excess in 2023. Already amended to pay taxes and 6% penalty on that $3,850 in 2023.

 

In late 2024, I took a distribution of $4,098 for excess + earnings on the $3,850. It should be Code 1 because it was too late to simply withdraw without penalty. I know I have to pay taxes + 20% penalty on the $3,850 to clear Form 5329 going forward, but someone else on this forum said I could avoid paying the taxes + 20% on the earnings of $248 if I claim $248 of medical expenses on Form 8889 Line 15, because I only need the original $3,850 to clear the 2023 excess from Form 5329. This would result in the $248 earnings never being taxed, which I found odd.

 

Would the earnings wind up somewhere else on the 1040? Or is using the $248 as a qualified medical expense not allowed under these circumstances?

Excess HSA from 2023 Next steps

@Opus 17 So, 1035 will be considered as income in schedule 1 8f for 2024?

Excess HSA from 2023 Next steps


@ramNAM wrote:

@Opus 17 So, 1035 will be considered as income in schedule 1 8f for 2024?


First, the excess contribution of $1035 made in 2024 for the 2023 tax return will be taxable income on your 2023 return. 

 

Then second, because you contributed $4150 in 2024 through payroll but are removing that to make room under the limit, that will be added back to your taxable income (since it was originally excluded from your income). 

Excess HSA from 2023 Next steps


@HSAQuestion1 wrote:

Sorry @Opus 17 I jumped into this thread and probably made it confusing. I am not OP, I just had a different question that was related.

 

I had $3,850 excess in 2023. Already amended to pay taxes and 6% penalty on that $3,850 in 2023.

 

In late 2024, I took a distribution of $4,098 for excess + earnings on the $3,850. It should be Code 1 because it was too late to simply withdraw without penalty. I know I have to pay taxes + 20% penalty on the $3,850 to clear Form 5329 going forward, but someone else on this forum said I could avoid paying the taxes + 20% on the earnings of $248 if I claim $248 of medical expenses on Form 8889 Line 15, because I only need the original $3,850 to clear the 2023 excess from Form 5329. This would result in the $248 earnings never being taxed, which I found odd.

 

Would the earnings wind up somewhere else on the 1040? Or is using the $248 as a qualified medical expense not allowed under these circumstances?


What you read is correct.  If you missed the deadline for a proper return of excess contribution (which was October 15, 2024, but only if you filed your return on time or got an extension) then you simply made a normal withdrawal of $4098.  (There was no reason to remove the excess contributions after the deadline.)

 

Since you have a normal withdrawal of $4098, how that is taxed is according to the normal rules.  If it is used for qualifying medical expenses, it is not taxed.  That's the whole point of an HSA if you follow the rules, money is not taxed going in and not taxed coming out.  If you don't use it for qualified expenses, you pay tax and a penalty but that can be used to negate an excess contribution.

 

Even if you were never eligible in 2023 or 2024, the rules allow this.   If you removed the money on time, the interest is taxable as if you earned it in a regular investment, because the HSA contribution "never happened" (in a way). Since you left it too late, you pay the 6%, and then it just becomes money in the account that is eligible to be used for medical expenses.

 

Of course, you have also now paid tax 3 times on the initial $3850 (once in 2023 because it was not deductible, once in 2024 when you withdraw it not for expenses, and the 20% penalty.)

 

Let me also remark that if you brought the account to zero (just guessing) the penalty is zero because the penalty is 6% of the excess or the remaining balance, whichever is lower.  That means that if you had (for example) $1000 of qualifying expenses, you can declare that, and the first $1000 will be tax and penalty-free, and you would pay income tax and 20% on the remaining $3098 of the withdrawal instead of $3850.

Excess HSA from 2023 Next steps

@Opus 17 

First, the excess contribution of $1035 made in 2024 for the 2023 tax return will be taxable income on your 2023 return. 

 

Then second, because you contributed $4150 in 2024 through payroll but are removing that to make room under the limit, that will be added back to your taxable income (since it was originally excluded from your income). 

But that would mean I will be paying tax twice on the same amount.

 

message box icon

Get more help

Ask questions and learn more about your taxes and finances.

Post your Question