Hi,
I have seen few question similar to this, but not exactly what I needed. So do not write it off as duplicate.
I made Roth Contribution in 2019. I had to withdraw the contribution + capital gains in January 2020 due to income limits. My brokerage mentioned that they will issue 1099-R for this in 2021.
I understand from earlier questions that I have to file 1099-R as if I already received one. While trying to do that here are some questions I have:
You'll need to sign in or create an account to connect with an expert.
@Tax20203 wrote:
Hi,
I have seen few question similar to this, but not exactly what I needed. So do not write it off as duplicate.
I made Roth Contribution in 2019. I had to withdraw the contribution + capital gains in January 2020 due to income limits. My brokerage mentioned that they will issue 1099-R for this in 2021.
I understand from earlier questions that I have to file 1099-R as if I already received one. While trying to do that here are some questions I have:
- For Box 7, the suggestion is to use codes P and J. Why use P (Return of contribution taxable in 2018) while code 8 (Return of contribution taxable in 2019) seems correct?
- For the question "Which year on form 1099-R?" I have to select 2020 and not 2019. Is that correct?
- Do I also have to file Form 4852 by selecting "Need to prepare a substitute 1099-R"?
You do not "have to" but it will save having to amend next year,
1) PJ for Roth.
2) 2020,
3) No.
A 2020 1099-R with a code "P" or "JP" in box 7 is taxable in 2019, not 2020
You must amend 2019 to report it. The 2019 1099-R interview will say that code P means "Return of contribution taxable in 2018", but the interview will ask if this it a 2019 1099-R or a 2020 1099-R. Say 2020 and the "taxable in 2018" becomes "taxable in 2019" (the year advances by 1 each year).
The returned contribution is not taxable, but any earnings reported in box 2a are taxable and also subject to an 10% penalty of you are under age 59 1/2.
@Tax20203 wrote:
Hi,
I have seen few question similar to this, but not exactly what I needed. So do not write it off as duplicate.
I made Roth Contribution in 2019. I had to withdraw the contribution + capital gains in January 2020 due to income limits. My brokerage mentioned that they will issue 1099-R for this in 2021.
I understand from earlier questions that I have to file 1099-R as if I already received one. While trying to do that here are some questions I have:
- For Box 7, the suggestion is to use codes P and J. Why use P (Return of contribution taxable in 2018) while code 8 (Return of contribution taxable in 2019) seems correct?
- For the question "Which year on form 1099-R?" I have to select 2020 and not 2019. Is that correct?
- Do I also have to file Form 4852 by selecting "Need to prepare a substitute 1099-R"?
You do not "have to" but it will save having to amend next year,
1) PJ for Roth.
2) 2020,
3) No.
A 2020 1099-R with a code "P" or "JP" in box 7 is taxable in 2019, not 2020
You must amend 2019 to report it. The 2019 1099-R interview will say that code P means "Return of contribution taxable in 2018", but the interview will ask if this it a 2019 1099-R or a 2020 1099-R. Say 2020 and the "taxable in 2018" becomes "taxable in 2019" (the year advances by 1 each year).
The returned contribution is not taxable, but any earnings reported in box 2a are taxable and also subject to an 10% penalty of you are under age 59 1/2.
Thank you for detailed reply. That clarifies.
Still have questions?
Make a postAsk questions and learn more about your taxes and finances.
Andy_W
Level 1
htb14
Returning Member
trailgirl
Level 2
ajaychhawacharia
Returning Member
annmarriott1
Returning Member
Did the information on this page answer your question?
You have clicked a link to a site outside of the TurboTax Community. By clicking "Continue", you will leave the Community and be taken to that site instead.