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It depends whether the excess distribution was corrected.
See this explanation from the IRS: Consequences to a participant who makes excess deferrals to a 401(k) plan:
Unless timely distributed, excess deferrals are
(1) included in a participant’s taxable income for the year contributed, and
(2) taxed a second time when the deferrals are ultimately distributed from the plan. See IRC Sections 402(g)(1) and 402(g)(2) and Reg. Section 1.402(g)-1(e)(2).
A participant who fails to receive a distribution of the excess deferrals does not receive basis in his pre-tax deferral account equal to the amount of excess deferrals. See IRC Section 402(g)(6).
The amount of the excess deferral will not be taxed twice if a corrective distribution is made.
I'm not sure that my initial question was understood.
What I am asking about is the *capital loss* on the excess deferral. In tax year 2018 I reported the full excess deferral amount, even though the distribution was a little smaller because of a capital loss. I believe that I was supposed to record the capital loss as negative income somewhere in tax year 2019.
I am in the same situation. I received a check in early April before filing my taxes for 2018. The letter that came with it said 'you should report the pre-tax amount of your excess deferrals on line 7 of your individual tax return (form 1040) for 2018, and you should report the alllocable loss as a bracketed amount on the "other income" line of your form 1040 for 2019.' I do not have to amend my 2018 return because I dealt with it when I filed in mid April.
For information see IRS Pub 525 page 10
https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p525.pdf
Report a loss on a corrective distribution of an excess deferral in the year the excess amount (reduced by the loss) is distributed to you. Include the loss as a negative amount on Schedule 1 (Form 1040), line 21, and identify it as “Loss on Excess Deferral Distribution.”
Enter as:
Miscellionious Income ->
Other reportable Income ->
Any Other Taxable Income (yes) ->
Description (enter "Loss on Excess Deferral Distribution" and amount as a negative number).
I was able to enter a negative number in line 14 of the Wages, Salaries, and Tips worksheet.
Here is how to enter the excess salary deferral in TurboTax so that the amount will appear on Form 1040 Schedule 1 line 8
Under income:
I tried doing as you suggested and TurboTax a) will not accept a negative number and b) Line 21 on the 1040 refers to a "refund".
@B_T007 wrote:
I tried doing as you suggested and TurboTax a) will not accept a negative number and b) Line 21 on the 1040 refers to a "refund".
Note that the topic of this thread is a *2018* tax return. It was line 21 in 2018, the forms and line numbers for 2019 are different. For 2019 that put it on the 1040 Schedule 1 line 8 under "Other income".
I'm in the same situation and getting the same error "'Wages, Salaries & Tips worksheet: TP other earned inc shouldn't be less than zero." Has anyone found a solution to this?
@user314 Try leaving it blank and deleting the 0.
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