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March 23, 2021
Question

Excess contribution IRA

  • March 23, 2021
  • 1 reply
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Hello,

 

I am trying to figure out how to file my excess contribution on my ROTH IRA account. I have seen other posts on here about excess contribution to their IRA but I am still a bit confused in my situation.

 

On 11-29-2018 I deposited $5500 into my ROTH IRA

on 1-15-2020 I withdrew $3600 because I didn't know about the Maximum Modified AGI amount. I calculated that I had over contributed $3600 based on my Maximum Modified AGI for 2018. The extra $1900 stayed in the IRA as a contribution.

 

I received the 1099-R form this year showing that I had a gross distribution of $3600 with box 2b checked "Taxable amount not determined". Also Distribution code J(early distribution) is entered.

 

I would like to just pay the 6% tax on the $3600 that I had in excess for the year of 2019. This is where I am not understanding how to do this.  The 1099-R form I received shows 2020. Should/Can I report this on my 2020 Tax Form or do I need to amend my 2019 form?  I tried reporting it on my 2020 taxes and entered in the $3600 as excess contribution but it doesn't seem to change anything for my federal taxes. It never specifically says anything about the 6% either.  Any help would be appreciated.

 

Thank you for your help,

 

Ryan

    1 reply

    macuser_22
    Employee
    March 23, 2021

    @ryan79 wrote:

    Hello,

     

    I am trying to figure out how to file my excess contribution on my ROTH IRA account. I have seen other posts on here about excess contribution to their IRA but I am still a bit confused in my situation.

     

    On 11-29-2018 I deposited $5500 into my ROTH IRA

    on 1-15-2020 I withdrew $3600 because I didn't know about the Maximum Modified AGI amount. I calculated that I had over contributed $3600 based on my Maximum Modified AGI for 2018. The extra $1900 stayed in the IRA as a contribution.

     

    I received the 1099-R form this year showing that I had a gross distribution of $3600 with box 2b checked "Taxable amount not determined". Also Distribution code J(early distribution) is entered.

     

    I would like to just pay the 6% tax on the $3600 that I had in excess for the year of 2019. This is where I am not understanding how to do this.  The 1099-R form I received shows 2020. Should/Can I report this on my 2020 Tax Form or do I need to amend my 2019 form?  I tried reporting it on my 2020 taxes and entered in the $3600 as excess contribution but it doesn't seem to change anything for my federal taxes. It never specifically says anything about the 6% either.  Any help would be appreciated.

     

    Thank you for your help,

     

    Ryan


    You must:

     

    1) Report the 2020 1099-R on your 2020 tax return.  Since it is your contribution being removed it will not be taxable.  When the interview asks for prior contributions enter it.

     

    2) You must amend 2018 and indicate a excess 2018 contribution on a 2018 5328 and pay a 2018 6% penalty.

     

    3) Since the money was still an excess at the end of 2019.  You must amend 2019 and indicate a 2019 excess  contribution on a 2019 5329 and pay another 2019 6% penalty.

     

    For #2 & 3 enter the excess in the IRA contribution interview.  Bypass the first new contribution questions and it will ask about prior excess.

    **Disclaimer: This post is for discussion purposes only and is NOT tax advice. The author takes no responsibility for the accuracy of any information in this post.**
    ryan79Author
    March 23, 2021

    Thank you for the quick response macuser_22! 

     

    I understand I need to ammend both my 2018 and 2019 with the $3600 excess contribution. I know where to ammend the tax return on turbo tax but I am not clear on where to go to enter the excess. I don't report this 2020 1099-R form on there correct?

     

    Thank you,

     

    Ryan

    macuser_22
    Employee
    March 23, 2021

    You report the actual distribution with the 2020 1099-R code J on your 2020 tax return.

     

    For 2018:

    Enter the 2018 Roth contribution in the IRA contribution interview and TurboTax will calculate how much was an excess and add the 5329 form.

     

    Enter IRA contributions here:
    Federal Taxes,
    Deductions & Credits,
    I’ll choose what I work on (if that screen comes up),
    Retirement & Investments,
    Traditional & Roth IRA contribution.

    OR  Use the "Tools" menu  (if online version under My Account) and then "Search Topics" for "ira contributions" which will take you to the same place.

     

    For 2019 same interview but not new contribution, just click through the interview until you get the prior years excess question.

     

    **Disclaimer: This post is for discussion purposes only and is NOT tax advice. The author takes no responsibility for the accuracy of any information in this post.**