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February 10, 2025
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If money was withdrawn from a 401k, and then used to pay off a loan from the same 401k. Is this taxable?

  • February 10, 2025
  • 1 reply
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I see there are provisions for returning the money to the same account but since this was a 401k loan that was being payed off, it wasn't exactly directly returning the money to the account.
    Best answer by dmertz

    Yes, that's taxable income of the amount shown in box 2a of the Form 1099-R.  It is not a rollover.

    1 reply

    dmertzAnswer
    Employee
    February 10, 2025

    Yes, that's taxable income of the amount shown in box 2a of the Form 1099-R.  It is not a rollover.

    cyberdoodAuthor
    February 11, 2025

    One more caveat. I see Turbo Tax lists provisions for emergencies and they have an other category. I did originally withdraw the money from my 401k for an emergency (unforeseen septic system replacement). We ended up selling the house and rolling in the repairs with the proceeds of the sale. At the time I didn't think to just put the money back and I had the 401k loan taken out so decided to pay it off instead. All of this happened within 60 days of withdrawal.

     

    I'm guessing even though I withdrew the money for "an emergency/unforeseen cost", since I didn't end up using the money for the emergency, then that provision is not relevant???

    And BTW, taxes were withheld on withdrawal, I'm mainly trying to avoid paying the 10% penalty. 🙂

    Employee
    February 11, 2025

    Cash is fungible, so if you paid an emergency expense, even though it might have been paid with "other" cash I would think that the exception would apply.  The emergency-expense exception would apply to a maximum of $1,000, so it would save you $100 of penalty at most.