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February 16, 2021
Question

Oh no! Over-contribution in Roth IRA.

  • February 16, 2021
  • 1 reply
  • 0 views

Hi All,

For background, I have an individual and Roth IRA account with TD Ameritrade.

For 2020, I contributed $12k as opposed to the $6k annual limit to my Roth IRA. Unfortunately, I used up 100% of those funds to buy stocks.

What ways/methods do I have to minimize/avoid the penalty?


Thanks in advance

    1 reply

    February 16, 2021

    You will have to tell your bank to withdraw the excess contribution (plus any earnings) by the due date otherwise you will pay a 6% penalty per year for each year the excess amounts remain in the IRA. 

     

    Or you could accept and pay the penalty this year and apply the excess amount to your 2021 contribution, if you haven't contributed anything in 2021 yet. If you consider doing this, just be sure that you will be able to apply the excess as a 2021 Roth IRA contribution so that you do not incur additional penalties on this excess. You will enter the this on your 2021 return.

     

    Please be aware your Roth IRA contribution may be limited based on your filing status and income:

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    n8236Author
    February 16, 2021

    Dana,

     

    According to the IRS (Roth) link, if a single person makes over > $140,000, their contribution should be $0. Does this suggest any contributed amount >$0 is considered an excess and is hit w/ the 6% penalty?

    February 16, 2021

    Yes, in 2020 if a persons modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) is equal or more than $139,000 ($140,000 is the 2021 limit) then you cannot contribute anything to the Roth IRA and any amount contributed would be excess contribution and hit with the 6% penalty.

     

    But you can still contribute to a traditional IRA (depending on your income and if you are covered by a retirement plan this might not be deductible). If you want you can make it nondeductible so you can convert it later to a Roth IRA and won't have to pay taxes on the nondeductible part (basis). This is called backdoor Roth IRA conversion.

     

    Please see How do I enter a backdoor Roth IRA conversion? for additional information.

     

     

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