Reversing IRA contribution
Hi,
I started a traditional IRA with $1000 at a bank a few months ago that is now worth $1003. I wish I hadn’t started it and would like to get my $1000 back. The bank says I will lose the interest (no big deal) but because I’m under 59.5 I am concerned that I might have to pay a 10% penalty tax.
I haven’t filed my taxes yet. Although I qualify for a deduction on the $1000 contribution, if I distribute the $1000 in the same year, the deduction and income will offset … but I still think I will owe a 10% penalty tax.
If I choose to not deduct the $1000 contribution (even though I could), then would the 10% penalty only apply to the growth (zero) or does it also still apply to the $1000 non-deductible contribution? If the penalty only applies to the growth on non-deductible contributions and not the non-deductible contribution itself, then the 10% penalty would be moot. Does this solve my problem?
Thanks!
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Thu, 2017-11-02 04:19
Permalink Submitted by David McFarland on Wed, 2018-04-11 00:57
I made an T-IRA contribution of $4,400 in May 2017. In Dec 2017, I had the $4,400 returned to me. The $4,400 was held as “cash” (long story) for the entire time, so it didn’t accumulate any earnings. The 1099-R, box 1 and 2a, both reflect the $4,400. Box 7 contains code 8 and the IRA/SEP box is checked. Upon entering the 1099-R info into Turbo Tax, it increased the amount I owe by roughly $1,700. If I enter zero in box 2a, the program shows a zero increase – which should be correct. If I researched correctly, box 2a of my 1099-R should reflect the Net Income Attributable (NIA) amount. I‘be already contacted my brokerage and discussed with them. They said I was mistaken and the $4,400 in block 2a is correct. For grins, I even tried adding the $4,400 into TurboTax as a contribution to see if that would change anything. It did not since I’ve already hit the max allowed. So my question is, what to I do to avoid paying tax on the $4,400? Is my brokerage incorrect about box 2a? If so, what are my options since they won’t change it. If my brokerage is correct, is there an additional IRS form I need to complete? I’m not really sure how to proceed from here. Any advice/assistance would be greatly appreciated.