EXCESS NON DEDUCTIBLE TIRA CONTRIBUTION ON FORM 8606
Hello:
I have a question about filling out Form 8606 with an excess contribution. I have a client (under 50) who contributed $6500 to her TIRA and converted it to a Roth. So far so good! Then on 12/28/23 she made another $539 contribution to her TIRA. This was converted to a Roth in Feb 2024. So should the Form 8606 Line 1 have the contribution of $6500 (max allowable contribution) or the actual contribution of $7,039? Since she had a balance at 12/31/23 of $541 ($539 + interest) there will be some taxes paid on the conversion. Obviously, including the additional contribution will help, but I don’t know if an excess nondeductible contribution increases basis or is disallowed for basis calculation.
What I can’t find in my research is if line 1 includes all contributions, including excess, or only the allowable contributions ($6,500).
Thanks in advance!
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Sat, 2024-04-06 01:55
Normally, the taxpayer would remove the excess contribution and related earnings by the due date, and if so the Form 8606 instructions indicate to not include the excess on line 1. But if this client converted their entire TIRA value to Roth, the excess contribution will have to be removed from the Roth IRA by the due date, and the situation explained to the Roth custodian. This is a mess and the Roth custodian may not know how to handle it.
Therefore, it will probably be easier to NOT attempt an excess correction from the Roth IRA, but to file Form 5329 and pay the 6% excise tax with the 2023 return. Do not show the excess on line 1 of the 2023 8606. Then contribute less for 2024 so that the excess can be “absorbed” (carried forward) to 2024 and deducted in 2024 (if eligible). This eliminates having to deal with the IRA custodians, and is all handled on Form 5329 for 2023 and 2024, with the 2024 form showing that the excess was eliminated by absorbing as a 2024 contribution.