Question about Excess Roth IRA contribution that hasn’t been covered here!
I live and work in Beijing China. For my 2013 taxes which I filed in January 2014 I took the foreign earned income exclusion. I then opened a Roth IRA in Feb of 2014 and contributed for 2013 5500$. I later found out that since I had zero income that I was not eligible to open an IRA. I liquidated my IRA account 3 days ago. Vanguard asked whether I want 10% withheld for Federal Taxes so I agreed. The remaining money is now in my account.
I called the IRS yesterday, and speaking to one of their agents.
He mentioned that I would only be charged 6% excess contribution tax.
He told me that the early disbursement rule does not apply to me since I wasn’t supposed to have had the account to begin with so the whole thing is an excess contribution.
He told me I would need to file form 5329.
The issue I have now come across that I need clarification on is the following:
On the 2014 Turbo Tax when I open this form it asks for excess made for 2014 and has nowhere to enter that this was an excess made for 2013.
So does this mean I have to amend my 2013 tax return? ( I opened the roth IRA after I submitted my tax return for 2013)
If so then what about the 5500+ 550 ( earnings) that I made, does that get reported on 2014’s TAXES?
Is the 6% figure correct and is that based on the principal or the principal + earnings?
The fact that Vanguard has 10% for federal tax, if my total tax is only 6% then will I be able to claim a credit for my taxes?
I hope there is some simple way out of this!
Thanks for any help!
Jonathan
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Thu, 2014-12-25 21:50
Before getting to your question, we need to know whether you specifically requested a return of your 2013 contribution (a corrective distribution) or whether you asked to close the entire account. Your 1099R will be coded to reflect how your request was worded. You will not get the 1099R for another month, but you may be able to check your Roth statement or on line account to see how this was processed. If it was not processed correctly, you need to have them change this to a return of your 2013 contribution. We need this done to know what the 1099R will say before a proper filing is done that reflects the 1099R.
Permalink Submitted by Jonathan Levitt on Fri, 2014-12-26 08:55
Thanks for responding. I looked on my vanguard account. I have the following to provide. They have my closing out of my IRA as a:Beginning balance 330.33012/23 Early roth distribution $ -5,446.48 $ 18.32 -330.330 .000 Federal withholding -605.17 I also noticed that they issued back in May they issued a 2013 form 5498 that has it listed as a 2013 contibution to Roth IRA.So since they are characterizing it as an early distribution, I should ask them to recharacterize it as a return of my 2013 contribution, is that what you are advising? ThanksJonathan
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Fri, 2014-12-26 19:39
Permalink Submitted by Jonathan Levitt on Sun, 2014-12-28 03:55
Thanks for your response once again. I have contacted Vanguard via email and they will get back to me by Tuesday regarding the question about recoding. One thing the IRS told me on the phone call whch i recorded, was that I cant avoid the 2013 6% penalty since I contributed for 2013, and if I wanted to avoid the penalty I wouldve had to remove it by July which was 6 months after I filed my return, even with a 3 month extension since I am overseas, that wouldve brought me to October, so He said that it was good that I got it out before the new year or else I wouldve had 2 6% penalties to deal with. Any thoughts? I’ll let you know what Vanguard says. I appreciate the help. Jonathan
Permalink Submitted by David Mertz on Sun, 2014-12-28 12:28
Yes, this agrees with what I provided in my reply below. It’s too late to avoid the penalty for 2013, but distributing $5,500 from the Roth IRA corrects the excess for 2014 and beyond.
Permalink Submitted by David Mertz on Fri, 2014-12-26 19:51
Permalink Submitted by Jonathan Levitt on Sun, 2014-12-28 04:05
Thanks for your reply. If I understand correctly I could roll it over, but that would mean that I would still have to have income to contribute this money right? I have income this year from capital gains, but zero earned income for The foreign earned income exclusion. So you’re idea is that I roll over the earnings 550$ and then I wont have to pay the 10% and then I can keep the excess 550$ in my roth IRA. If I only have capital gains can I still contrinute to an IRA, or is only earned income considered. I see on the IRS website they separate the two.I am also working on getting Alan the answer about recoding the distribution as a removal of excess.I’ll let you know. Thanks for the helpRegards Jonathan
Permalink Submitted by David Mertz on Sun, 2014-12-28 13:03
Permalink Submitted by Jonathan Levitt on Mon, 2014-12-29 12:18
Ok so if I get this straight.1. rolling over the earnings avoids the 10% 55$ tax2. File an ammended return for 2013 showing that an excess contribution was made in 2013 for 5500 on form 53293. file form 8606 as ALan suggested for 2014 taxes showing a distribution and the rollover of the earning part only within 60 days as you mentioned DMxDid I get the above right? I am also a bit confused that since I filed my taxes in January 2014 and made an excess contrbution for 2013 and owe 330$ on this because of the 6% penalty. Since I owed tax and didnt pay it will I have to pay a tax on top of that? The IRS told me on the phone I will just have to pay 6%So my next questions are With the 10% I had vanguard withold ( see my initial post), can I use that to pay for my 2013 6% tax on my excess contribution on my 2014 taxes?If yes how do I do that, if No how do I get that money back?Or will I have to pay that separately and use the tax they witheld as a 2014 credit for whatever I owe this year?You both are a great help and I really appreciate the time youve spent on this.Regards Jonathan
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Mon, 2014-12-29 15:58
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Sun, 2014-12-28 19:33
Jonathan, in your original post I overlooked that your distribution had just occurred, so as Dmx indicated it is too late for a specific corrective distribution of a 2013 contribution. The rest of the postings are correct, and you should roll over 551.65 that represents the earnings before withholding within 60 days of when you received the distribution. That will eliminate tax and early withdrawal penalties on these earnings and preserve the earnings in your Roth IRA. You would only have to pay the 6% excise tax for 2013 plus the IRS could bill you late interest on the excise tax you are paying late with Form 5329. You will also have to file an 8606 for 2014 reporting the distribution. If you roll over the earnings, only report on line 19 of Form 8606 the amount of your original contribution of 5500 (even though you received in the distribution less due to withholding). There will be no tax generated. Show “rollover” next to line 15b if you complete the rollover and of course remember to claim credit for the withheld amount on your 2014 return. Finally, make a note to yourself if you do the rollover that your Roth IRA has no basis (unless you made contributions or conversions before 2013) and the amount in your Roth is all earnings. You will need to know that if you every take another Roth distribution. Again, sorry for the error and hope you did not spend too much time trying to get VG to recode the distribution, because they will not do so.