Return of IRA Contribution with Earnings – Taxation
My wife made a 2017 IRA contribution during 2017 for $6,500 which she ultimately was ineligible to make as a deductible contribution. Brokerage firm returned $6,500 + $2,300 earnings in Jan. 2018. Form 1099-R for this transaction won’t be issued until early 2019. She’s under age 59.5, but we had medical expenses + medical insurance premiums in excess of the $2,300 (after reducing by 7.5% of AGI).
We need to recognize $2,300 in ordinary income for the 2017 tax year and appear to meet an exception to the 10% early distribution penalty because of the medical expenses. Using Turbo Tax, it’s not clear what needs to be done.
What forms need to be completed and is a letter of explanation to the IRS necessary? Any help is appreciated. Thank you.
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Wed, 2018-01-31 00:11
Permalink Submitted by David Mertz on Wed, 2018-01-31 02:18
In this case the dummy 2018 Form 1099-R would have codes P and 1 because the contribution was in 2017 but the return of the contribution was in 2018. (The same result can be accomplished with a dummy *2017* Form 1099-R with codes 8 and 1, but the actual 2018 Form 1099-R will have codes P and 1.) An explanation statement *is* required for the return of contribution.