Getting penalty abatement for excess IRA contributions in multiple year transfer error
I have worked through two years of 5329 forms with amended returns to pay the 6% excise tax on IRA excess contributions. This due to a Roth transferring in error as a Traditional, with resultant excess, that I have now carried the excess forward to claim unused contribution limits.
Besides explaining the transfer error, my question now is what to say in the explanation section for the changes on the 1040X. Should I hope to avoid being assessed penalties at this point, by either explaining good cause, or a first time abatement ? I assume of the two, FTA is more easily established, so as to work with a short explanation on the 1040X. Might I avoid penalty assessment by proving a good explanation at this point? Will this possible suffice? Should I attach document copies?
Or is the only thing anyone gets is a later assessment of penalties letter, with ability to appeal the letter for abatement at that point?
I read the First Time Abatement is for a single tax year, does that mean it can not be used for both years, even with subsequent year’s excesses arising from the same initial error? I am not disqualified for FTA.
Does Good Cause require I not be part of the error? I did miss error for 2 years. Are banking documents of the error accepted, or is it more involved with the IRS needing more time dig in or to contact the banks etc.?
In case it matters, I have paid the excise tax due.
This is the home stretch for this tax nightmare, and I really need any advice or experiencse on how to handle it or what to expect.
Thanks everyone.
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Wed, 2018-10-24 21:10
There is no IRS authority to waive the 6% excise taxes for excess contributions. The last page of the 5329 Inst refer to a reasonable cause request to waive the 50% excess accumulation penalty for missed RMDs, not to waivers of the excise tax. However, if the IRS bills you any late interest fee for paying the excise taxes late, you might be able to appeal the late interest fees. If so, I would wait until you get a bill for late interest, as the IRS may not bill you in the first place.
Permalink Submitted by John Williams on Thu, 2018-10-25 19:10
Thank you. Yes you are right about the excise penalty, I was not clear that I was asking about the penalty for Failure to Pay the 6% excise tax (.5% a month).