2019 Roth IRA Excess Contribution
I posted a question last week regarding a 2018 Roth IRA excess contribution, it was answered very quickly and thoroughly so thank you..
The response has made me think about how to handle an excess 2019 Roth IRA contribution. I have a client who made a $7,000 2019 Roth IRA contribution which has grown to approx. $10,000. His MAGI will disallow a 2019 Roth IRA contribution. My understanding is by processing a excessive distribution he must take contribution($7,000) and all earnings ($3,000) the earnings will be taxed at client’s Ordinary Income bracket (32%) and 10% penalty on earnings. This totals a 42% tax rate on $3,000 creating a tax liability of $1,260!!! He may qualify next year to contribute to a Roth IRA but definitely will be in a slightly lower marginal tax bracket. Recharacterization not a good option since it wont be deductible and client already has a very large T IRA.
My questions are?
1) What is the harm of processing the excess Roth IRA distribution in March 2020 so earnings are taxed in 2020 versus 2019?
2) Leave 2019 Roth contribution in IRA, end of 2020 take the $7,000 out and pay 6% excise tax ($420) and allow current and future earning to stay in? Really don’t see benefit of processing a excessive 2019 Roth IRA distribution and forcing contribution and all earnings out!!! Opportunity cost on earnings then lost if removed?
What am I missing???
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Tue, 2019-12-17 23:58