Trying to fix years old excess Roth contribution (6% excise already paid)
I over contributed to my Roth IRA for the tax years of 2020 ($2300) and 2021 ($4010). I have already paid the 6% excise tax, for each of those years, as well as for 2022.
From my understanding, in order to no longer have this penalty, I need to withdraw a total of $6310. I would not need to account for gains (or losses) on those contributions since I’ve already paid the 6% fee. Please correct me if I’m wrong here.
I am unclear on the withdrawal process. My brokerage has a Re-characterization/Removal of Excess form, however in my situation I’m not sure I need to use that form, as the tax deadlines for the effected years have passed. I’m also not sure if there are any IRS specific forms I need to file (since the excise fees have already been paid).
From what I’ve gathered, it appears I can simply sell off $6310 worth of shares and remove those funds from the Roth. Then account for that in my tax software (HR Block), which has a step that asks if I have removed the excess.
Any help with this would be greatly appreciated.
Permalink Submitted by David Mertz on Mon, 2023-12-04 20:23
Correct. So that the Roth IRA custodian does not mess it up, tell the Roth IRA custodian nothing about this being a distribution to correct an excess contribution. Do *not* use the custodian’s recharacterization/return of excess form. Simply obtain a *regular* distribution of $6,310. It will be handled on your 2023 Form 5329 by the $6,310 being included on line 20. If it’s not a qualified distribution, make sure that the $6,310 is part of your contribution basis included on line 22 of Form 8606.