This one is giving me fits. Client mentions casually that they have an HSA account at his company (C-Corp) and they contribute funds into it for him. No information on his W-2. No 1099-SA. After much emailing back and forth, he finally gets it -- that yes, there IS an SA-1099 for 2011 to the tune of almost $10K+ and gets copy from bank handling account and emails it to me. He verifies all is legitmate medical expense. For the third time, I have asked him how much did the co put into the account in 2011, since no info is on W-2. He says $10K+, the exact amt of SA-1099 distribution to the penny. What? Form definitely says HSA on it, so it is not something else. Max contribution per year for him as single person under 50 is $3,050 by my reckoning. Does he have a taxable income problem? PS: Co president assures me the CPA firm handling W-2's knows what they are doing. Really? Or is it me? I think this is a really small C-Corp. Only 3 employees and one of them is the Prez.
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He did not send me the 5498-SA. It was paid through the company and there was NOTHING shown on the W-2. I have spent the better part of 10 days trying to get that across to the client's boss, that the W-2 was not completed properly. My main concern, however right now is, can the company plunk all this money into the account? Isn't it limited? Instructions for 8889, page 5, discuss Excess Employer Contributions, which says they are the excess over your limitation on Line 8 of the form. The limitation for this TP is $3,050. Line 9 & 11 is the employer contribution amt. While there is nothing on Line 13 and therefore no deduction for the TP to take, it appears that the employer contribution is in excess of the allowed amt by $6,727. It goes on to say on page 5, "if the excess was not included in income on Form W-2, you must report it as "Other Income" on your tax return." I have other clients that have these accounts and on every one the information is on the W-2, Box 12, Code W and the amt is never over the limit for the TP's age and plan type.Last edited by Burke; 04-05-2012, 12:48 PM.
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I doubt very much
Originally posted by Burke View PostHe did not send me the 5498-SA. It was paid through the company and there was NOTHING shown on the W-2. I have spent the better part of 10 days trying to get that across to the client's boss, that the W-2 was not completed properly. My main concern, however right now is, can the company plunk all this money into the account? Isn't it limited? Instructions for 8889, page 5, discuss Excess Employer Contributions, which says they are the excess over your limitation on Line 8 of the form. The limitation for this TP is $3,150. Line 9 & 11 is the employer contribution amt. While there is nothing on Line 13 and therefore no deduction for the TP to take, it appears that the employer contribution is in excess of the allowed amt by $6,727. It goes on to say on page 5, "if the excess was not included in income on Form W-2, you must report it as "Other Income" on your tax return." I have other clients that have these accounts and on every one the information is on the W-2, Box 12, Code W and the amt is never over the limit for the TP's age and plan type.
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I think there are a lot of companies that got the HSA reporing wrong.
I have a question similar but the opposite, My client has a W-2 marked with a W in box 12 b, Employer contributions, its $2,700, he assures me he contributed $1,500 and the company contributed $1,200. My software will not let me split the $2700 marked with a W. So either the W-2 is wrong or my client is wrong. Any suggestions?
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Originally posted by Roger N View PostI think there are a lot of companies that got the HSA reporing wrong.
I have a question similar but the opposite, My client has a W-2 marked with a W in box 12 b, Employer contributions, its $2,700, he assures me he contributed $1,500 and the company contributed $1,200. My software will not let me split the $2700 marked with a W. So either the W-2 is wrong or my client is wrong. Any suggestions?Believe nothing you have not personally researched and verified.
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Originally posted by veritas View PostI doubt very much the HSA bank would allow excess contributions.Last edited by Burke; 04-04-2012, 09:23 AM.
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Originally posted by Roger N View PostI think there are a lot of companies that got the HSA reporing wrong.
I have a question similar but the opposite, My client has a W-2 marked with a W in box 12 b, Employer contributions, its $2,700, he assures me he contributed $1,500 and the company contributed $1,200. My software will not let me split the $2700 marked with a W. So either the W-2 is wrong or my client is wrong. Any suggestions?
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I have the HSA statement and it shows... Employee/Employer contributions $2,700 which matches the W-2 however doesn't answer my question, nonetheless, I am sure its most likely pre-tax which from what I understand doesn't get the deduction anyway.
I went a looked at another client who has the HSA, she contributed $540, employer contributed $1,000, W-2 shows $540... which is not right.
I wonder if employers are grouping the employee pre-tax contributions with the company contributions? Not sure.
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The terminology is screwy on the form. The instructions give better detail.
EmployER contributions and pre-tax employee contributions paid via payroll deduction count as employER contributions. Maybe because it's part of the employee's compensation from his employer, reduces taxable wages. No deduction on return because they already reduced his taxable wages.
Only employee pre-tax contributions, often mailed in separately, count as the taxpayer's contributions and feed to the adjustments area of his 1040.
He needs to give you two forms and tell you how much he paid in qualified medical expenses. Some plan holders provide online access detailing each transaction.
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Originally posted by Lion View PostThe terminology is screwy on the form. The instructions give better detail.
EmployER contributions and pre-tax employee contributions paid via payroll deduction count as employER contributions. Maybe because it's part of the employee's compensation from his employer, reduces taxable wages. No deduction on return because they already reduced his taxable wages.
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