My client was disabled in an industrial accident. Years later a previous employer sent him a 1099R for over 20K with a 2 in box seven. When he recieved the check (which was unexpected) he immediatly opened an IRA with a broker and deposited the entire amount. Since box 7 did not have a G marked I am unable to recover much of the tax that was with held by the payer. Does anyone have a suggestion how I might help this man?
Disabled client recieves retirement payout, rolls it same day and looses $
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As long as it was rolled over in a timely manner. Have the taxpayer get a copy of the roll over documents from the broker (form 5498 or equivalent docs). Attach those via pdf and an explanation of the transaction to the return. On the 1099R input screen, show the taxable amount as zero. -
wonder if he thought of just paying the tax at the current low rates. The disability allows him attach a 5329 for the disability penalty exclusion. I cant help but think President Orcazio Cortez will make a later distribution regretful."Dude, you are correct" Rapid RobertComment
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My client was disabled in an industrial accident. Years later a previous employer sent him a 1099R for over 20K with a 2 in box seven. When he recieved the check (which was unexpected) he immediatly opened an IRA with a broker and deposited the entire amount. Since box 7 did not have a G marked I am unable to recover much of the tax that was with held by the payer. Does anyone have a suggestion how I might help this man?Comment
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The taxable amount would not be zero because the withholdings were not rolled over. There's no need to attach any documents to the tax return. The TP should keep proof of the rollover for his records however. Page 28 of the 1040 instructions explain how to report this type of rollover on the tax return.
Knock it off with the politics.Comment
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To clarify: The disabled taxpayer set up the IRA on the very day that the check was recieved from the retirement fund. As I said earlier, he was unaware the fund even existed or a better decision might have been made regarding the dispersment. Thanks to all for the help!Comment
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The taxable amount would not be zero because the withholdings were not rolled over. There's no need to attach any documents to the tax return. The TP should keep proof of the rollover for his records however. Page 28 of the 1040 instructions explain how to report this type of rollover on the tax return.
Knock it off with the politics.Comment
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Not sure why you would need to attach documents or receive a CP if done correctly. If the disbursement and 1099R was 20,000 and had 4,000 tax withheld, and he used the net check to put into an IRA, the return should show 20,000 received, 16,000 as rollover and 4,000 as taxable.Comment
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Not sure why you would need to attach documents or receive a CP if done correctly. If the disbursement and 1099R was 20,000 and had 4,000 tax withheld, and he used the net check to put into an IRA, the return should show 20,000 received, 16,000 as rollover and 4,000 as taxable.Comment
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It shows as a rollover. If receiving company handles it correctly the 5498 will report that they received a rollover contribution and everything will match up.Comment
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. I say its best to be pro-active and explain "on the return", the circumstances.
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In the above example, $20K payout, less $4K taxes and $16K rolled over would not produce a $4K tax liability after deductions and exemptions unless other income was reported on the return which increased his tax liability. The 10% early withdrawal penalty would not apply. And, no, there is nothing you can do to change anything now -- assuming the 60-day window has passed.Comment
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