I have a client who has insurance under Obamacare who has no earned income. They have a large penalty because other income was over threshold. By contributing money to a IRA this penalty goes away. Why does program allow this if they are not qualified to contribute to IRA.
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I see what is going on now.
On the 1099-R worksheet, scroll about 1/2 way down and click the "Quickzoom" for the "Quickzoom to enter traditional IRA basis".
On the sheet that opens up (the "IRA Info Wks"), go down a few lines to Line 18. Enter the $601,200 on that line.
What is going on is that the $5000 contribution adds some Basis to the IRA. That means part of the IRA withdrawal is not taxable, which reduces the MAGI for the Premium Tax Credit.
But until you add the $601,200 to Line 18 of the IRA Info Wks, it is incorrectly treating the entire $5000 as a full Basis of the withdrawal (effectively resulting in $5000 less income). When you enter the $601,200 to Line 18, it will properly prorate the $5000 of Basis. It will still slightly reduce the taxable income, but not enough to qualify for the credit.
That is an interesting situation that I hadn't thought of before. If they had no other IRAs (the $601,200 was not there), that would a method that would have worked to qualify for the credit.
I suspect that @rbynaker would find this interesting too.
First, it is NOT a "penalty". It is a repayment of a credit that the taxpayer does not qualify for.
Have you gone through the error check, such as entering the year-end amount of the IRAs..
Have you double checked that there is no "compensation". Look at Line 1 of form 1040, Line 2 and 3 of Schedule 1 any Partnership K-1 profits or non-taxable combat pay.
Have you checked that the IRA deduction is showing up on Line 19 of Schedule 1?
This is return,type in pro series and see what you get
married filing joint both under 65
ira distributions $66585.00
1095a info
monthly Enroll premium 743.53
second lowest silver plan $1249.51
monthly advance payment $ 743.53
Fed tax withheld $6657.00
balace due $6938.00
now put 5000 contribution to ira
now shows refund of $2284.00
Why???? No earned income
Have you done what I said, including "Have you gone through the error check, such as entering the year-end amount of the IRAs."?
Yes I put in year end value of IRA of $601200 and I get full take away of $8922.00 advance premium payback before $5000.00 Ira contribution. THis is a simple tax return please see if you get same results I get. The distribution code of 1099r box 7 is a code 7.
I see what is going on now.
On the 1099-R worksheet, scroll about 1/2 way down and click the "Quickzoom" for the "Quickzoom to enter traditional IRA basis".
On the sheet that opens up (the "IRA Info Wks"), go down a few lines to Line 18. Enter the $601,200 on that line.
What is going on is that the $5000 contribution adds some Basis to the IRA. That means part of the IRA withdrawal is not taxable, which reduces the MAGI for the Premium Tax Credit.
But until you add the $601,200 to Line 18 of the IRA Info Wks, it is incorrectly treating the entire $5000 as a full Basis of the withdrawal (effectively resulting in $5000 less income). When you enter the $601,200 to Line 18, it will properly prorate the $5000 of Basis. It will still slightly reduce the taxable income, but not enough to qualify for the credit.
That is an interesting situation that I hadn't thought of before. If they had no other IRAs (the $601,200 was not there), that would a method that would have worked to qualify for the credit.
I suspect that @rbynaker would find this interesting too.
When I put in info as you said, they owe $6938. if I put a $5000 IRA contribution they now owe $7238.
I did not put anything on worksheet except for the $5000.
Edit at first I did not check IRA box on 1099R .Bill has the solution
Thanks Tax Guy Bill
Thanks Bill.
ProSeries gives wildly incorrect answers when it comes to IRAs if you don't go step by step and enter basis, FMV, etc.
Rick
I never thought of intentionally contributing to a Traditional IRA when the taxpayer doesn't qualify for it. But doing so in certain circumstances COULD reduce income enough to fall below the 400% threshold for the Premium Tax Credit.
At best that's going to be an extremely fringe case. 1) You have to have IRA distributions in the same tax year, and 2) You have to have very little left in IRAs for the allocation to be meaningful.
Wouldn't there be an excess contribution penalty?
Yes. But in many of these "fall off a cliff" situations, it's costing taxpayers 5-figures in APTC repayment. So a little 6% penalty isn't going to hurt anyone. 🙂
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