I rolled over $25K from a 457 account to a traditional IRA, and then rolled over $16K from the traditional IRA to a Roth IRA. When I filed my taxes, I only reported the $16K conversion because it was taxable. But I have read some stuff indicating I probably should have reported the $25K nontaxable rollover as well. So my questions are: 1) do I need to do a 1040X to report that nontaxable transfer? 2) how exactly do I report that on the tax form?
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Yes, you should have reported the $25K rollover on your tax return, even though it’s not taxable.
Topic no. 413, Rollovers from retirement plans has the information about reportable rollovers.
Yes, it is highly recommended that you file an amended return using Form 1040-X to report the nontaxable rollover. If you did not report the $25K rollover, the IRS might assume it was a taxable distribution, which could trigger a notice or audit. You should clearly state that you are amending the return to report a nontaxable rollover from a 457(b) account to a traditional IRA that was not included on the original return. This will help the IRS understand why you are filing an amendment and will match your records with theirs.
How exactly do I report that on the tax form?
@user17581197005 Thanks for the question!!
Does Pro-Rata rule apply to this scenario?
The problem is that there is only one line 4b, and I have already reported the taxable $16K conversion there.
The Pro-Rata Rule applies only when you have both pre-tax and after-tax amounts in your Traditional IRA and you do a conversion to a Roth IRA.
@user17581270646 Hope this helps!!
Since both the $25K rollover and the $16K Roth conversion are IRA distributions, you need to combine them on Line 4a, and then split the taxable portion on Line 4b:
This tells the IRS:
If you are using TurboTax, the software would do this for you once you enter the 25K distribution & select the option that it is a direct rollover.
@user17581197005 Thanks for the question!!
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