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Retirement tax questions
Yes, you'll report all three.
For the code G Form 1099-R, answer No to each of the questions that ask if the rollover was to any kind of Roth account because this Form 1099-R is reporting a rollover to a traditional IRA.
For the code 2 Form 1099-R with the IRA/SEP/SIMPLE box marked you'll indicate that this was converted to a Roth IRA. Presumably the entire gross amount shown on this Form 1099-R was converted.
I'm guessing that the third Form 1099-R has code 1 in box 7, the IRA/SEP/SIMPLE box marked and the same amount in boxes 2a and 4 as the gross amount in box 1, perhaps equal to 1/9 of the amount converted to Roth, indicating that 10% of the combined amount on the code 2 and code 1 Forms 1099-R was withheld for taxes. Unless you substituted other funds to complete a Roth conversion or rollover of this amount, this amount remains distributed and subject to tax and to a 10% early-distribution penalty. (Assuming this to be the case, you should have declined withholding on the Roth conversion and made an estimated tax payment instead, avoiding the early distribution penalty. Paying an early-distribution penalty to be able to do a Roth conversion is rarely the best financial choice. If the distribution from the traditional IRA occurred on 12/27/2019 or later, as of today you are still within the 60-day window to complete a conversion or rollover of this amount.)