I am having an issue where Turbotax is calculating that I owe a TON of taxes for a Pretax 401K total distribution to a direct rollover Fidelity Rollover IRA. In going through the 1099-R entry, I have two choices, a Roth 401K/403B or a ROTH IRA but what confuses me is all the choices are ROTH and not a Rollover option. If I select the Roth 401K it eliminate the taxes, but I don't understand this well enough to know if that is the right choice, and confused why TurboTax doesn't have a "Rollover IRA".
I should add that Box 7 has a G
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After you have entered the information reported on your Form 1099-R, the follow-up questions are the key to reporting it as a direct rollover that should have no tax implications.
As you mentioned, one of the first questions you see asks if the money was rolled over to a Roth 401(k) or 403(b) account. If if was not put into a Roth account, you should select 'no' for this question. Selecting 'yes' will make the distribution taxable to the extent that there were pre-tax funds in the account.
Then, the next question asks if it was rolled into a Roth IRA. Again, you should answer 'no' if the money was rolled into a Traditional IRA account to preserve the nature of the pre-tax funds. This 'no' answer is assuming that the 401(k) money that was rolled over simply went to a Traditional IRA or similar type of account. There should be a message on the screen that explains this and even mentions that if it was rolled to a Traditional IRA you would answer 'no' even though it does not explicitly ask that question.
By answering No to both questions that ask if the rollover was to some type of Roth account, TurboTax knows to treat the rollover as nontaxable.
After you have entered the information reported on your Form 1099-R, the follow-up questions are the key to reporting it as a direct rollover that should have no tax implications.
As you mentioned, one of the first questions you see asks if the money was rolled over to a Roth 401(k) or 403(b) account. If if was not put into a Roth account, you should select 'no' for this question. Selecting 'yes' will make the distribution taxable to the extent that there were pre-tax funds in the account.
Then, the next question asks if it was rolled into a Roth IRA. Again, you should answer 'no' if the money was rolled into a Traditional IRA account to preserve the nature of the pre-tax funds. This 'no' answer is assuming that the 401(k) money that was rolled over simply went to a Traditional IRA or similar type of account. There should be a message on the screen that explains this and even mentions that if it was rolled to a Traditional IRA you would answer 'no' even though it does not explicitly ask that question.
By answering No to both questions that ask if the rollover was to some type of Roth account, TurboTax knows to treat the rollover as nontaxable.
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