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@rghennessy wrote:
I want to minimize my tax liability. The contribution to the traditional IRA would be post tax monty (I do not qualify for the deduction). My plan is to do the rollover at the end of the year. I believe that the gains from traditional IRA is taxed as ordinary income during the conversion to roth IRA.
As long as all Traditional IRA account balances are zero at years end only the gains would be taxable income.
[Warning: do not wait until Dec 31 to do the conversion or it might not post until Jan 2, making it a 2021 conversion. The financial institutions rules in the account agreement determine which year. Every year there are some that wait until the last day only to find that they must wait a year to report it.]
You are correct that the gains on the traditional IRA are taxed as ordinary income during the conversion.
As you know, a backdoor Roth IRA allows you to get around income limits by converting a Traditional IRA into a Roth IRA.
Contributing directly to a Roth IRA is restricted if your income is beyond certain limits, but there are no income limits for conversions.
Doing a backdoor Roth conversion is a two step process.
Step 1: Enter the Non-Deductible Contribution to a Traditional IRA
Step 2: Enter the Conversion from a Traditional IRA to a Roth IRA
To check the results of your backdoor Roth IRA conversion, see your Form 1040:
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