My income is too high for a ROTH. In 2023 I contributed $6500 to a traditional IRA and immediately transferred it to a ROTH. I followed all the instructions on TurboTax for a ROTH conversion.
Now I’m being told that I made too much for a ROTH and will have a $390 penalty for every year I don’t take out the $6500.
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Please make sure that you don't enter the conversion as a Roth IRA contribution in the IRA contribution sections. A conversion is entered in the retirement section.
Please review the steps on how to enter the nondeductible tradition IRA contribution and conversion here: How do I enter a backdoor Roth IRA conversion?
A Conversion is not a Contribution. Only report the conversion via the 1099-R.
So there is no need to enter anything in deductions & credits section as long as I have an 1099-R?
Correct. You do not enter anything pertaining to making a Roth IRA contribution.
However, if the Traditional IRA non-deductible contribution was made during 2024, you do need to be sure to enter it in the deductions and credits section for IRA contributions.
So I made the traditional IRA non-deductible contribution in 2024.
I entered that into the Traditional IRA section and followed the steps.
However, it is saying that I have a penalty. Even though I submitted a 1099-R in the Wages & Income section.
To confirm you only entered the Traditional IRA contribution and you did not say during the IRA contribution interview that you switched/transferred the contribution to Roth IRA (recharacterization)?
To enter the nondeductible contribution to the traditional IRA:
To enter the Form 1099-R conversion:
Those are two completely different things.
A 1099-R lists withdrawals (distributions). A 1099-R has nothing to do with contributions.
You must list your contributions separately, if you made any. They are two separate transactions with different rules.
@sesayse92 wrote:
So I made the traditional IRA non-deductible contribution in 2024.
I entered that into the Traditional IRA section and followed the steps.
However, it is saying that I have a penalty. Even though I submitted a 1099-R in the Wages & Income section.
A 1099-R only lists withdrawals. Contributions are separate, different, and covered by different rules.
Did you have income earned from working? You can only contribute to any kind of IRA if you have compensation from working (generally, wages in box 1 of a W-2, or self-employment income.)
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