Hello, I think I'm missing a 1099-R, but want to make sure.
Here is the timeline of my issue:
03/01/2021 - Made a $6,000 contribution to my Roth IRA
12/20/2021 - Did an Excess Contrib Withdraw to pull out the $6,000 since I am above the income limit
12/20/2021 - Opened an IRA account
03/22/2022 - Made a non deductible $6,000 contribution to the IRA for 2021
04/05/2022 - Converted the IRA to a Roth.
As of right now, I have only 1 1099-R that shows a J8 code, and I THINK that is the Excess Contribution Withdraw.
Should I also have a 1099-R that shows the conversion?
Thanks!!
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No, it won't be an issue. You can make a nondeductible contribution for 2022 and then convert it in 2022.
Next year on your 2022 tax return:
To enter the nondeductible contribution to the traditional IRA for 2022:
To enter the 1099-R conversion:
@soljarag wrote:
Hello, I think I'm missing a 1099-R, but want to make sure.
Here is the timeline of my issue:
03/01/2021 - Made a $6,000 contribution to my Roth IRA
12/20/2021 - Did an Excess Contrib Withdraw to pull out the $6,000 since I am above the income limit
12/20/2021 - Opened an IRA account
03/22/2022 - Made a non deductible $6,000 contribution to the IRA for 2021
04/05/2022 - Converted the IRA to a Roth.
As of right now, I have only 1 1099-R that shows a J8 code, and I THINK that is the Excess Contribution Withdraw.
Should I also have a 1099-R that shows the conversion?
Thanks!!
No. Since the conversion was done in 2022 you will receive the 1099-R next year to go on your 2022 tax return.
Be sure you enter the 2020 non-deductible Traditional IRA contribution to produce a 2021 8606 form with the $6,000 on lines 1,3 and 14. You will need the line 14 amount for the 2022 1099-R next year.
Not yet. Even though you made the non-deductible contribution to the Traditional IRA for 2021, the actual conversion to the Roth IRA took place in 2022. You will receive a 2022 Form 1099-R reporting the conversion, which will then be reported on your 2022 tax return.
As for the Form 1099-R with code J8, you are correct about what it is reporting.
Ok, Thanks!
So If I do another conversion in 2022 (for my 2022 non-deductible contribution) will that be an issue (can I convert $12,000 in 1 year?)
No, it won't be an issue. You can make a nondeductible contribution for 2022 and then convert it in 2022.
Next year on your 2022 tax return:
To enter the nondeductible contribution to the traditional IRA for 2022:
To enter the 1099-R conversion:
@soljarag wrote:
Ok, Thanks!
So If I do another conversion in 2022 (for my 2022 non-deductible contribution) will that be an issue (can I convert $12,000 in 1 year?)
Your 2022 1099-R should be the total of both.
In addition to my prior post, the 2022 non-deductible contribution must also be entered in the IRA contribution interview to put the 2020 $6,000 amount on the 2022 8606 line 1, the line 2 amount is from line 14 of the 2021 8606 so the total of $12,000 should be on line 3.
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