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good answer but Turbo tax program wants me to enter total previous year contributions to my Roth after I reported Roth contribution for 2020 in that section of the program. Good Grief! Agent says this may have something to do with fact I also take annual RMDs from a taxable retirement IRAs and 2020 covid-year special withdrawal rule. How do I get around this?
To figure out the previous year contributions for an IRA going back further than 10 years, you can work off of a formula. To calculate your IRA basis at any point in time, you would need to add up all nondeductible contributions you've made to date and subtract any nondeductible contributions you have withdrawn. Therefore, it would follow that you can subtract the total value of the IRA and the contributions that your broker recorded for the past 10 years, and the remainder is the prior years' contributions that you're looking for.
This shouldn't have anything to do with COVID. As long as it's reasonable, makes sense, and you can show where you logically got the number from, you're golden.
I've owned my ROTH IRA for 20 some odd years. How do I figure out my contributions since day 1? I am 53.
You will have to reconstruct as best you can and the IRS is willing to work with a reasonable result.
Back in the year 2000, the maximum amount you could put in was $2,000. So try to reconstruct how many years you may have contributed and multiply that by $2,000. Then put this information in your tax file to show how you arrived at this number.
The attached link to IRS Publication 590 (Year 2000) shows the maximum amount for that year. I would keep this link with your records as well.
This should help you figure out how much you contributed for the first 10 years.
you don't need to enter that Roth contribution info into TurboTax unless you plan to distribute more than that, before age 59 1/2.
Any amounts above your contributions (total) would be taxable and subject to penalty.
I am 68 years old and took a distribution in 2022. Turbo tax is asking for my total net contributions to the Roth and I am not sure where I can get this information. The broker only has 10 years of reports and there is no cumulative amount in any of the reports.
I am not sure what to enter for this question
add up the 10 reports and use that amount.
as pointed out above, this should have no effect as long as you tell TurboTax your IRA is more than five years old.
It's not clear why this question is coming up.
Thank you for the reply.
After entering the amounts given on the 1099-R that I received, it then asks about the net contributions. It makes it clear that this amount should not include any earnings.
There have been no contributions to this Roth IRA for the past 10 years.
you can enter $10, $10,000 or $10 Million, it's not going to change anything.
If you are penalized, you did not describe your Roth IRA correctly.
I know this post is a bit old, but I was hoping you might have some feedback as to why the current TurboTax software is asking for total contributions anyways, even though I'm over 60 and making my first withdrawals, so they're only from the basis coming out from any gains.
@rupunzlkim can't answer you question directly, but it doesn't matter what you enter. As you are over 59.5 years old, and the Roth has been opened for at least 5 calendar years, there will never be any taxable income related to the withdrawals.
what is the code in Box 7? if a Q (which is should be), that is all TT needs to know so there is no taxable income on the distribution.
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