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New Member
posted Feb 7, 2021 10:01:19 AM

I had a 401K at my previous employer which was rolled into an IRA account. Would I count that as contributing to an IRA? I received a 1099R form for the account.

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3 Replies
Level 15
Feb 7, 2021 10:22:57 AM

No.  A rollover is not a new IRA contribution.  Do not enter under Deductions & Credits anything regarding this rollover.  Only enter the Form 1099-R and answer the follow-up questions.

Expert Alumni
Feb 7, 2021 10:29:16 AM

No, a rollover doesn't count as a contribution. 

 

401K rollovers are reported as distributions, even when they are rolled over into another eligible retirement account. An eligible rollover of your 401K funds to an IRA is a non-taxable transaction. Rollover distributions are exempt from tax when you place the funds in another IRA account within 60 days from the date of distribution.

 

Regarding rolling 401K into IRA, you should receive a Form 1099-R reporting your 401K distribution. Regarding reporting 401K rollover into IRA, how you report it to the IRS depends on the type of rollover.

 

If this was a direct rollover, it should be coded G. Enter the amount from your 1099-R, Box 1 on Form 1040, Line 16a. Enter the taxable amount from Box 2a on Line 16b. The Box 2a amount should be 0 for direct rollovers.

 

 [Edited 02/09/2021 | 9:10 AM PST] 

 

 

Level 15
Feb 7, 2021 10:57:17 AM


however a rollover from a 401k plan or traditional IRA, SEP IRA, or SIMPLE IRA into a Roth IRA may affect your ability to make a contribution to a retirement plan that year.

No, it wouldn't affect one's eligibility to make an IRA contribution that year.  However, it might affect one's eligibility to take a deduction for a traditional IRA contribution due to increasing the MAGI for the purpose.