The Inherited IRA RMD was originally withdrawn in 2020, and fed tax was withheld. The rollover back was for the entire amount originally withdrawn.
Because RMDs were waived for 2020, this distribution was not an RMD even if that was the original intent. Enter the 1099-R from TurboTax. In the follow-up questions, indicate that none of the distribution was RMD, indicate that you moved the money to another retirement account or returned it to the same account, then indicate the amount rolled over. TurboTax will exclude the amount rolled over from the taxable amount on Form 1040 line 4b and will include the word ROLLOVER next to the line.
If you previously entered the Form 1099-R and indicated that any part of the distribution was RMD, delete the 1099-R form from TurboTax and reenter it as described above.
Thank you. However, I entered the 1099-R as you described, indicating that it was not an RMD, but nowhere was I able to tell it that I had rolled back the distribution amount.
Thank you again, dmertz. Actually, the distribution code in box 7 is "4" ("death," because this is an inherited IRA). So I did delete and re-enter the 1099-R, but still no place to describe the rollover return. Could this be a TurboTax bug?
[Edit] It works fine in the CD/download version of TurboTax but I tested just now with the online version of TurboTax and it doesn't work. The only workaround that I can come up with is to say that the IRA was inherited from your spouse and that you did not put the money into your own IRA. This will allow online TurboTax to present the necessary question but will not affect your tax return in any other way.
I've edited my previous reply after discovering that this is a bug only in the online version of TurboTax.
@Katie_B , here is another problem only in the online version of TurboTax that can only be experienced by stepping through step-by-step mode, in this case entering a code 4 Form 1099-R to report a rollover of a distribution received by a non-spouse beneficiary (a special situation for 2020 due to IRS Notice 2020-51).
Thank you, again, dmertz. It appears that the bug is the page immediately following the 1099-R entry pages, where it asks if there any of a list of "uncommon situations apply." When I put a check in the box for "I inherited the IRA," then I do not get the page that asks about the moving it to another IRA or returned to same. But if instead, I select "none of these apply," then I get tot he page which you describe. So I will use that setting. Thank you again for all your help, now that I see it as you said.
dmertz -- BTW, will this bug be reported, and will I know when it gets fixed?
I've notified the administrator of this forum. I would just use the workaround and not worry about when it will be fixed. Using the workaround that you found will produce a tax return that is identical to what you would get if this problem did not exist.
@dmertz and all- this is currently being investigated by our team and I will give you updates as I receive them.
When I was playing around with my own file, I unchecked the box for IRA, continued to the rollover questions and completed them, then re-checked the IRA/inherited boxes. It did appear on my test file to still have the rollover in place, but definitely double check that on your own files if you try to use it as a workaround.
Otherwise I will keep you all posted with this, thanks!
Hello all, I did hear back from the team about this. It has been determined to not be a bug due to this IRS publication, which describes that non-spouse beneficiaries are not permitted to rollover the IRA.: https://www.irs.gov/retirement-plans/plan-participant-employee/retirement-topics-beneficiary#:~:text=If%20the%20inherited%20traditional%20IRA,out%20of%20the%20inherited%20IRA
Although that is true generally, year 2020 was a special case, due to the CARES Act. RMD from IRA's, including inherited IRA's, were changed to 0 required. And if one had already taken an RMD out for 2020, it could be rolled back in, including for inherited IRA's before 8/31/2020.
As sdavgord24 said, this needs to be permitted in 2020 TurboTax due to IRS Notice 2020-51 permitting non-spouse beneficiaries to have rolled back to the distributing account by August 31, 2020 amounts that would have been RMDs were it not for the CARES Act waiving RMDs for 2020. In any other year the "not a bug" response would have been correct, but not 2020.
Katie_B:
THANK YOU! I tried what you suggested and it worked perfectly. It was driving me crazy not to be able to check "inherited" when the IRA was, in fact, inherited from a non-spouse. So, for anyone new to this thread and facing the same conundrum - do what Katie_B said:
1) Follow all of the steps on the online process but DO NOT click "inherited" or you will never be directed to the rollover info page (and your RMD will remain taxable in the online system).
2) Once you've completed the 1099-R section and it's saved into the system and the numbers look right, go back and click "inherited" and complete the additional associated steps. When I did that the numbers didn't change (i.e. my RMD remained untaxed) and now the accompanying info is totally correct as well.
This seems to be the workaround we have all been looking for. So glad I found this thread - thanks again!
Thank you all. I also rolled back an inherited IRA and Turbo Tax was not allowing me to indicate the rollover. So I did what you suggested and first deleted and reimported the IRA. When it came to the question, did you inherit the IRA from National Financial Services (eg. Fidelity), this time I answered NO. (which seems sort of correct, since I didn't inherit the IRA from Fidelity, I inherited it from my mother). But Turbo Tax must have known it was an inherited IRA because Box 7 had a code of 4 for death. Their next question was Tell us when this person was born. I continued to step through the interview, Answered NO to none of this withdrawal was an RMD, answered that I moved the money to another retirement account (or returned it to the same account) and that I rolled over all of this money. Once I did this, everything worked fine.
You don't have to enter incorrect information on your 1040 to try and trick the system. After you're done filling in the 1099-R information, open the forms view. Find your 1099-R for your RMD. Check the box that says the entire amount of the distribution was rolled over. And the taxable amount that was originally added will be deleted by TurboTax.
You don't have to incorrectly say it was inherited from your spouse. Just open the forms view and check the box indicating that you rolled over the entire amount. And the added tax will be removed.
You don't need to try and trick the system by entering incorrect information. Just open the forms view and check the box indicating that you rolled over the RMD. The added tax will disappear.
Most TurboTax users use the online version of TurboTax which does not have forms mode. The workaround works for all users.