If I make a $5100 Traditional IRA contribution for 2018, I'll get a $200 Retirement Savings Contribution Credit. I'll contribute the other $1400 to my Roth IRA for 2018. If I convert Traditional IRA funds to Roth in 2019, would I have to repay the $200 credit or just pay the income tax on the funds being converted in 2019?
As long as my tax bracket stays the same between years (which I expect), it seems like I'd be $200 ahead by doing this. Are there rules or problems with this plan that I may not be aware of?
In case it makes a difference in the answer, I'm on SS but have other taxable income too. The Traditional IRA contrib first reduces my taxable SS and then also directly reduces my AGI, so the $5100 contrib reduces my taxable income by just over $10K.
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A Roth conversion is disregarded with regard to the Retirement Savings Contributions credit. You'll just pay income tax on the conversion, no repayment of the credit.
If less than 85% of your 2019 Social Security income will otherwise be taxable, the extra income from the Roth conversion will likely cause more of your Social Security income to become taxable, having a multiplying effect on your tax rate opposite of what has occurred on your 2018 tax return, so be careful about making any assumptions about your marginal tax rate. But yes, there are situations where shifting taxable income to the following year can produce a net savings.
You need to prepare a simulated 2019 tax return to be sure. You can use the What-If Worksheet in forms mode of the CD/download version of TurboTax to do this.
A Roth conversion is disregarded with regard to the Retirement Savings Contributions credit. You'll just pay income tax on the conversion, no repayment of the credit.
If less than 85% of your 2019 Social Security income will otherwise be taxable, the extra income from the Roth conversion will likely cause more of your Social Security income to become taxable, having a multiplying effect on your tax rate opposite of what has occurred on your 2018 tax return, so be careful about making any assumptions about your marginal tax rate. But yes, there are situations where shifting taxable income to the following year can produce a net savings.
You need to prepare a simulated 2019 tax return to be sure. You can use the What-If Worksheet in forms mode of the CD/download version of TurboTax to do this.
This is a very belated thank you for your answer. Thank you.
This is my mini version of the downloaded program's tutorial that should be in the downloaded program:
Forms Mode lets you view and make changes to your tax forms "behind the scenes."
If you're adventurous, you can even prepare your return in Forms Mode, but we don't recommend it. You may miss obscure credits and deductions you qualify for, and you may forget to report things that will come back and haunt you later.
Forms Mode is exclusively available in the TurboTax CD/Download software. It is not available in TurboTax Online.
If you want to play around with different figures and tax scenarios without affecting your original return you can ….
It's always a good idea to make a backup copy of your tax data file, in case your original gets lost or corrupted. Here's how:
If you make changes to your original tax return file, repeat these steps to ensure your original and backup copies are in-synch.
GEN85508
Answered by TurboTax FAQ to this question
AND save it as a PDF so you have access to a copy even if you don’t have the program still installed and operational :
AND protect the files :
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