I performed several things last year and want to make sure I didn't totally screw up my tax situation by doing so:
I have to the best of my knowledge supplied every one of these transactions to TurboTax
However, when I check my form 1040, Line 4b is showing a taxable distribution of nearly $6000 which I am not expecting to see as I understood all of my actions to be nontaxable. Did I do something wrong in TurboTax or did the 401k rollover mess up my ability to do the backdoor in a nontaxable manner?
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Yes, the 401(k) rollover of pre-tax funds complicated your tax situation, and part of your conversion will be taxable as shown on line 4b of Form 1040.
The Backdoor Roth only works if your traditional/SEP/SIMPLE IRAs are empty. Since you had pre-tax funds from your 401k rollover in your traditional IRA the pro-rata rule applies. This means that with each distribution/ conversion, you will have a taxable and nontaxable part. You can see the remaining basis on line 14 of Form 8606, this basis can be carried forward. Therefore each distribution/conversion in the future will have a taxable and nontaxable part until the basis is all used.
If you plan to use the Backdoor Roth strategy in the future you might want to think about a reverse rollover where you rollover IRA money to a company plan, like a 401(k). Only pre-tax funds can be rolled from an IRA to a company plan. Therefore, you would isolate the basis and could start the Backdoor Roth procedure fresh. But it only works if your employer allows it, not all plans do.
You might want to look into both these articles for additional information: How to FIX Backdoor Roth IRA Screw-ups and When the Reverse Makes Sense: Benefits of a Reverse Rollover.
Instructions for review:
To enter the recharacterization and nondeductible traditional IRA contribution:
To enter the 1099-R conversion:
Yes, the 401(k) rollover of pre-tax funds complicated your tax situation, and part of your conversion will be taxable as shown on line 4b of Form 1040.
The Backdoor Roth only works if your traditional/SEP/SIMPLE IRAs are empty. Since you had pre-tax funds from your 401k rollover in your traditional IRA the pro-rata rule applies. This means that with each distribution/ conversion, you will have a taxable and nontaxable part. You can see the remaining basis on line 14 of Form 8606, this basis can be carried forward. Therefore each distribution/conversion in the future will have a taxable and nontaxable part until the basis is all used.
If you plan to use the Backdoor Roth strategy in the future you might want to think about a reverse rollover where you rollover IRA money to a company plan, like a 401(k). Only pre-tax funds can be rolled from an IRA to a company plan. Therefore, you would isolate the basis and could start the Backdoor Roth procedure fresh. But it only works if your employer allows it, not all plans do.
You might want to look into both these articles for additional information: How to FIX Backdoor Roth IRA Screw-ups and When the Reverse Makes Sense: Benefits of a Reverse Rollover.
Instructions for review:
To enter the recharacterization and nondeductible traditional IRA contribution:
To enter the 1099-R conversion:
thanks for the response @DanaB27 , just to be sure, this applies even if I did the 401k rollover after the backdoor conversion which was marked as a Total Distribution?
Yes, it even applies if the rollover happened after the backdoor conversion since you have to enter the value of the IRA at the end of 2022 on Form 8606 to calculate the taxable part.
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