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Yes, you may withdraw the $2000 prior to the April 15th tax deadline.
Thanks! Is there any real disadvantage to just leaving that $2000 non-deductible portion in there? I know I must file the form 8606. Thank you so much.
@rrb-burke wrote:
Thanks! Is there any real disadvantage to just leaving that $2000 non-deductible portion in there? I know I must file the form 8606. Thank you so much.
(First, let me mention this would not be a normal withdrawal, it must be processed as a "return of excess contributions." The custodian must also return any earnings that are attributed to the excess contribution, and those earnings are taxable income.)
It's a matter of paperwork. If you don't plan on doing any Roth conversions (such as, to allow you to do a backdoor Roth IRA sometime later in your life), then you will keep that non-deductible basis for as long as you have any traditional IRAs (well into retirement). You might end up with a situation where you have several hundred thousand dollars in an IRA, of which $2000 is non-deductible basis, meaning that 1% or less of your withdrawal is non-taxable, and you have to keep track of it forever. If you don't mind the paperwork, then the non-deductible contribution will continue to grow.
If your income makes you eligible for a Roth IRA, it would make more sense to recharacterize that $2000 as a Roth IRA contribution. It's still not deductible this year, but it grows tax free and is never taxed in withdrawal, either. Here are the contribution limits.
You can have till Oct 15 to act.
You must have a) filed by tax day, or b) requested an extension of time to file by tax day to take advantage of the Oct 15 deadline.
it's clearly better to get the custodfian to act before filing, or you'll have to amend later
Sounds like a plan I will look into. Thank you!!
Will do! Thank you much..
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