2897239
You'll need to sign in or create an account to connect with an expert.
What a beautiful way to realize your own folly and end it happily.
Love this as common sense prevails and it is your own tax and you are the creator of good and bad.
Good things will always happen to good Samaritans.
Kind Regards
@dollyb1930--just fix this Your hostile and inappropriate comments have been reported to the moderators.
So, i think the problem may be that spouse's conversion was actually a contribution and conversion in March 2022 for the 2021 tax year contribution (spouse is always a year "behind" in contributions). Thus, when answering where the distribution is from, i selected "Pension/...None of the above" rather than "Current year conversion..." (because it's actually a prior year conversion. Regardless, i tried selecting current year conversion and have the same issue. I do still select the option for converting the full amount to a Roth IRA. And in the deduction section, i answer that spouse's contribution was made b/w 1/1/23 and 4/18/23.
Since you made the Roth contribution for 2021 and recharacterized it in 2022 please follow the steps below. You should have entered the recharacterization when you enter the contribution to the Roth IRA on your 2021 tax return. When you made the contributions nondeductible you should have had a 2021 Form 8606 with the basis on line 14 this will be entered in the retirement section (step 7).
On your 2021 tax return:
To enter the 1099-R conversion on your 2022 tax return:
If you need additional help please provide more details and we will be happy to help you!
[Edited 2/20/2023 |9:00 am PST]
Hi,
Thank you so much for the quick reply @DanaB27 .
I believe I have done those steps you suggested. However, I made a follow-up post, but I believe it was just as you were replying. Your suggestion notes that those are the steps I should follow if the contribution and conversion were made in 2022. For spouse, the contribution and conversion were made in 2022, but the contribution made in 2022 was for the 2021 tax year. To clarify, spouse made 2021 tax year contribution to traditional IRA and immediately converted to Roth IRA in March 2022. That generated a 1099-R. Spouse also will be making a 2022 tax year contribution to traditional IRA (and immediate conversion to Roth) in the upcoming days prior to 4/18/23). Our income dictates that it is not deductible, so we don't get the option to select it as non-deductible, TT just automatically seems to do that, but it does show $0 deductions, which seems correct. The problem seems to be on the income portion where it is treating spouse's 2021 contribution/conversion as income. I don't know what I am entering incorrectly. I have tried various combinations that each seem possible correct (and even some that seem wrong just to see if it changed anything even though I didn't intend to file it that way). Regardless, it always seems to treat the spouse TY2021 contribution/conversion from the corresponding 1099-R as income on line 4b.
Thanks again
I had edited my answer above on how to enter the basis from your 2021 tax return.
For the traditional IRA contribution for 2022 (that your spouse plans to make in the next few days) you will enter the contribution with these steps on your 2022 tax return:
Since the conversion of the 2022 contribution will take place in 2023 you will enter another conversion next year on your 2023 tax return. On your 2022 tax return, you will have a basis on line 14 Form 8606 to carry over to your 2023 tax return.
Still have questions?
Questions are answered within a few hours on average.
Post a Question*Must create login to post
Ask questions and learn more about your taxes and finances.
user17552101674
New Member
HNKDZ
Returning Member
kac42
Level 1
rtoler
Returning Member
Propeller2127
Returning Member