In December 2022 I contributed money from my bank account to my Traditional IRA. I then converted it to my Roth IRA in January 2023.
In my 2022 taxes, I did not file a form 8606. My 1099-R was $0 and my traditional IRA 5498 form had the 6,000 contribution noted on it. I did not file a form 8606 in 2022 since the turbotax screens mentioned if I plan to contribute in Jan 2023 - Apri. 2023, which I did not since I contributed in December. I then contributed 6500 for 2023 within 2023, same as usual.
Now when I am submitting my taxes, my 1099-R is marking a contribution of 6,000 + 6500 = 12,500. It is either saying I overcontributed, or I have to pay fees since it's marking 6,000 as income.
Was I supposed to submit a 8606 for 2022 since my conversion was in 2023? For is something wrong with the software to be marking me with errors? If I amend 8606 for 2022, do I do this before I submit my 2023 taxes?
You'll need to sign in or create an account to connect with an expert.
Yes, you were supposed to report the nondeductible traditional IRA contribution for 2022 on the 2022 Form 8606. You should have a basis on line 14 that has to be entered on the 2023 return when TurboTax asks "Any nondeductible Contributions to your IRA?".
If you did not file the 2022 Form 8606 included in your 2022 return, you'll need to fill out a 2022 Form 8606 to record your nondeductible basis for conversion, and mail this form to your designated IRS office.
To enter the nondeductible contribution to the traditional IRA for 2023 in TurboTax Desktop:
To enter the 1099-R conversion:
Thanks! This was really helpful. I realized in the past years when I did my IRA contribution and conversion to roth in the same year I didn't file a 8606 -- just had the 1099 with the distribution method 2. Did I mainly need this because my conversion happened in the next calendar year? Or have I just been doing it wrong this whole time? For instance, in 2023 I did my backdoor roth contribution and conversion in May 2023. Do I need to record an 8606 form for this?
Also for fixing my 2022 8606, do I need to wait for this to process before submitting my 2023 taxes? Or can I submit my 2023 taxes with the updated basis I calculated?
To clarify, you made a conversion in 2022 and received a 2022 Form 1099-R with code 2?
It seem you reported only a distribution from the traditional IRA (entered the Form 1099-R) since no Form 8606 was included (conversions are reported on Form 8606 part II). You will have to amend the 2022 tax return to correct this. Do you show the conversion amount as taxable on line 4b? Or did you enter this as a rollover instead of a conversion (4b would be $0)
Yes, you can submit your 2023 return once you have the correct basis calculated for your 2022 Form 8606 line 14.
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.
x9redhill
Level 2
les_matheson
Level 2
tinktank
New Member
nomathhere
Level 1
NMyers
Level 1