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If only one of these was an IRA-to-IRA rollover, yes, you are permitted to do both rollovers. Rollovers to or from a 401(k) are not subject to the one-per-year limit. That limit only applies to the total of traditional IRA-to-traditional IRA rollovers and Roth IRA-to-Roth IRA rollovers.
I withdrew $155,000 from my traditional IRA and redeposited that same amount , $155,000 to the same IRA within 60 days.
My 1099 does not reflect the redeposit. In filing with TurboTax I entered the Gross Distribution per the 1099 and manually entered the Taxable Amount with the redeposit subtracted from the Gross Distribution. TurboTax is now carrying the entire Gross Distribution as taxable income and of course calculated the tax due by including the $155,000 amount as income. Please advise what to do.
jonhngimble, you've entered this incorrectly. You must enter the Form 1099-R exactly as received. In the follow-up, indicate that you moved the money to another retirement account (or returned it to the same account), then indicate the amount rolled over. The gross amount will appear on Form 1040 line 4a but the amount rolled over will be excluded from any taxable amount on line 4b. TurboTax will also include the word ROLLOVER next to line 4b.
What do you mean by entering information in the follow-up?
You can indicate that you returned your distribution to your IRA, in the screens that follow the 1099-R entry screen. Please follow these steps:
TurboTax Online
TurboTax CD/Download
The follow-up is the series of questions that TurboTax presents after clicking the Continue button on the page where you enter the details from the Form 1099-R provided by the payer.
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