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Level 2
March 27, 2026
Question

Recharacterization and Backdoor Roth Conversion Reporting Question

  • March 27, 2026
  • 1 reply
  • 206 views

Hi @DanaB27

I've just started a Recharacterization process from my Fidelity Roth IRA account to a Traditional IRA account (opened today just for this purpose) as I've made an excess Roth IRA contribution in 2025 (well above the MAGI limit). I don't have any other IRA accounts....The eventual goal is to do a Backdoor Conversion of the entire amount from the Trad IRA to the Roth IRA once the fund settles, thus leaving the balance of the Trad IRA account as $0.

 

I plan to follow the steps mentioned in these two posts while filing my taxes in Turbo Tax for the year 2025, exactly in this order once my Backdoor Conversion process is completed:

 

https://ttlc.intuit.com/turbotax-support/en-us/help-article/retirement-income/recharacterize-roth-ira-contribution-traditional/L6VoYVkaP_US_en_US

 

https://ttlc.intuit.com/turbotax-support/en-us/help-article/retirement-benefits/enter-backdoor-roth-ira-conversion/L7gGPjKVY_US_en_US

 

The email that I've received from Fidelity after submitting my Recharacterization request includes a Note that says - The amount of the recharacterization reported on your next statement and your Fidelity issued tax forms may be slightly different than this calculation due to intra-day price fluctuations of the securities recharacterized. 

 

Here, I must mention that I did the Recharacterization in-kind by moving my Shares from my Roth IRA to the Trad IRA account, instead of cash.

 

Will it be a problem if I go by the numbers mentioned in today's email to file my taxes but if the numbers are slightly different when I get the 1099-R next year? Is that a red flag? 

 

My plan is to report the recharacterization as well as the backdoor conversion on my 2025 tax return following the above two links...will you recommend against it or is this the right approach?

 

 

1 reply

baldietax
Level 12
March 28, 2026

contributions/recharacterizations can be backdated to the prior tax year but the subsequent conversion back to Roth as part of a backdoor process is reported in the calendar year it is done, so next year you will get a 1099-R for the conversion for tax year 2026, which will have a finalized market value for whatever was converted.

 

this backdoor conversion split across tax years is normal situation when backdating the contribution, referred to in the Backdoor Roth page you referenced:

  • If you'll receive a 2026 1099-R in 2026, wait to report it on your 2026 taxes. In this case, only complete Step 1 below for your 2025 taxes. You’ll complete the second step next year when filing your taxes for 2026.

 

 

so for 2025 taxes - you would report the contribution & recharacterization only, and the end result will be a non-deductible contribution to your Trad IRA (for the original amount of the contribution), reported on Form 8606 Lines 1 & 14 which will carry forward the basis for 2026 when you report the conversion.

 

when you enter the recharacterization you will provide the market value that was moved back to Trad IRA and an explanation statement, but the market value of the Trad IRA doesn't matter until you convert it (and you will be taxed on any gains thru this whole process).  I'm not 100% certain if there is any other issue if the final market value changes a bit but I don't think it affects your 2025 return.

 

perhaps @DanaB27 or @dmertz can confirm any other issues.

DzongrilaAuthor
Level 2
March 28, 2026

That's an interesting perspective and may be correct as well. However, a couple of days ago when I had set up an appointment with a TT Expert and talked to him for a while, I literally read out all the steps mentioned in the two links that I've shared and he confirmed that I am on the right track (including Step 2: Enter the Conversion from a Traditional IRA to a Roth IRA)...but it's possible he may not have fully understood or missed some key points during our conversation....

 

Hopefully  @DanaB27 or @dmertz or @RogerD1 will tell me what's the right way to approach this...