I contributed $6,000.00 on January 1, 2022. I had an one-time unplanned for spike in MAGI(300k) from my business.
February 1, 2023 I finally figured out I was over the income limit for Roth IRA out when I went to file my taxes, as it gave me a warning and penalty warning. So re-characterized to Traditional for value of $3,541.78...which I have now figured out I am over the MAGI limit for traditional as well, so it won't be a reduction of MAGI and tax benefit.
Can I re-characterize back to roth as a backdoor, since I am not getting the benefit of traditional? Or did I mess that up?
Yes, although it make be prudent to delete what you have entered and then start over again. To enter a back-door Roth contribution is a two-step process in TurboTax. Below are the steps to follow if you are using TurboTax online. The process is fairly similar if you are using TurboTax CD/download; however, at the end of the steps listed here is a link to a TurboTax article that provides the steps to follow if you are using TurboTax CD/download.
Step 1: Enter the Non-Deductible Contribution to a Traditional IRA
Step 2: Enter the Conversion from a Traditional IRA to a Roth IRA
To check the results of your backdoor Roth IRA conversion, see your Form 1040:
How to Enter a Back Door Roth IRA Conversion
Yes, although it make be prudent to delete what you have entered and then start over again. To enter a back-door Roth contribution is a two-step process in TurboTax. Below are the steps to follow if you are using TurboTax online. The process is fairly similar if you are using TurboTax CD/download; however, at the end of the steps listed here is a link to a TurboTax article that provides the steps to follow if you are using TurboTax CD/download.
Step 1: Enter the Non-Deductible Contribution to a Traditional IRA
Step 2: Enter the Conversion from a Traditional IRA to a Roth IRA
To check the results of your backdoor Roth IRA conversion, see your Form 1040:
How to Enter a Back Door Roth IRA Conversion