2994877
In 2022, my wife contributed $6,000 to her non-deductible IRA, had some capital losses, and converted all of the remaining amount to a Roth IRA. Later in the year, she withdrew all contributions she had made to her Roth IRA in the last 4 years (including 2022).
TurboTax correctly considers the withdrawals from the contributions prior to 2022 non-taxable. However, it completely ignores the Roth 2022 conversion, and considers that almost $6,000 of the withdrawal are earnings (surprisingly, it only charges penalty, but not taxes on this value).
How can I address that?
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Please make sure that the conversion is entered correctly:
You should see the conversion amount included on line 24 of Form 8606. Please follow these steps to view Form 8606 (you might be asked to pay first):
If this doesn't solve your issue it might be helpful to have a TurboTax ".tax2022" file that is experiencing this issue. You can send us a “diagnostic” file that has your “numbers” but not your personal information. If you would like to do this, here are the instructions for TurboTax Online:
We will then be able to see exactly what you are seeing and we can determine what exactly is going on in your return and provide you with a resolution.
The result suggests that the Roth conversion is at least partially taxable. Perhaps you have not yet entered your wife's nondeductible traditional IRA contribution for 2022 (or, if the contribution was made for 2021, you did not report the nondeductible contribution on the 2021 tax return so that the basis in nondeductible traditional IRA contributions would carry forward to 2022).
Examine the IRA Information worksheet to see your wife's basis in contributions and conversions.
Examine Form 8606 to see the calculation of the nontaxable and taxable amounts of the Roth conversion. If any of the Roth conversion is taxable and your wife was under age 59½ at the time of the distribution from the Roth IRA, any part of the distribution attributable to taxable Roth conversions held less than 5 years are subject to the 10% additional tax, but not income tax.
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