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Yes, you must report the rollover on your tax return. The financial institution will send you a Form 1099-R which you will use to report the transaction. Box 7 of this form will have code G, Direct rollover of a distribution (other than a designated Roth account contribution) to a qualified plan, a section 403(b) plan, a governmental section 457(b) plan, or an IRA.
If you do not receive the Form 1099-R by February 15, 2016, please see IRS Tax Topic 154 - Form W-2 and Form 1099-R (What to do if Incorrect or Not Received).
A note about indirect rollovers
IRA distributions are reported on Form 1099-R. If you had a direct rollover, the funds moved directly from one financial institution to another, so you never saw the money. As mentioned above, direct rollovers are indicated with either code G or H in Box 7 of the Form 1099-R. There is no special box 7 code for an indirect rollover (i.e., the code will indicate something else, such as “1” for an early distribution). Instead, enter the 1099-R that reports the distribution, then continue through the tax interview. TurboTax will ask what you did with the money, and you can indicate that you rolled it over (click the first attachment below to enlarge it for reference). Note that if you only rolled over part of the funds, you'll be prompted to enter the rollover amount (click the second attachment below for reference).
To enter your rollover:
For more information, see the FAQ below, What Is the Difference Between a Direct and an Indirect Rollover? https://ttlc.intuit.com/replies/3880707
Yes, you must report the rollover on your tax return. The financial institution will send you a Form 1099-R which you will use to report the transaction. Box 7 of this form will have code G, Direct rollover of a distribution (other than a designated Roth account contribution) to a qualified plan, a section 403(b) plan, a governmental section 457(b) plan, or an IRA.
If you do not receive the Form 1099-R by February 15, 2016, please see IRS Tax Topic 154 - Form W-2 and Form 1099-R (What to do if Incorrect or Not Received).
A note about indirect rollovers
IRA distributions are reported on Form 1099-R. If you had a direct rollover, the funds moved directly from one financial institution to another, so you never saw the money. As mentioned above, direct rollovers are indicated with either code G or H in Box 7 of the Form 1099-R. There is no special box 7 code for an indirect rollover (i.e., the code will indicate something else, such as “1” for an early distribution). Instead, enter the 1099-R that reports the distribution, then continue through the tax interview. TurboTax will ask what you did with the money, and you can indicate that you rolled it over (click the first attachment below to enlarge it for reference). Note that if you only rolled over part of the funds, you'll be prompted to enter the rollover amount (click the second attachment below for reference).
To enter your rollover:
For more information, see the FAQ below, What Is the Difference Between a Direct and an Indirect Rollover? https://ttlc.intuit.com/replies/3880707
It only gets reported if you receive a 1099-R. Even then, while the code in box 7 ***MIGHT*** show it as a distribution, if you pay attention to detail when entering the 1099-R in the program, it will be reported for exactly what it is - a rollover.
If this was a trustee-to-trustee transfer and you never laid eyeballs on the money personally yourself, then it's very likely you will not get a 1099-R and nothing has to be reported. But if you even so much as laid eyeballs or touched the money in any way, form or fashion you can expect to get a 1099-R.
Rollovers from an IRA into a 401(k) are ALWAYS reported on a 1099-R, even if it is a direct trustee-to-trustee rollover. If it was a direct trustee rollover the 1099-R should have a code "G" in box 7. That still must be reported on your tax return.
To be a direct rollover the IRA owner cannot have access to the money, but the IRA trustee can give the IRA owner a check to be delivered by the IRA owner to the trustee of the new plan. The IRA owner does not have access to the funds as long as the check is made out to the new plan and not the IRA owner.
(Only trustee-to-trustee transfers of IRA's between IRA accounts or trustees are not reportable - changing from one type of account to another type [IRA to 401(k] - is always reportable.)
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