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Itemized tax

Hello,

 

I have three questions:

1- As a single person, can I claim the co-pay/deductibles of all my doctors' bills and medical procedures under" medical expenses" and ask for the itemized tax, not the standard one?

 

2- I converted my "traditional IRA" account to the "Roth IRA" account as my former employer closed the traditional account. I already paid the tax for the traditional and again, I am paying tax for the Roth (which is ok). My question is how I can make sure that I am taxed for the difference rates of Roth and traditional and not again on the total and converted fund from traditional to Roth.

 

3- Would claim the amount of money/tax I paid to the Roth account in 2024 help to reduce or increase my tax refund?

 

Thank you!

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6 Replies
JohnB5677
Employee Tax Expert

Itemized tax

1.  Yes, you can claim all of your medical expenses, but there are some significant restrictions.

2. The distribution from the Traditional IRA should be taxed, but only once.

  • You did not pay taxon that Traditional IRA contribution.
  • When entering the 1099-R information, follow these steps
  1. Under Federal
  2. Select Wages & Income
  3. Scroll to and select IRA, 401(k), Pension Plan Withdrawals (1099-R)
  4. Now Edit or Add another 1099-R
  5. Continue the interview to the question
  6. Tell us if you moved the money through a rollover or conversion
  7. I converted some or all of it to a Roth IRA
  8. If you had taxes taken out
  9. No, I converted less than $XXX XXX
  10. Post the Actual amount converted

3. If you had taxes withheld when you withdrew the Traditional IRA, it will reduce your tax burden.

  • If you're referring to a penalty charge (That you had withheld) it would also reduce the tares owed.
  • If I misunderstood this question, please give a clarification.

 


 

 

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Itemized tax

Thank you for the detailed information.

 

Following up on 1099-R,  the traditional IRA account was ~$3570 and currently, I owe $781 for the federal tax and ~150 for the state tax. Do these taxes make sense? (781/3570)=21%....The traditional account was in State A and I live in State B. Does it matter? Should I be taxed for 1099 based on state A and not B?

 

Regarding question 3, I was confused by a section called "Traditional IRA and Roth IRA" and asked if I had any ROTH or traditional contributions in 2024. I had only ROTH in 2024. 

It then asks for the "repayment of a retirement distribution" ...not sure what this is... then Enter your ROTH IRA contribution....Why should we state the Roth contribution here? Does it help me to get a break or again increase the tax? I even don't know how much I contributed in 2024 for Roth as I had three employers.  Should I enter all the details or can I skip this?

 

 

I have an additional question regarding the state tax in NY. I worked only for two weeks in NYC (did not move there officially and stayed at a friend's house). I got $2808 and paid $303 for federal and $132 state tax for it. Turbotax calculated an additional ~$150 state tax for me in NY as due. Isn't that wrong?   I mean when I check the details, TurboTax considered the entire AGI for the NY tax purposes while it should be only $2808. Am I wrong? I believe I should be taxed only for 2808 for the NY state tax purpose and not the entire AGI. how can I fix it?

 

Best,

JohnB5677
Employee Tax Expert

Itemized tax

Regarding question 3: If the contributions are to an employer provided plan you do not have to report it.  You only have to record contributions to an IRA or Roth that you do personal.  You will have to report all withdrawals.

 

The tax May be wrong, but how did you report the income.

  • Do boxes 16 - 20 reflect an amount on your W-2?
  • Does the W-2 reflect your home state?
  • Did you indicate you were a part year resident of NY, or leave it blank?
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Itemized tax

Regarding the NY (state C) tax, I set it as nonresident and not part-time resident. Boxes 16 and 17 have numbers. Boxes18, 19, 20 are empty. Again, I did not live in NY but stayed at a friend's place for about 10 days. Do I need to pay for the local, state tax of NY?

 

Could you clarify it again as I am not sure what you exactly meant?

I had a traditional IRA in state A in 2018 from employer A. Employer A closed my traditional IRA account (as I no longer worked for them) and left the money in an undefined account type on Fidelity. I took the ~3570 and opened a new personal Roth IRA account on Fidelity when I resided in State B (home state). So, I am taxed for 21% on that money (~$3570) and I was thinking where this 21% would come from for a Roth IRA account that I opened. Should it be about 7% which is my home state's (State B) tax rate and not 21%? Maybe the ROTh tax rate is different than the state tax rate??

Itemized tax

@JohnB5677 

 

Any comments?

JohnB5677
Employee Tax Expert

Itemized tax

You are correct to select Non-Resident.

 

Did you pay tax in 2018 when you withdrew the IRA and put it in a Undefined account with Fidelity?  Or was this an IRA account with Fidelity?

 

If this was coming from an IRA in Fidelity,  you should be taxed on the full IRA on the Federal and by the state. 

If you never were a resident of NY you will be taxed in your home state. You would not include it on the NY tax return.

@DS44325 

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