3551466
Last March when doing my 2023 taxes I realized an unanticipated income jump had disqualified me from keeping my regular ROTH IRA contributions. Vanguard helped me through this and I recharacterized the $6,500 in Roth contributions to a non-deductible IRA. I then converted this amount ($7,800 in total -- my $6,500 ROTH contributions plus gains from the year) to my Roth IRA.
Last year I filed Form 8606 through Turbotax saying I had contributed $6,500 to a non-deductible IRA.
This year I received two 1099-Rs from Vanguard. One for the Roth and one for the traditional. I am pretty sure I need to pay taxes on the $1,300 in gains from the recharacterization last March since that money was earned from the already-taxed $6,500 contribution.
When I entered the two 1099-Rs into Turbotax for tax year 2024 it reduced my return quite a bit. I think I need to mention the basis of $6,500 on the $7,800 that was recharacterized so I am only taxed on the gain and not the entire $7,800 since I've already paid taxes on $6,500 of it.
Could you confirm this is the way or is there anything else I need to do?
You'll need to sign in or create an account to connect with an expert.
Your 2023 Form 8606 should have shown $6,500 on line 14. That $6,500 should have carried forward to line 2 of your 2024 Form 8606 if you transferred in your 2023 tax file to begin your 2024 tax return. If the $6,500 is not present on line 2, be sure to go through the traditional IRA contribution section of TurboTax, indicate that you made nondeductible contributions, then enter the $6,500.
Still have questions?
Questions are answered within a few hours on average.
Post a Question*Must create login to post
Ask questions and learn more about your taxes and finances.
tcondon21
Returning Member
march142005
New Member
drildrill23
Returning Member
VAer
Level 4
WDM67
Level 3