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Try deleting Form 2210 and/or 2210AI and then go back through the penalty interview. @jstroebel @ct8889
How to delete forms in TurboTax Online
How to delete forms in TurboTax Desktop
I am using TurboTax online. Do you know how to fix it there?
At the moment (until TurboTax fixes the glitch between the interview interface and the actual IRS forms for calculation of the underpayment penalty), the only way I know around this is to go to the Forms themselves and enter the data manually. Then the calculation seems to work (at least the answer changes and the penalty is lower--mine was cut by half.
So, go to the banner line at the top of the screen and select Forms. Then you will see a list of the IRS forms in the left-hand column of the page. Scroll down to Form 2210 (the Underpayment of Estimated Tax Form). If your experience is like mine, you will find that a lot of the form has already been filled in from information you entered in the Interview process. What wasn't filled in in my cases was Part II on the first page of the Form. I was surprised to see that box C ("Your income varied during the year and your penalty is reduced or eliminated when figured using the annualized income installment method...:" Check this Box. You will note at the end of this statement it tells you to go to Schedule A1 to Form 2210. Then either "Quick Zoom" (whatever that is) to Schedule A1 or just select that Schedule from the left hand column listing all the forms. Once you get to this form, you will again find that all the information you painfully calculated and entered in the Interview process, has not carried to the form. Enter this information in the appropriate places on the Schedule (I think the only information that you will have to enter are your annualized AGI (line 1) and annualizing your capital gains in the Capital Gain Computation Smart Worksheet. The rest of the information on the Form will be filled in for you. Toward the end of the Schedule (line 27) you will see the calculations which you need to carry over to Form 2210, Part III, line 10. I believe again you will find that once you have completed Schedule A1, most of the required information is already carried over to Form 2210. Again, this resulted in my calculated penalty being reduced by half.
I'm not saying there isn't some issue in TT if multiple people are experiencing a problem. But for folks going through this process, one thing to beware of having gone thru the interview process there is a question at the end whether you want to adopt the AI method which defaults to NO by checking the box and you have to uncheck that box to apply the method. It's very confusing and seems easy to undo all the work that was done. Personally I had no issues with the AI method via the interview screens, using Mac Desktop / Premier version.
The method below can also help to clarify how to use the annualized method for 2024. Just ignore anything about 2025 and you should be fine.
I have found a way to use 2024 (previous year as we are in 2025) Turbotax to get a rough idea of the estimated tax payments I need to make in 2025 (current year) to minimize my tax penalty when my 2025 income is expected to be UNEVEN. I’m not sure, but I think that the 2025 estimated tax payments generated by ttax 2024 is based on the assumption that your total expected income in evenly distributed throughout the year, as does the IRA. This can lead to a large penalties if your income is significantly larger in certain quarters. You can use also this when you expect to get 2025 W2 income together with uneven 1099 or other income. This method presumes that tax rates will not drastically change from 2024 to 2025. You are only looking for an estimate of possible penalties of +/- ~$100 in penalty.
If there is a simpler way, let me know and I’ll kick myself :). If there is an issue with this method let me and others know. As I finished this, I realize it’s too long and no one will likely read it! I wanted to explain this to myself.
I do this because my projected (current year) 2025 income is a result of quarterly ROTH conversions that change depending on how my investments and market is doing. I’m retired and need to convert as much of my IRA to ROTHs before 73 to minimize taxes from RMDs.
There are three key steps:
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