I received a Roth IRA disbursement after our divorce. Entered information from form 1099-R which included codes 2B. When I select the yes this is a Roth IRA button Turbotax says Good News you don't owe any additional taxes, but reduces my refund amount by $2700. It seems to be contradictory. If I say it is not a Roth IRA I get the same message but refund amount stays the same. Am I missing something?
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Yes, you are missing the basis of the Roth IRA.
The message on the screen is telling you that you do not owe any additional taxes on the distribution, but the distribution itself is being included as part of your income and is being taxed. You will need to enter information about the basis of the Roth IRA in order to reduce or eliminate the amount being included as income.
The basis of an IRA is the amount that was originally contributed. This does not include earnings that have accumulated in the account over time. You can take a distribution of your contributions to a Roth IRA without any penalty or income tax. Therefore, TurboTax needs to know how much of your distribution was contributions to the account.
After you enter your Form 1099-R, there should be some follow-up questions to go through. One of those questions will ask about Prior Year Roth IRA Contributions. This is where you should enter the amount that had been contributed to the account.
If you do not see those follow-up questions, keep reading below for another method to enter your Roth IRA basis:
This will bring you to a screen with checkboxes to indicate what types of accounts you had in 2022. Be sure that Roth IRA is checked. Click Continue.
If Traditional IRA is checked or if you have a spouse that had either type of account, the next questions will not pertain to your Roth IRA. Continue through this section until you are asked whether you made any contributions to your Roth IRA for 2022. This is the beginning of the section where you will enter details about your Roth IRA, including the basis.
Continue answering the questions according to your situation. On the screen where you see Let Us Track Your Roth IRA Basis, click Yes.
Then, on the screen titled Enter Prior Year Roth IRA Contributions, this is asking for your total contributions for years prior to 2022 (basis). If your basis exceeds your distribution, then the distribution will not be taxable. If the distribution exceeds your basis, then the excess will be taxable.
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