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August 20, 2024
Question

I did a Roth IRA conversion and answered all questions on TurboTax correctly. However, TT made my $6500 contribution taxable. What should I do to make it non-taxable?

  • August 20, 2024
  • 2 replies
  • 0 views
I need to make my 1040 form line 4b be 0, but I can't figure out how to do that through answering TurboTax's series of questions.

2 replies

VolvoGirl
August 20, 2024

A Traditional IRA conversion to a ROTH IRA is normally taxable.  Why do you think it shouldn’t be taxed?  Did you have a after tax basis in the IRA?  And why do you mention a contribution?  Are you doing a back door contribution?  

fanfare
August 20, 2024

If your IRA has been funded with deductible contributions, generally you won't be able to do a tax-free "backdoor contribution" to a Roth IRA.

 

@celerityseiche 

February 14, 2025

i have this issue every year and Turbotax has never fixed it. one fix is t change the 1099r box 2a to ZERO. With so many people doing back door roths every year i am not sure how both answers think it is taxable!! you contribute on day 1 and "convert" (it seems TT thinks that is recharacterizing) the next day. that would never be a taxable event. i am so disappointed in TT! 

February 16, 2025

There is no issue in TurboTax when reporting a backdoor Roth IRA conversion.  It is a simple, two-step process if the non-deductible Traditional IRA contribution and the subsequent conversion to a Roth IRA take place in the same calendar year.  It can be a bit more complicated if these two steps span over two years.  

 

See the TurboTax help article below for instructions:

 

How do I enter a backdoor Roth IRA conversion?
 

Not everyone uses the 'backdoor' method when converting a Traditional IRA to a Roth IRA.  The conversion can take place from any Traditional IRA, including one with deductible contributions.  If that is the case, then it is not a tax-free transaction.  If the taxpayer has any Traditional IRA accounts with any deductible contributions, then at least a portion of the amount converted will be taxable.  TurboTax can handle this situation as well.

 

Also, it is never a good idea to alter your inputs of Form 1099-R to be different than what was reported to you.  That's a good way to get a letter from the IRS down the road.

 

@jrdinsmore 

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March 25, 2025

May I ask on how to handle a Roth conversion of an amount spanning non-deductible contributions across 2 years?

 

Specifically, my wife made non-deductible contributions up to the limit to a traditional IRA in 2023 and 2024, but only converted them both to a Roth in 2024, resulting in a single 1099R distribution of both sums. 

 

I now cannot get TurboTax to recognize this converted amount as non-taxable, whereas it recognizes mine as a non-taxable conversion just fine (same year contribution/conversions).

 

Thanks,
N