Skip to main content
March 23, 2024
Solved

Treatment of gains on recharacterized IRA contributions

  • March 23, 2024
  • 1 reply
  • 0 views

I contributed $7500 to a traditional IRA in January 2023 and made 3 recharacterizations totaling $4800 to a Roth in July.   My custodian sent me a 1099-R with distribution code N showing $5300 which included $500 of earnings, none of it taxable.  Is my deductible IRA contribution $2700 (7500-4800) or $2200 (7500-5300)?

    Best answer by dmertz

    When TurboTax asks you how much of your traditional IRA contribution you switched (recharacterized), enter $4,800.  The result of recharacterizing $4,800 of your $7,500 traditional IRA contribution is that you have a $2,700 traditional IRA contribution and a $4,800 Roth IRA contribution.  The $500 of earnings simply become $500 of earnings in the Roth IRA.

    1 reply

    dmertzAnswer
    Employee
    March 23, 2024

    When TurboTax asks you how much of your traditional IRA contribution you switched (recharacterized), enter $4,800.  The result of recharacterizing $4,800 of your $7,500 traditional IRA contribution is that you have a $2,700 traditional IRA contribution and a $4,800 Roth IRA contribution.  The $500 of earnings simply become $500 of earnings in the Roth IRA.

    March 23, 2024

    Thank you.  That is what I put when I was filling out the interview-style TT but my husband was reviewing the 1040 and other forms and asked why the number on my 1099 was different than what I had claimed - the untaxed numbers weren't adding up.  So I did a live chat with my broker/custodian and they verified that they put the correct amount (including earnings) on the 1099-R, but would not tell me what they are going to put on the 5498 in May.  They suggested I call their Retirement Services department on Monday, or talk to my tax advisor.

    Employee
    March 24, 2024

    The 2023 Form 5498 from the traditional IRA will show $7,500 in box 1.  The 2023 Form 5498 from the Roth IRA will show $5,300 in box 4.  However, these forms only tell part of the story.  It's your 2023 tax return that will report what actually happened.  When you tell TurboTax that you "switched" $4,800 to be a Roth IRA contribution, TurboTax will prompt you to prepare an explanation statement describing the recharacterization which is what the IRS will use to confirm that everything has been reported properly on your tax return.