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June 3, 2019
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How to add backdoor Roth IRA information with contribution for this and previous tax year?

  • June 3, 2019
  • 6 replies
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Hi,

For the year 2018, I made two $5500 contributions to my traditional IRA, both before March 2018. First one for 2018 and second one for 2017. I did not make any such contribution for 2017, so there no excess. 

Then I converted over both $5500 amounts to my Roth IRA, essentially doing the backdoor Roth.

So my 1099-R has $11000 as both Gross Distribution and Taxable Amount.

I followed this article

https://ttlc.intuit.com/questions/3582070-backdoor-roth-ira-contribution

But in the end it says I have a penalty of $330, so 6% of $5500. No increase in taxes, so that's good. 

Out of that 11000, I think there has to be a way to tell all of that was not for 2018, but was for 2017 and 2018.

How do I solve this problem?

Best answer by fanfare

" I made two $5500 contributions to my traditional IRA, "

you must indicate to turbotax that you elected both these contributions were non-deductible.

then your problem will go away.

6 replies

June 3, 2019
this article is not helping, can someone please clarify the steps of making a 2017and 2018 contribution in the same year.  The article steps, which I followed, do not work and I get a penalty and a statement that says I do not qualify for a roth.
fanfare
Employee
June 3, 2019
the article did not help OP either,but if you study the followup comments (from me) you will get the gist of what has to be done
It's easier to do this with cd/downlaod, not Online.
OR
search the forum there are hundreds of posts on this topic
June 3, 2019
Under deductions  section, entered the 2018 nondeductible traditional IRA contribution of $5,500.
You said manually enter the 1099-R with the $11,000 distribution/conversion. Will my manual entered 1099R be exact copy of 1099R received from Fidelity? If not what will be differences? Please clarify?
fanfare
Employee
June 3, 2019
you have 5,500 prior years basis (or should have) and you have 5,500 contribution this year,
so you are converting 11,000. your prior years basis should drop to zero.
macuser_22
Employee
June 3, 2019
Your 2017 contributions should have been entered on your 2017 tax return and if non-deductible would have produced a 2018 8606 form with the carry froward non-deductible basis in box 14.

Your 2018 non-deductible Traditional IRA contributions are entered as 2018 contributions in the IRA contribution section which will produce a 2018 8606 form with the 2018 contribution on line 1.

When you enter the 2018 1099-R the interview will ask for prior years non-deductible contributions.  You enter the 2017 8606 box 14 amount  that will go on line 2 of the 2018 8606 form.   Line 3 will be the total of line 1 (2017) and line 2 (2018) so that the total of both non-deductible contribution will offset the taxable distribution on lines 6-18.  That depends on line 6 being zero total Traditional IRA 2018 year end value - if a Traditional IRA account still existed then only part of the distribution will be tax free.
**Disclaimer: This post is for discussion purposes only and is NOT tax advice. The author takes no responsibility for the accuracy of any information in this post.**
fanfare
fanfareAnswer
Employee
June 3, 2019

" I made two $5500 contributions to my traditional IRA, "

you must indicate to turbotax that you elected both these contributions were non-deductible.

then your problem will go away.

fanfare
Employee
June 3, 2019
"but was for 2017 and 2018."
you only enter the $5,500 contribution for 2018.
The 2017 contribution is considered "prior years basis".