Ranger Posted February 23, 2011 Report Posted February 23, 2011 Client converted $15,000 to Roth (new account) in 2010. So $7,500 will be reported in 2011 and 2012. After conversion, a distribution of $5,000 was taken from the new Roth account. So in 2010 $5,000 will be taxable with 10% penalty. For 2011 and 2012, $7,500 will be included on Form 8606 with a basis reduction of $2,500 for net taxable of $5,000. Does that make sense? Thanks for any comments you might have. Quote
jainen Posted March 14, 2011 Report Posted March 14, 2011 >>$7,500 will be included on Form 8606 with a basis reduction of $2,500 for net taxable of $5,000.<< This excellent question apparently slipped by us in the February rush. My understanding is that the entire $5000 distribution is applied to 2012 first. See page 63 at this link: Pub 590. Might have made a nice planning strategy if we had noticed it before the end of the year. Quote
OldJack Posted March 14, 2011 Report Posted March 14, 2011 >>So in 2010 $5,000 will be taxable with 10% penalty.<< So in 2010 the 10% penalty will be on earnings distributed. Did the $5,000 represent earnings? I think not! So since the $5,000 is a return of contributions, nothing is taxable in 2010. Quote
DANRVAN Posted March 16, 2011 Report Posted March 16, 2011 Jack, I think you misunderstood the situation which deals with the tax laws specific to the year 2010. It is true that withdraw of contributions from a Roth are never taxable, but in this case the funds came from a converted IRA that normally would be taxable in the year of conversion. It sounds like there are two transactions here. First, $15,000 was converted from a regular IRA to a Roth. Under the current tax law, the $15,000 is taxed equally in 2011 and 2012. In the second transaction, the taxpayer withdrew $5,000 from the converted Roth. So now, instead of deferring the tax on that amount to 2011 and 2012, the $5,000 is taxed in 2010. The net result is $15,000 of a converted IRA taxed over a three year period. Jainen nailed the timing on the remaining $10,000. ($7,500 taxed in 2011 and $2,500 in 2012) Quote
OldJack Posted March 16, 2011 Report Posted March 16, 2011 >>Jack, I think you misunderstood the situation which deals with the tax laws specific to the year 2010.<< Yes, I misunderstood and stand corrected. Quote
Ranger Posted March 16, 2011 Author Report Posted March 16, 2011 Thanks Jainen for digging up my dead and forgotten post! Your reference was helpful as this return has been on hold for further research and additional information. Quote
jlewis Posted March 17, 2011 Report Posted March 17, 2011 Jack, I think you misunderstood the situation which deals with the tax laws specific to the year 2010. It is true that withdraw of contributions from a Roth are never taxable, but in this case the funds came from a converted IRA that normally would be taxable in the year of conversion. It sounds like there are two transactions here. First, $15,000 was converted from a regular IRA to a Roth. Under the current tax law, the $15,000 is taxed equally in 2011 and 2012. In the second transaction, the taxpayer withdrew $5,000 from the converted Roth. So now, instead of deferring the tax on that amount to 2011 and 2012, the $5,000 is taxed in 2010. The net result is $15,000 of a converted IRA taxed over a three year period. Jainen nailed the timing on the remaining $10,000. ($7,500 taxed in 2011 and $2,500 in 2012) Quote
jlewis Posted March 17, 2011 Report Posted March 17, 2011 I tried the info as presented and the 5,000 got reported in 2010 but 10,000 was split 50/50 on 8606, not 7,500 for 2011 and 2,500 for 2012. Don't know what I am doing wrong or if the form isn't working right. Thanks for any input Quote
DANRVAN Posted March 17, 2011 Report Posted March 17, 2011 I tried the info as presented and the 5,000 got reported in 2010 but 10,000 was split 50/50 on 8606, not 7,500 for 2011 and 2,500 for 2012. Don't know what I am doing wrong or if the form isn't working right. Thanks for any input Keep in mind there are two separate transactions. First, the $15,000 conversion is reported on line 21 form 8606. Of that amount, $7,500 will be deferred to 2011 and 2012. Secondly, the $5,000 withdraw goes on line 26, subject to the 10% penalty. Then in 2012 there will be a line item to reduce the taxable amount by $5,000 (similar to line 22 “basis” on the current year form). The software will have no idea of the amount taxed in 2010 so that will be a manual entry. Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.