Non Roth After Tax Contributions paired with In Plan Roth Conversion
Within a qualified retirement plan that permits :
– Non Roth After Tax Contributions
paired with
– In Plan Roth Conversions
I assume EACH in-plan Roth conversion has a new five year clock attached to it in order to be considered a qualified distribution?
Who would be responsible for record keeping of each conversion?
AND, especially if there are “monthly conversions” (as we have arranged in our company plan, so as to keep the taxable increments low/nonexistent)
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Mon, 2018-04-30 16:08
Permalink Submitted by Charles Wilfong on Mon, 2018-04-30 18:59
i have client who does not have any traditional irs accounts yet inherited a deceased brother’s ira and continues to be maintained as a “deceased ira for the benefit of” client.client made a non decutable traditional ira contribution in 2017 and then converted to a roth ira in 2 days following.Client’s accountant says that the conversion is taxable tothe extent of the pro rata rule but I believe and have been able to find in the IRS code that inherited IRA’s are not included in the pro rata rule. Does anyone have a better understanding?
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Mon, 2018-04-30 23:12
This should have been a new post, since it is unrelated to the original thread. However, the accountant is incorrect because basis in an owned IRA is not affected by any basis that may or may not exist in an inherited IRA. The Form 8606 used to report the non deductible contribution and conversion should NOT include the value of the inherited IRA on line 6. This is clearly stated on p 5 of IRS Pub 590 B.