CARES act conversion
Unders the CARES act can you convert up to $!00k from an IRA to a ROTH and not pay the taxes for 3 years? Assuming you qualify under the CARES act qualifications?
Unders the CARES act can you convert up to $!00k from an IRA to a ROTH and not pay the taxes for 3 years? Assuming you qualify under the CARES act qualifications?
My clients are older than 59.5, what if we just withdraw the amount from the ROTH (assuming the IRS disallows conversions). Now it’s a taxable amount from a withdraw not a conversion and now we can spread the tax bill over 3 years. We still would probably have to explain to the IRS what happened but could that be a solution?
You could do that, but it would have to be done as a distribution of an excess regular contribution to the Roth since the Roth would not be an eligible plan to receive the repayment (rollover). This just means that any earnings allocated to the Roth contribution would have to be distributed in addition to the converted amount and would be taxed pursuant to the 1099R reporting the corrective distribution. The income from the CRD could then be reported ratably over 3 years, with the option to repay to the TIRA remaining open for 3 years from the CRD date. You have until 10/15/2021 to complete the corrective distribution providing the 2020 return is extended or filed by 4/15, so there is no urgency to complete the corrective distribution. The earnings on the conversion that are withdrawn would be taxable in 2020 even if the corrective distribution is not done this year.
Sorry, what is TIRA?
TIRA = Traditional IRA (not a Roth IRA)
Permalink Submitted by David Mertz on Wed, 2020-12-02 17:16
Permalink Submitted by dan casey on Wed, 2020-12-02 17:27
Crap, I’ve already done some for some clients. Now that recharachtization isn’t allowed, any ideas?? ugh I’d probably have to see if the custodian can reclassify it as a withdraw instead of a conversion and then transfer the money from the ROTH to the brokerage account and pray I don’t get sued.