Inherited Roth IRA has not met 5 year rule, Code T or Code 4 on 1099?
A Father converted 150,000 from a traditional IRA to a Roth IRA in 2018. He passed away in 2020 when he was age 69. The Roth IRA was inherited by each of his three children…..50k to each by the end of 2020.
In 2022, a child takes a 5k distribution having not met the 5 year rule (2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022). The custodian has coded the 5,000 as gross distribution, box 2a as 0 and box 7 with a Code “T”. The CPA is saying the the distribution is showing as taxable because an exception doesn’t apply for code T and that code 4 should have been used in conjunction with T (or instead of).
The code T exceptions seem to be age 59.5, has died or is disabled. The CPA is saying “has died” only applies to the original account owner in the year of death, not the inherited Roth IRA account owner and thus an exception doesn’t apply.
Question: does code T apply to an inherited Roth IRA account beneficiary or only the original account holder? If not, what is the proper combination of codes to use? T AND 4? or just 4? Any citation I can point the CPA and / or Custodian to?
Thanks.
Permalink Submitted by David Mertz on Mon, 2023-03-13 19:32
Permalink Submitted by Matt Groome on Tue, 2023-03-21 00:41
I really appreciate you responding to this question and providing guidance on how to approach. Love the Forum!