IRA Rollover Rule regarding one per year
I was not aware of the IRS rule that only one rollover can be done within a year out of a given traditional IRA account. I have done two. Efforts to deal with the original brokerage firm holding the IRA and with the banks they were rolled into have been unsuccessful in resolving this problem. I seem to be facing paying taxes on a large sum for the second rollover. In both cases I took possession of a check made out to me and made the deposit to new traditional IRA’s within a week.
Discussions with a CPA have so far not shown any options. Are there any steps we can take to make the second IRA rollover either legitimate or like it did not occur? Or do we have recourse in some fashion with the IRS to treat this in such a fashion that taxes are not due? Even a conversion of the second one to a Roth IRA would be attractive to me, but that has not seemed possible either.
I understand there is such a thing as a Private Letter Ruling with the IRS. Is there any precedent here with the issue I have? Is such an approach with the IRS likely to be successful?
Any help you can provide would be really appreciated. I have learned much reading Mr. Slott’s books some years ago, but this one eluded me.
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Thu, 2013-08-01 22:03
Permalink Submitted by Marion Woodyard on Fri, 2013-08-02 00:21
Thanks. Not the answer I wanted to hear, but I am not surprised. Following on my earlier question, I also did a third distribution from the same traditional IRA, but still have the check uncashed and undeposited. I realized the once per year limit before cashing the check. Now I intend instead to do a Roth conversion with it, possibly choosing later to recharacterize part or all of it to keep income from going too high this year. As I understand there are no limits on how many Roth conversions can be done in a year, and that just because I have used up my rollover for a traditional to traditional rollover, that does not limit the Roth conversion. The brokerage house holding the original IRA account says they will do this for me. Am I on solid ground if I go ahead with this? Is this an OK thing to do.Thaniks again for any help you can offer.
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Fri, 2013-08-02 02:57
Yes, you are OK to convert the 3rd distribution within 60 days of receipt, and if you choose to recharacterize the conversion it will be OK. Neither conversions or recharacterizations count toward the one rollover rule. I would have mentioned this before but you did not mention a 3rd distribution that had not yet been rolled over. Note that this will not work with the earlier distributions because you have already rolled them over.