Son left me a 403 Annuity. I moved the proceeds into a new Vanguard rollover IRA
After more research my questions are:
1) Did I do more than one rollover to an IRA in one year?
2) Being a non-spouse should I have done a trustee to trustee transfer instead?
3) If necessary, is there a procedure to back out the new Vanguard rollover IRA that I have already funded?
I retired in Feb 2017 and rolled over my Fidelity 401k into an IRA.
My son passed away in Sep 2017 and left me a $7,500 403(b) Annuity (school teacher).
I took a %100 cash distribution from the 403(b) and received a 1099-R showing %20 taxes have been withheld for 2017. I sent the amount I received plus the %20 to Vanguard within 60 days hoping to reduce my tax.
Thanks for your expertise!
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Wed, 2018-02-21 02:15
Permalink Submitted by Kenneth Gowdy on Wed, 2018-02-21 10:09
Thank you for your quick and comprehensive reply.
Permalink Submitted by Kenneth Gowdy on Sun, 2018-03-11 21:55
Hi, thought I would follow up to see if there are any forms I may be missing before I file my 2017 return. I did have Vanguard move the non-deductible earnings out of the Rollover IRA which now has a zero balance and moved the funds to a non-retirement account. At the same time I filled out an “Excess Contribution Removal” form online with Vanguard. I reported $177 in earnings and I am over 591/2. I feel lines 15a, 15b, 16a, and 16b include everything I am required to report. Using H&R Block software it did ask the question and created a “Statement Explaining Return of IRA Contributions” and is including the statement in the 2017 return. I was concerned with not filing form 8606 but it does say don’t file “If, in 2017, you made traditional IRA contributions or Roth IRA contributions for 2017 and you had those contributions returned to you with any related earnings (or minus any loss) by the due date (including extensions) of your 2017 tax return, the returned contributions are treated as if they were never contributed.” I expect in May 2018 I will receive form(s) showing what was contributed for all of 2017 and possibly need to file an amended return? Thank you so much for your help.
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Sun, 2018-03-11 22:28
While you will get a Form 5498 in May showing a 7500 rollover contribution and also the Fidelity 401k rollover. You will not have to amend your 2017 return because you withdrew the excess contribution and explained that in your statement. The IRA custodian does not report on Form 5498 contributions that you removed, only the ones that you made. So even though you made an excess contribution as a rollover, your statement that you removed it is all that is needed.