Roth Conversion Quarterly Estimate Question
I have a client that that is converting a significant portion of his traditional IRA to Roth over the next 10 years, prior to age 70, to be able to pass this money onto his kids in a tax efficient manner. The amount that we’re converting annually is going to force him to make quarterly estimates. My question is, if we decide to process these conversions quarterly, and we have the custodian withhold both Federal and State taxes from the converted amount, will that suffice the quarterly estimates for my client? Or are we better off taking a distribution from the IRA (the amount that would have been withheld for taxes), and have the client pay in manually? We’ve discussed the option of paying the tax liabilities out of their liquid cash, but they’ve decided to withhold the taxes from the converted amount. Thanks in advance for your help!
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Fri, 2020-02-14 19:48
Client will now have either one or two extra years before his RMDs begin, so he can convert less each year. Taxes paid by withholding from the conversion distribution are treated as being paid equally througout the year, so client could postpone the entire annual withholding until late in the year, therefore holding on his money longer. Estimates are only credited when they are paid, and therefore would have to be paid quarterly, unless Form 2210 A1 is filed and that form can be challenging. Obviously, if withholding is taken from an IRA distribution, the amount left for conversion will be less, or the total distributions will have to be increased to equal both the amount to be converted plus the withholding.