Backdoor Roth Conversions
For many years, taxpayer has made nondeductible contributions into an IRA and subsequently converted the balance of this small IRA into a Roth IRA each year. Taxpayer had a separate rollover IRA funded from a 401(k) rollover but was not aware of the “cream in the coffee” rule.
So, even though taxpayer had two IRAs (one being used for a Backdoor Roth contribution and the other from a 401(k) plan), taxpayer never calculated the pro-rata tax on the Roth IRA conversion. In other words, taxpayer assumed no tax liability on each backdoor Roth contribution.
How should taxpayer handle these previous year backdoor Roth contributions? Is there a statute of limitations on these Roth conversions? In other words, is taxpayer responsible for paying tax on the previous backdoor Roth contributions if they occurred many years ago?
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Tue, 2020-03-03 22:55
The IRS can only go back to 2016, and after 4/15 can only go back to 2017 to bill back taxes unless the understated income is more than 25% of the income on the return. However, the more recent returns could be subject to various penalties if the IRS notices the error.
Permalink Submitted by John Britton on Wed, 2020-03-04 18:41
In January, 2019 I converted $140,000 from a traditional IRA to a Roth IRA. I just completed the first draft of my tax return and owe $22,000. I have the funds to pay the bill on time. Will I be hit with a penalty for not filing estimated quarterly taxes? If I convert a similar amount into Roth this year, will I need to send in the expected taxes quarterly?
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Wed, 2020-03-04 19:35