Recharacterization

I fully recharacterized a Roth IRA contribution for the 2021 tax year to a Traditional IRA contribution for the 2021 tax year. I also did a Roth Conversion in 2021. How should this be handled when I prepare my 2021 income tax return? Thanks.



If I have a retirement plan at work and our married filing jointly income is $192,000, then am I correct that there is no advantage in recharacterizing my Roth contribution to a Traditional IRA?  If so, can a recharacterization from Roth to Traditional be reversed back to a Roth  prior to submitting our 2021 income tax return?? Thanks.

A modified AGI of 192,000 is low enough to permit you both to make a full 2021 Roth contribution. But since you recharacterized it as a TIRA contribution, your MAGI is too high to deduct that contribution if you are participating in a workplace plan. And you cannot reverse a recharacterization (back to Roth) so if you still want to make a Roth contribution, you must request the now TIRA contribution to be returned to you. Then you would make a new 2021 Roth contribution. Before taking further action, be sure that you are using modified AGI to detemine your income, not straight AGI.

Thanks Alan!

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