Submitted by MosDefNoDoubt t3_z7xqa5 in personalfinance
blakeh95 t1_iy8nsd5 wrote
Reply to comment by MosDefNoDoubt in Best way to transfer current year traditional IRA contributions to a Roth IRA? by MosDefNoDoubt
Do not submit the return of excess form for this. Directly on the form it states:
>Do not use this form to recharacterize contributions between a Traditional IRA and a Roth IRA. The Fidelity IRA Request for Recharacterization Form should be used.
MosDefNoDoubt OP t1_iy8o1um wrote
I searched "recharacterize" and found the proper form. Thank you very much. Not a lot of money but it was irritating me that I was essentially locking it for 30 years without even receiving tax benefits.
blakeh95 t1_iy8oody wrote
Recharacterizing is definitely the way to go, but in fairness you would have received some tax benefit, just not as much as recharacterizing to Roth would give you. (If you aren't interested in the details, no need to read below).
A nondeductible Traditional IRA still grows tax-free while inside the IRA. This is not true for taxable accounts. In other words, every single time you sell inside a taxable account, you'll have to pay some tax on the gains--you don't have to do that for any kind of IRA, even if the contribution was nondeductible.
Second, the nondeductible contribution is still only taxed once. When you start withdrawing from a Traditional IRA and you have nondeductible contributions, those nondeductible contributions come back out tax free. For example, suppose you had $1,000 of nondeductible contributions and a total account balance of $100,000. This means that 1% of your account balance was nondeductible and had already been taxed. Therefore, for every $100 you withdraw from the account, only $99 is taxable. 1% of your withdrawal--equivalent to the 1% of the account that was nondeductible in the first place--is not taxed when withdrawing later.
MosDefNoDoubt OP t1_iy8wnj1 wrote
That's good to know. Wouldn't have been as irritated had I known that portion of the account wouldn't be taxed. Won't be making this mistake again but at least now I can educate others.
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