Last year a client brought me a year-end IRA statement from his insurance company which listed a $200 contribution. He makes too much money for it to be allowed, so I told him to call the company and have it switched to a non-deductible IRA. I entered it into the program which took it 8606 as non-deductible and it wasn't deducted on the return. He never checked back with me on the status and this year he brings in another company statement, unchanged, and now including a 2012 $500 contribution.
It's been a few years since I've done it, but as I recall you used to have to pull an excess contribution out of the account before April 15th and switch to a non-tax sheltered account to avoid the excess contributions penalty. However, when I entered it this time, the program again simply took it to 8606 which lists the $500 on line one as "...nondeductible contributions to traditional IRAs for 2012..." and kills the deduction off the 1040.
Seemingly everything's okay, but doesn't the insurance company have to cancel the traditional IRA account and transfer it to a different non-deductible IRA account? And, is the program's 8606 treatment making everything acceptable to IRS with nothing more needing to be done?
It's been a few years since I've done it, but as I recall you used to have to pull an excess contribution out of the account before April 15th and switch to a non-tax sheltered account to avoid the excess contributions penalty. However, when I entered it this time, the program again simply took it to 8606 which lists the $500 on line one as "...nondeductible contributions to traditional IRAs for 2012..." and kills the deduction off the 1040.
Seemingly everything's okay, but doesn't the insurance company have to cancel the traditional IRA account and transfer it to a different non-deductible IRA account? And, is the program's 8606 treatment making everything acceptable to IRS with nothing more needing to be done?
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