Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Except that it's not a taxable event, like I said.
You pay zero taxes for conversion, as it is with post tax dollars.
Actually a Roth conversion is a taxable event, although whether you actually owe taxes will depend on your specific facts. I do a Roth conversion every year and some years I owe tax and some years I don't.
Anonymous wrote:Except that it's not a taxable event, like I said.
You pay zero taxes for conversion, as it is with post tax dollars.
Anonymous wrote:Just be sure to Google the 'pro data rule,' if you have significant other retirement money it's hard to benefit from this path to after tax, tax sheltered savings.
and it applies to other IRAs, but not other 401ks.Anonymous wrote:There is nothing to report - it's not a taxable event . It's all post tax money, and you can't write it off.
Have you been doing it wrong?
Anonymous wrote:The problem is you use Turbotax. Use an accountant.