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In reply to the discussion: Roth IRA conversion tax reporting. I am so confused! [View all]Susan Calvin
(2,161 posts)23. Thank you for all the detailed advice.
The reason I want to get it into the Roth is simply so I'm not required to take it out. I know it's going to cost me some money, and I don't care, within reason. Asking on this forum readjusted my attitude about what's within reason to the extent of getting me to do it piecemeal, but it didn't change my original goal. It's not all that much money anyway. If I do it piecemeal over the next few years, I think the extra withholding that I do anyway will pay for it.
As far as my time frame, according to my doctors, knock on wood, barring an accident, or cancer, or a stroke, I have every reason to expect at least another 20 healthy years. Knocking on wood again.
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Capital gains is a non-issue with IRAs. One is taxed on the value of the IRA at the time of withdrawal or conversion
nmmi
Nov 29
#15
You're welcome. And I am so relieved you are considering doing small conversion amounts at a time
nmmi
Nov 29
#18
You should get your November monthly statement from whoever runs your IRA in a few days.
mahatmakanejeeves
Nov 29
#7
You don't have to wait to Jan 15. We pay the last estimated around the middle of December
question everything
Nov 29
#14
I don't know your age. But I converted part of my IRA to a Roth at 64 one year before
doc03
Nov 29
#9
Are both the traditional and Roth with the same custodian? No forms are needed
question everything
Nov 29
#13
Also, depending on the amount you may be subjected to Alternative Minimum tax.
question everything
Nov 29
#20
Interesting - 20 years is my base case default assumption on longevity in my spreadsheet
nmmi
Nov 29
#24
Absolutely. One advice that I keep reading consistently, is to never pay taxes from an IRA account, always pay the
nmmi
Nov 29
#30