Instructions for Form 8606 |
2003 Tax Year |
Specific Instructions
This is archived information that pertains only to the 2003 Tax Year. If you are looking for information for the current tax year, go to the Tax Prep Help Area.
Name and social security number (SSN).
If you file a joint return, enter only the name and SSN of the spouse whose information is being reported on Form
8606. If both you and your spouse
are required to file Form 8606, file a separate Form 8606 for each of you.
Part I—Nondeductible Contributions to Traditional IRAs and Distributions From Traditional, SEP, and SIMPLE
IRAs
If you used the IRA Deduction Worksheet in the Form 1040 or 1040A instructions, subtract line 10 of the worksheet (or the amount you
chose to deduct on Form 1040, line 24, or Form 1040A, line 17, if less) from the smaller of line 8 or line 9 of the worksheet. Enter the
result on line 1 of Form 8606. You cannot deduct the amount included on line 1.
If you used the worksheet Figuring Your Reduced IRA Deduction for 2003 in Pub. 590, enter on line 1 of Form 8606 any nondeductible
contributions from the appropriate lines of that worksheet.
If you did not have any deductible contributions, you may make nondeductible contributions up to your contribution limit.
Enter on line 1 of Form
8606 your nondeductible contributions.
Do not include on line 1 contributions that you had returned to you with the related earnings (or less any loss). See page 4.
If this is the first year you are required to file Form 8606, enter zero. Otherwise, use the chart below to find the amount
to enter on line 2.
However, you may need to adjust or include an amount on this line if your basis changed since you last filed Form 8606 because
of any of the
following.
- You had a return of excess traditional IRA contributions (see page 4).
- Incident to divorce, you transferred or received part or all of a traditional IRA (see Distributions incident to divorce on this
page).
- You rolled over any nontaxable portion of your qualified employer plan to a traditional or SEP IRA. Include the nontaxable
portion on
line 2.
If you made contributions to traditional IRAs for 2003 in 2003 and 2004 and you have both deductible and nondeductible contributions,
you may
choose to treat the contributions made in 2003 first as nondeductible contributions and then as deductible contributions,
or vice versa. But the
amount on line 4 cannot be less than the excess, if any, of the amount on line 1 over the contributions you actually made
in 2003.
Example. You made contributions for 2003 of $1,500 in May 2003 and $1,500 in January 2004, of which $2,000 are deductible and $1,000
are
nondeductible. You choose $1,000 of your contribution in 2003 to be nondeductible. You enter the $1,000 on line 1, but not
line 4, and it becomes part
of your basis for 2003.
Although the contributions to traditional IRAs for 2003 that you made from January 1, 2004, through April 15, 2004, can be
treated as
nondeductible, they are not included in figuring the nontaxable part of any distributions you received in 2003.
Enter the total value of all your traditional, SEP, and SIMPLE IRAs as of December 31, 2003, plus any outstanding rollovers.
A statement should be sent to you by February 2, 2004, showing the value of each IRA on December 31, 2003. However, if you
recharacterized any
amounts, enter on line 6 the total value taking into account all recharacterizations, including recharacterizations made after
December 31, 2003.
For line 6, a rollover is a tax-free distribution from one traditional, SEP, or SIMPLE IRA that is contributed to another traditional,
SEP, or SIMPLE IRA. The rollover must be completed within 60 days of receiving the distribution from the first IRA. An outstanding rollover
is any amount distributed within 60 days before the end of 2003 (from November 2 through December 31) that was rolled over
after December 31, 2003,
but within the 60-day rollover period.
The IRS may waive the 60-day requirement if failing to waive it would be against equity or good conscience, such as situations
where a casualty,
disaster, or other events beyond your reasonable control prevented you from meeting the 60-day requirement. Also, the 60-day
period may be extended if
you had a frozen deposit. See Pub. 590 for details.
Note: Do not include a rollover from a traditional or SEP IRA to a qualified employer plan even if it was an outstanding
rollover.
If you received a distribution in 2003 from a traditional, SEP, or SIMPLE IRA and you also made contributions for 2003 to
a traditional IRA that
may not be fully deductible because of the income limits, you must make a special computation before completing the rest of
this form. For details,
including how to complete Form 8606, see Are Distributions Taxable? in Chapter 1 of Pub. 590.
Do not include any of the following on line 7.
- Distributions that you converted to a Roth IRA.
- Recharacterizations.
- Distributions that you rolled over by December 31, 2003, and any outstanding rollovers included on
line 6.
- Distributions you rolled over to a qualified employer plan.
- Distributions that are treated as a return of contributions under Return of IRA Contributions on page 4.
- Distributions that are treated as a return of excess contributions under Return of Excess Traditional IRA Contributions on page
5.
- Distributions of excess contributions due to incorrect rollover information. If an excess contribution in your traditional
IRA is the result
of a rollover from a qualified retirement plan and the excess occurred because the information the plan was required to give
you was incorrect, the
distribution of the excess contribution is not taxable. Attach a statement to your return explaining the distribution and
include the amount of the
distribution on Form 1040, line 15a; Form 1040A, line 11a; or Form 1040NR, line 16a. See Pub. 590 for more details.
- Distributions incident to divorce. The transfer of part or all of your traditional, SEP, or SIMPLE IRA to your spouse under a
divorce or separation agreement is not taxable to you or your spouse. If this transfer results in a change in the basis of
the traditional IRA of
either spouse, both spouses must file Form 8606 and show the increase or decrease in the amount of basis on line 2. Attach
a statement explaining this
adjustment. Include in the statement the character of the amounts in the traditional IRA, such as the amount attributable
to nondeductible
contributions. Also, include the name and social security number of the other spouse.
If, in 2003, you converted any amounts from traditional, SEP, or SIMPLE IRAs to a Roth IRA, enter on line 8 the net amount
you converted. To figure
that amount, subtract from the total amount converted in 2003 any portion that you recharacterized back to traditional, SEP,
or SIMPLE IRAs in 2003 or
2004 (see Recharacterizations on page 3). Do not take into account related earnings that were transferred with the
recharacterized amount or any loss that occurred while the amount was in the Roth IRA. See item 1 under Reporting
recharacterizations on page 3 for details.
If you were under age 59½ at the time you received distributions from your traditional, SEP, or SIMPLE IRA, there generally
is an
additional 10% tax on the portion of the distribution that is included in income (25% for a distribution from a SIMPLE IRA
during the first 2 years).
See the Instructions for Form 1040, line 57.
Part II—2003 Conversions From Traditional, SEP, or SIMPLE IRAs to Roth IRAs
Complete Part II if you converted part or all of your traditional, SEP, or SIMPLE IRAs to a Roth IRA in 2003, excluding any
portion you
recharacterized. See item 1 under Reporting recharacterizations on page 3 for details.
Limit on number of conversions.
If you converted an amount from a traditional, SEP, or SIMPLE IRA to a Roth IRA in 2003 and then recharacterized the
amount back to a traditional,
SEP, or SIMPLE IRA, you may not reconvert that amount until the later of January 1, 2004, or 30 days after the recharacterization. See Pub.
590 for details.
You may not convert any amount to Roth IRAs in 2003 if (a) your modified AGI for Roth IRA purposes (see page 2) is more than
$100,000 or (b) your filing status is married filing separately and you lived with your spouse at any time in 2003. If you erroneously made
a conversion, you must recharacterize the converted amount. See Recharacterizations on page 3.
If you did not complete line 8, see the instructions for that line. Then, enter on line 16 the amount you would have entered
on line 8 had you
completed it.
If you did not complete line 11, enter on line 17 the amount from line 2 (or the amount you would have entered on line 2 if
you had completed that
line) plus any contributions included on line 1 that you made before the conversion.
Part III—Distributions From Roth IRAs
Complete Part III to figure the taxable part, if any, of your 2003 Roth IRA distributions.
Do not include on line 19 any of the following.
- Distributions that you rolled over, including distributions made in 2003 and rolled over after December 31, 2003 (outstanding
rollovers).
- Recharacterizations.
- Distributions that are a return of contributions under Return of IRA Contributions on page 4.
- Distributions made on or after age 59½ if you made a contribution (including a conversion) for 1998.
- Distributions made upon death or due to disability if you made a contribution (including a conversion) for 1998.
- Distributions incident to divorce. The transfer of part or all of your Roth IRA to your spouse under a divorce or separation
agreement is
not taxable to you or your spouse.
If, after considering the items above, you do not have an amount to enter on line 19, do not complete Part III; your Roth
IRA distribution(s) is
not taxable. Instead, include your total Roth IRA distribution(s) on Form 1040, line 15a; Form 1040A, line 11a; or Form 1040NR,
line 16a.
Figure the amount to enter on line 20 as follows.
- If you did not take a Roth IRA distribution before 2003 (other than an amount rolled over or recharacterized or a returned
contribution),
enter on line 20 the total of all your regular contributions to Roth IRAs for 1998 through 2003 (excluding rollovers and any
contributions that you
had returned to you), adjusted for any recharacterizations.
- If you did take such a distribution before 2003, use the chart on page 7 to figure the amount to enter.
- Increase or decrease the amount on line 20 by any basis transferred or received incident to divorce. Also attach a statement
similar to the
one explained under Distributions incident to divorce on page 6.
Generally, there is an additional 10% tax on 2003 distributions from a Roth IRA that are shown on line 21. The additional
tax is figured in Part I
of Form 5329. See the instructions for Form 5329, line 1, for details and exceptions. However, do not complete Form 5329 if you have an
amount on line 23 that is equal to or more than the amount on line 21; you do not owe the additional 10% tax.
Figure the amount to enter on line 22 as follows.
- If you have never made a Roth IRA conversion, enter -0- on line 22.
- If you took a Roth IRA distribution (other than an amount rolled over or recharacterized or a returned contribution) before
2003 in excess
of your basis in regular Roth IRA contributions, use the chart on this page to figure the amount to enter on line 22.
- If you did not take such a distribution before 2003, enter on line 22 the total of all your conversions to Roth IRAs (other
than amounts
recharacterized). These amounts are shown on line 14c of your 1998, 1999, and 2000 Forms 8606 and line 16 of your 2001, 2002,
and 2003 Forms
8606.
- Increase or decrease the amount on line 22 by any basis transferred or received incident to divorce. Also attach a statement
similar to the
one explained under Distributions incident to divorce on page 6.
If you had a qualified first-time homebuyer distribution from your Roth IRA and you made a contribution (including a conversion)
to a Roth IRA for
1998, enter the amount of your qualified first-time homebuyer expenses on line 23, but do not enter more than $10,000.
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