If you have a situation where you made a contribution to a Roth IRA and later recharacterized part or all of it to a traditional IRA the following information and instructions may apply to you.
Per the IRS Instructions for Form 8606, page 3:
Generally, you can recharacterize (correct) an IRA contribution by making a trustee-to-trustee transfer from one IRA to another type of IRA.
Trustee-to-trustee transfers are made directly between financial institutions or within the same financial institution. You generally must make the transfer by the due date of your return (including extensions) and reflect it on your return. However, if you timely filed your return without making the transfer, you can make the transfer within 6 months of the due date of your return, excluding extensions. If necessary, file an amended return reflecting the transfer (see Amending Form 8606, later). Write “Filed pursuant to section 301.9100-2” on the amended return.
No recharacterizations of conversions made in 2018 or later. A conversion of a traditional IRA to a Roth IRA, and a rollover from any other eligible retirement plan to a Roth IRA, made in tax years beginning after December 31, 2017, cannot be recharacterized as having been made to a traditional IRA.
Treat any recharacterized IRA contribution as though the amount of the contribution was originally contributed to the second IRA, not the first IRA. For the recharacterization, you must transfer the amount of the original contribution plus any related earnings or less any related loss. In most cases, your IRA trustee or custodian figures the amount of the related earnings you must transfer. If you need to figure the related earnings, see How Do You Recharacterize a Contribution? in chapter 1 of Pub. 590-A. Treat any earnings or loss that occurred in the first IRA as having occurred in the second IRA. You can’t deduct any loss that occurred while the funds were in the first IRA. Also, you can’t take a deduction for a contribution to a traditional IRA if you later recharacterize the amount. The following discussion explains how to report the two different types of recharacterizations, including the statement that you must attach to your return explaining the recharacterization.
You made a contribution to a Roth IRA and later recharacterized part or all of it in a trustee-to-trustee transfer to a traditional IRA.
In the TaxAct program, you will enter the net Roth IRA contribution amount (contribution minus recharacterized amount). Report the nondeductible traditional IRA portion of the recharacterized contribution, if any, on Form 8606, Part I. Don’t report the Roth IRA contribution (whether or not you recharacterized all or part of it) on Form 8606. Attach a statement to your return explaining the recharacterization.
Note. Depending on your individual deductible contribution limit, you may need to allocate the recharacterized amount between deductible and nondeductible traditional IRA contributions). The nondeductible traditional IRA portion, if any, will be reported on Form 8606, Part I. If you did not recharacterize the entire contribution, the remaining Roth IRA portion of the contribution will not be reported on Form 8606. Attach a statement to your return explaining the recharacterization.
Note. The other three types of recharacterizations are not listed here as they do not apply to this situation.
See the instructions for a detailed example on page 4 for further clarification.
To enter or review your IRA contribution entries:
To enter or review Form 1099-R Distributions from Pensions, Annuities, Retirement or Profit-Sharing Plans, IRAs, Insurance Contracts, etc:
Also, as stated above, a statement is required. You are able to do this in the TaxAct program as follows and the return will still be eligible for electronic filing.