Tax Reporting of a Traditional IRA Rollover
Tax reporting for retirement rollovers involves accurately completing Form 1040, interpreting the Form 1099-R received from the distributing plan, confirming the Form 5498 from the receiving custodian, and — for certain transactions — filing Form 8606 or Form 5329. The reporting requirement exists even for non-taxable direct rollovers.
1Overview — Tax Reporting Defined
Every retirement plan distribution — including non-taxable direct rollovers — generates a Form 1099-R that must be addressed on the federal income tax return. The distribution code in Box 7 of Form 1099-R determines how the transaction is reported on Form 1040 and whether any additional forms (Form 8606, Form 5329) are required. Failure to properly report even non-taxable rollovers can result in the IRS assessing tax on what was in fact a non-taxable transaction.
IRS Governing Framework
- Primary IRC Section
- IRC Section 6047 — information reporting requirements for retirement plan distributions
- Secondary IRC Section
- Treasury Regulation 1.408-7 — IRA reporting requirements; IRC Section 6693 — penalties for failure to file required reports
- Key Publications
- IRS Publication 590-B (Distributions from IRAs) contains comprehensive reporting instructions. IRS Instructions for Form 1099-R provide Box-by-Box guidance for custodians and participants.
- Tax Year Rule
- All reporting is based on the tax year in which the distribution was issued — not the year the rollover was completed. A distribution issued December 28, 2026 that is rolled over on January 15, 2027 is reported on the 2026 tax return. The Form 1099-R will show a 2026 distribution date regardless of when the rollover deposit was made.
2Traditional IRA — Account-Specific Rules
Traditional IRAs can receive rollovers at any time. There is no triggering event required — you can initiate a rollover from another IRA or from a qualified plan at any point.
Tax Treatment
pre-tax (if deductible) or after-tax (non-deductible)
Contributions may be fully deductible, partially deductible, or non-deductible depending on income, filing status, and workplace plan coverage. Non-deductible contributions create 'basis' tracked on Form 8606.
Early Withdrawal
10% federal penalty
10% federal penalty plus ordinary income tax on pre-tax amounts withdrawn before age 59½
RMD Age
Age 73
Traditional IRAs are subject to RMDs beginning April 1 of the year following the year you turn 73. Unlike workplace plans, RMDs from multiple traditional IRAs can be aggregated — you calculate the total RMD across all traditional IRAs and can take the full amount from any one account.
Rollover Deadline
60 Days
Rollovers between traditional IRAs are processed as trustee-to-trustee transfers (preferred) or as 60-day rollovers. Trustee-to-trustee transfers are not reported on Form 1099-R and do not count against the one-rollover-per-12-months rule. This is a critical distinction from qualified plan rollovers.
The traditional IRA is the primary destination for most rollover assets — it is the most common IRA type by total assets. However, it is also the most misunderstood from a tax basis perspective. Millions of Americans hold traditional IRAs with a 'mixed basis' — some contributions were deductible and some were not — without maintaining the required Form 8606 records. Rolling additional qualified plan assets into a mixed-basis traditional IRA can permanently complicate the tax calculation on every future distribution.
Anyone with earned income can contribute to a traditional IRA, but the deductibility of contributions depends on income level and access to a workplace retirement plan. The rollover of qualified plan assets to a traditional IRA is always permitted regardless of income — but future Roth conversions of the rolled amount will be fully taxable.
3How Tax Reporting Applies to Traditional IRAs
📌 Account-Specific Tax Logic
Tax Reporting — Traditional IRA
IRA-to-IRA transfers produce no Form 1099-R — they are invisible to tax reporting. For 60-day rollovers: Form 1099-R Code 7 (if 59½+) or Code 1 (if under 59½). The Form 5498 from the receiving custodian confirms the rollover was completed — but it is issued in May, after the tax filing deadline, so it cannot be included with the return.
4IRS Forms Reference — Traditional IRA
The following IRS forms are directly involved in reporting tax reporting events for a Traditional IRA rollover. Form 1099-R is the primary form for Traditional IRA distributions and leads this table.
| Form | Purpose & When Issued | Traditional IRA Priority |
|---|---|---|
| Form 1099-R | Issued by the distributing plan or IRA custodian. Reports the gross distribution (Box 1), taxable amount (Box 2a), federal withholding (Box 4), and distribution code (Box 7). Received in January of the year following the distribution. | ★ Primary |
| Form 5498 | Issued by the receiving IRA custodian. Confirms rollover contributions, IRA contributions, and fair market value. Issued in May of the year following the contribution (after the IRA contribution deadline). Does not appear on the tax return — serves as verification that the rollover was received. | Reference |
| Form 1040 | Lines 5a and 5b report pension and IRA distributions. Line 5a shows the total distribution (from Form 1099-R Box 1). Line 5b shows the taxable amount. For a non-taxable direct rollover: 5a = gross distribution amount, 5b = $0. The word 'ROLLOVER' should be written next to Line 5b. | Reference |
| Form 8606 | Required when a traditional IRA contains non-deductible contributions (after-tax basis), when a Roth conversion occurs, or when a distribution is taken from a Roth IRA before age 59½. Tracks the after-tax basis to prevent double taxation. | Reference |
| Form 5329 | Required when the 10% early withdrawal penalty applies or when a penalty exception is being claimed. Part I reports the early distribution and the applicable exception code. Filed as an attachment to Form 1040. | Reference |
| Form W-4R | Completed before receiving a distribution to elect the desired federal withholding rate. For IRA distributions: can elect $0. For eligible rollover distributions from qualified plans: the only way to reduce withholding to $0 is a direct rollover — Form W-4R cannot eliminate the mandatory 20% on indirect rollovers. | Reference |
5Form 1099-R — Distribution Codes for Traditional IRA
The Box 7 code on your Form 1099-R controls how the IRS classifies your Traditional IRA distribution. The table below shows only the codes that actually appear on Traditional IRA 1099-Rs — irrelevant codes have been removed.
| Code | Meaning & Tax Treatment for Traditional IRA |
|---|---|
| Code Code G | Direct rollover to a qualified plan or IRA. Non-taxable. Report on 1040 Line 5a with $0 on 5b. |
| Code Code H | Direct rollover from a designated Roth account to a Roth IRA. Non-taxable. |
| Code Code 7 | Normal distribution — age 59½ or older. Taxable as ordinary income. No penalty. |
| Code Code 1 | Early distribution, no known exception. Taxable plus 10% early withdrawal penalty. |
| Code Code 2 | Early distribution, exception applies. Taxable but penalty exception claimed on Form 5329. |
| Code Code 4 | Death distribution. Tax treatment varies by beneficiary relationship. |
| Code Code Q | Qualified Roth IRA distribution. Tax-free and penalty-free. |
| Code Code J | Early Roth IRA distribution, no known exception. Earnings are taxable and penalized. |
| Code Code S | Early SIMPLE IRA distribution within 2-year period. 25% penalty applies. |
6Real-World Scenarios — Traditional IRA
The following dollar-based scenarios illustrate how tax reporting rules apply specifically to Traditional IRA rollovers. The first scenario is drawn directly from the account-specific rules above.
Traditional IRA — Tax Reporting (Account-Specific)
IRA-to-IRA transfers produce no Form 1099-R — they are invisible to tax reporting. For 60-day rollovers: Form 1099-R Code 7 (if 59½+) or Code 1 (if under 59½). The Form 5498 from the receiving custodian confirms the rollover was completed — but it is issued in May, after the tax filing deadline, so it cannot be included with the return.
Direct Rollover — Simple Correct Reporting
In April 2026, Marcus rolls over his $180,000 401(k) directly to a traditional IRA. In January 2027, he receives Form 1099-R showing $180,000 in Box 1, $0 in Box 2a (taxable amount), and Code G in Box 7. On his 2026 Form 1040, he enters $180,000 on Line 5a and $0 on Line 5b, writing 'ROLLOVER' on the dotted line. No additional forms required. IRS inquiry risk: near zero — Code G specifically indicates non-taxable direct rollover.
Roth Conversion With Pro-Rata Rule — Complex Reporting
Patricia has a traditional IRA with $100,000 total — $20,000 of non-deductible contributions (basis, tracked on prior Form 8606) and $80,000 of pre-tax growth. She converts $50,000 to a Roth IRA. The pro-rata calculation: $20,000 basis ÷ $100,000 total × $50,000 converted = $10,000 non-taxable. Taxable conversion amount: $40,000. She files Form 8606 Part II, which flows $40,000 to Form 1040 Line 5b as ordinary income. Her remaining basis after the conversion: $10,000 (to be used in future distributions or conversions).
7Expert Analysis
Tax reporting for retirement account rollovers is unique in the tax code because the reporting obligation exists even when the transaction produces zero taxable income. A participant who executes a perfect direct rollover of $500,000 still receives a Form 1099-R showing $500,000 distributed and must correctly report it on Form 1040 — otherwise the IRS's automated matching system will treat the $500,000 as unreported taxable income and issue a deficiency notice. The 'Code G' on the 1099-R is the participant's protection — but only if it is correctly reported on the return.
Retirees who complete multiple rollover transactions in a single year — consolidating several 401(k) accounts, rolling over a pension lump sum, and executing a partial Roth conversion — may receive 4–6 Form 1099-R documents in January of the following year. Each document must be addressed on the return. A missed or incorrectly reported 1099-R is one of the most common triggers for IRS correspondence among the 60–75 demographic, who are often managing their own tax filings without professional assistance.
8Common Mistakes to Avoid
Not reporting a non-taxable direct rollover on Form 1040 because 'nothing was taxable'
A direct rollover generates a Form 1099-R that the IRS receives from the plan administrator. If the taxpayer does not report it on their return, the IRS's automated system sees unreported income and issues a CP2000 notice proposing tax on the full distribution amount. The solution is simple: report the gross amount on Line 5a and $0 on Line 5b with the word 'ROLLOVER' — this documents the non-taxable nature and closes the matching issue before it starts.
Using Form 8606 from a prior year without updating for the current year's transactions
Form 8606 tracks IRA basis cumulatively across all years. Many taxpayers keep a copy of their prior-year Form 8606 but fail to update it for the current year's conversions, distributions, or additional non-deductible contributions. An outdated Form 8606 leads to incorrect pro-rata calculations and either overpayment of tax (if basis is understated) or underpayment (if basis is overstated). File a new Form 8606 every year in which any IRA transaction occurs that affects basis.
Not filing Form 5329 when a penalty exception is being claimed
When a distribution code on Form 1099-R indicates an early distribution (Code 1), the IRS automatically assesses the 10% penalty. If the taxpayer qualifies for an exception (disability, first-time home purchase, SEPP, etc.) but does not file Form 5329 to document it, the penalty is assessed by default. Form 5329 Part I lists every available exception code — the taxpayer must complete it and attach it to the return to claim the exception. Simply leaving the penalty off the return without Form 5329 will result in an IRS notice.
Governed under IRC Section 408(a) and IRS Publication 590-A (contributions) and Publication 590-B (distributions). The 'pro-rata rule' under IRC Section 408(d)(2) determines the taxable portion of any distribution from a traditional IRA that contains both deductible and non-deductible contributions.
9Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need to report a rollover on my tax return if it was non-taxable?
Yes — you must report the rollover even if nothing is taxable. Enter the gross distribution amount on Form 1040 Line 5a and $0 on Line 5b, and write 'ROLLOVER' on the dotted line. This is required because the IRS receives Form 1099-R from the distributing plan and will flag your return if the distribution isn't addressed. Failing to report it can trigger an IRS notice proposing tax on the full amount.
What do I do if the distribution code on my Form 1099-R is wrong?
Contact the plan administrator or IRA custodian that issued the 1099-R immediately. They can issue a corrected 1099-R (Form 1099-R marked 'CORRECTED') showing the proper distribution code. Common errors include Code 1 instead of Code G for direct rollovers, or Code 7 instead of Code G. File your tax return with the corrected form once received. If the corrected form arrives after you have already filed, file an amended return (Form 1040-X).
When will I receive Form 5498 confirming my rollover?
Form 5498 is issued by the receiving IRA custodian in May — after the April 15 tax filing deadline. You cannot wait for it before filing your return. Instead, verify the rollover was correctly received by logging into your IRA account or requesting a year-end statement from the custodian. The Form 5498 serves as official documentation for your records but is not required to be attached to your tax return.
What tax reporting rules specifically apply to a Traditional IRA?
IRA-to-IRA transfers produce no Form 1099-R — they are invisible to tax reporting. For 60-day rollovers: Form 1099-R Code 7 (if 59½+) or Code 1 (if under 59½). The Form 5498 from the receiving custodian confirms the rollover was completed — but it is issued in May, after the tax filing deadline, so it cannot be included with the return.
Does the tax reporting apply to direct rollovers from a Traditional IRA?
Every retirement plan distribution — including non-taxable direct rollovers — generates a Form 1099-R that must be addressed on the federal income tax return. A direct rollover reduces but may not eliminate all tax reporting implications — the destination account type determines the tax outcome.
10IRS References & Regulatory Authority
Primary Publication
IRS Publication 590-B (Distributions from IRAs) — Reporting section
Secondary Publication
IRS Instructions for Forms 1099-R and 5498
Primary IRC Section
IRC Section 6047 — information reporting requirements for retirement plan distributions
Secondary IRC Section
Treasury Regulation 1.408-7 — IRA reporting requirements; IRC Section 6693 — penalties for failure to file required reports
Primary Form
Form 1040 (Lines 5a and 5b)
Secondary Forms
Form 1099-R; Form 5498; Form 8606; Form 5329
Traditional IRA — Primary Ref
IRS Publication 590-A (Contributions to Individual Retirement Arrangements)
Traditional IRA — Distribution Form
Form 1099-R