If you contribute to an individual retirement account (IRA), there’s a tax form you should get familiar with: Form 5498. In simple terms, it’s a record of your IRA activities over the last year. Form 5498 is typically issued to anyone who has contributed to an IRA, but you generally won’t have to do anything with this form.
What is Form 5498? What does it show?
You, as an IRA holder, are not required to file a Form 5498 to the IRS — your IRA custodian (e.g. Vanguard or Fidelity) is, and you simply receive a copy for your own records.
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Who gets Form 5498, and when?
Anyone who owns an IRA should get a Form 5498 each year, for each IRA they own.
IRA custodians are required to file Forms 5498 for tax year 2023 by May 31, 2024, so it may arrive in your mailbox anytime between January and mid-June.
What do you do with Form 5498?
You don’t need to fill anything out on a Form 5498, nor do you need to send it to the IRS — your IRA custodian has already done that for you. Form 5498 is provided to you purely on a “for your information” basis.
That said, like any tax form, it’s worth keeping any Form 5498s you receive in a safe place, for several reasons:
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It’s good to keep tax forms in case of an audit. In particular, maintain a paper trail for big deductions like traditional IRA contributions. If, for whatever reason, the IRS questions traditional IRA contributions you deducted in years past, Form 5498 can serve as third-party documentation of those contributions.
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Form 5498 may be helpful for properly reporting your IRA contributions on your Form 1040 (individual income tax return). Traditional IRA contributions are an important deduction for many taxpayers, and Form 5498 shows you the amount of traditional contributions that the IRS is expecting you to report for a specific account and tax year. Using it can help you avoid mistakes when adding up the total amount of IRA contributions you can deduct.
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Box 3 of Form 5498 can help you stay on top of tax liability from a Roth IRA conversion. If you previously contributed money to a traditional IRA, deducted those contributions, and then converted that traditional IRA to a Roth IRA, you now owe taxes on that money. The “Roth IRA Conversion Amount” box of Form 5498 can help you fill out Form 8606 (Nondeductible IRAs), which tells you how much taxable income your Roth IRA conversion generated.