I am doing some TIRA to 401K rollovers, and later Roth conversions. From below article, these activities are not subject to once-per-year-rule:
https://www.irahelp.com/slottreport/7-things-you-need-know-about-once-year-rollover-rule
So, if you receive a check from 401K, you have 60 days to rollover to a Rollover IRA, and you can only do that once every 12 months. Why don't you just get the full balance, and rollover to IRA once and be done with it?
What would be the actual examples of once-per-year-rollover-rule?
https://www.irahelp.com/slottreport/7-things-you-need-know-about-once-year-rollover-rule
So, if you receive a check from 401K, you have 60 days to rollover to a Rollover IRA, and you can only do that once every 12 months. Why don't you just get the full balance, and rollover to IRA once and be done with it?
What would be the actual examples of once-per-year-rollover-rule?