Roth
IRAs
What is it?
A Roth individual retirement account
(IRA) is a personal savings plan that offers certain tax benefits to encourage
retirement savings. Contributions to a Roth IRA are never tax deductible on
your federal income tax return, which means that you can contribute only
after-tax dollars. But amounts contributed to the Roth IRA grow tax deferred
and, if certain conditions are met, distributions (including both contributions
and investment earnings) will be completely tax free at the federal level.
A
Roth IRA, like a traditional IRA, is not an investment, but a tax-advantaged
vehicle in which you can hold some of your investments. You need to decide how
to invest your Roth IRA dollars based on your own tolerance for risk and
investment philosophy. How fast your Roth IRA dollars grow is largely a
function of the investments you choose.
Caution: All investing involves risk, including the possible loss of
principal.
For
2015, you can contribute up to the lesser of $5,500 ($6,500 if you're age 50 or
older) or 100 percent of your taxable compensation to a Roth IRA. You may also
be able to contribute up to $5,500 to a Roth IRA in your spouse's name even if
he or she receives little or no taxable compensation ($6,500 if your spouse is 50 or older).
However, not everyone qualifies to use the Roth IRA. Even if you do, you may
not qualify to contribute the annual maximum. The amount you can contribute to
a Roth IRA (if any) depends on your modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) for
the year and your federal income tax filing status.
Tip: Consider contributing to a Roth IRA rather than a
traditional deductible IRA if you expect that you may be in the same or a
higher federal income tax bracket when you retire. If you can't make deductible
contributions to a traditional IRA and are trying to decide between making
nondeductible contributions to a traditional IRA or contributing to a Roth IRA,
you should probably choose the Roth IRA. If you are eligible to contribute to a
Roth IRA, there is generally no advantage to making nondeductible contributions
to a traditional IRA.
Tip: If you participate in a 401(k), 403(b), or 457(b) plan at
work, you may be able to make Roth contributions to the plan. Qualified
distributions of these contributions and related earnings may be income tax
free (and penalty free) at the federal level. Your employer may also match your
contributions, in whole or in part. The ability to make Roth contributions to
your employer's plan may be a factor in deciding whether (or how much) to
contribute to a Roth IRA. Be sure to discuss your situation with a qualified
professional before making any decisions.
Caution: Special rules apply if you inherit an IRA.
Caution: Special rules apply to certain distributions to reservists
and national guardsmen called to active duty after September 11, 2001.
When can it be used?
You must receive taxable compensation
during the year
To
contribute to an IRA (Roth or traditional),
you must receive taxable compensation during the year. For purposes of IRA
contributions, taxable compensation includes wages, salaries, commissions,
self-employment income, and taxable alimony or separate maintenance. Other
taxable income, such as interest earnings, dividends, rental income, pension
and annuity income, and deferred compensation, does not qualify as taxable
compensation for this purpose. Your contribution for a given year cannot exceed
your taxable compensation for that year.
Tip: Members of the Armed Forces can include nontaxable combat
pay as part of their taxable compensation when determining how much they can
contribute to an IRA (their own or a spousal IRA). For service members with
only nontaxable combat pay, Roth IRA contributions will generally make more
sense than nondeductible contributions to a traditional IRA.
Tip: An individual who receives a military death gratuity or
Service member's Group Life Insurance ("SGLI") program payment to
contribute the funds to a Roth IRA within one year of receiving the death
benefits. These contributions are treated as rollover contributions to the Roth
IRA account, and are not subject to normal income or contribution limits. In
the event of a subsequent distribution from a Roth IRA that is not a qualified
distribution, the amount of the distribution attributable to the contribution
of the military death gratuity or SGLI payment is treated as nontaxable
investment in the contract.
Tip: Differential pay received by service members is considered
compensation for IRA contribution purposes. Differential pay is defined as any
payment which: (1) is made by an employer to an individual with respect to any
period during which the individual is performing service in the uniformed
services while on active duty for a period of more than 30 days; and (2)
represents all or a portion of the wages that the individual would have
received from the employer if the individual were performing services for the
employer.
Your ability to make annual contributions
depends on your income and filing status
If
you file your federal income tax return as single or head of household and your
MAGI for 2015 is $116,000 or less, you can make a full contribution to your
Roth IRA. Similarly, if you file your return as married filing jointly or
qualifying widow(er) and your MAGI for 2015 is $183,000 or less, you can make a
full contribution. Otherwise, your allowable annual Roth IRA contribution is
reduced or eliminated as follows:
If your federal filing status is:
|
Your Roth IRA contribution is reduced if your MAGI is:
|
You cannot contribute to a Roth IRA if your MAGI is:
|
Single or head of household*
|
More than $116,000 but less than $131,000 (for
2015)($114,000-$129,000 for 2014)
|
$131,000 or more (for 2015)($129,000 or more for 2014)
|
Married filing jointly or qualifying widow(er)*
|
More than $183,000 but less than $193,000 (for
2015)($181,000-$191,000 for 2014)
|
$193,000 or more (for 2015)($191,000 or more for 2014)
|
Married filing separately
|
More than $0 but less than $10,000
|
$10,000 or more
|
*These
income ranges are indexed for inflation each year.
If
you are married filing a joint return, you may be able to contribute to a Roth
IRA for your spouse even if he or she has little or no taxable compensation. If
you are married filing separate returns and you lived apart from your spouse at
all times during the taxable year, you are treated as a single taxpayer for
purposes of the Roth IRA rules.
Tip: To calculate the exact amount of your allowable Roth IRA
contribution, a step-by-step worksheet is available. See IRS Publication 590,
Individual Retirement Arrangements (IRAs).
Tip: These income limits do not apply to rollover contributions
to your Roth IRA.
Even
though your ability to make annual
Roth contributions may be limited depending on your income and filing
status, there's an easy workaround if you want to make annual Roth
contributions. You can simply make your annual contribution first to a
traditional IRA, and then take advantage of the new liberal conversion rules
and convert that traditional IRA to a Roth IRA. (You can make nondeductible
contributions to a traditional IRA if you have taxable compensation and you
haven't yet reached age 70½.) There are no limits to the number of Roth
conversions you can make. (Note: you'll need to aggregate all traditional IRAs
and SEP/SIMPLE IRAs you own (other than IRAs you've inherited) when you
calculate the taxable portion of your conversion.)
You must not have already contributed
the annual maximum to your traditional IRA
Total
contributions to all of your IRAs (traditional and Roth) cannot exceed $5,500
for 2015 ($6,500 if you're age 50 or older). If you contribute the maximum
allowed to your traditional IRA for any year, you cannot contribute to your
Roth IRA at all for that year. If you make a partial contribution to your
traditional IRA, your allowable Roth IRA contribution for that year is equal to
the difference between the annual IRA contribution limit and the amount
contributed to your traditional IRA (or vice versa).
Example(s): You have a traditional IRA and a Roth IRA. You contribute
$2,900 to your traditional IRA for 2015. You can contribute no more than $2,600
to your Roth IRA for 2015 ($3,600 if age 50 or older).
Tip: The annual contribution limits ($5,500 in 2014 and 2015)
don't apply to rollover contributions.
Caution: An active reservist or guardsman who receives a qualified
reservist distribution can repay all or part of that distribution to an IRA at
any time during the two year period beginning on the day after active duty
ends. The regular IRA contribution limits don't apply to these repayments. A
qualified reservist distribution is a payment from an IRA, or a payment of
elective deferrals and earnings from a 401(k) plan or 403(b) plan, to an active
reservist or guardsman who is called to duty after September 11, 2001, for a
period in excess of 179 days (or for an indefinite period).
Strengths
Qualified distributions are completely
tax free
A
withdrawal from a Roth IRA
(including both your contributions and investment earnings) is completely tax
free (and penalty free) if (1) made at least five years after you first
establish any Roth IRA, and (2) one of the following also applies:
·
You
have reached age 59½ by the time of the withdrawal
·
The
withdrawal is made due to qualifying disability
·
The
withdrawal is made for first-time homebuyer expenses ($10,000 lifetime limit)
·
The
withdrawal is made by your beneficiary or estate after your death
Withdrawals
that meet these conditions are referred to as qualified distributions. If the
above conditions aren't met, any portion of a withdrawal that represents
investment earnings will be subject to federal income tax and may also be
subject to a 10 percent premature distribution tax if you are under age 59½
(unless an exception applies). See "Questions & Answers," below.
Tip: The five-year holding period begins on January 1 of the tax
year for which you make your first contribution (regular or rollover) to any
Roth IRA. Each taxpayer has only one five-year holding period for this purpose.
Example(s): You make an annual Roth contribution on April 15, 2015, and
designate the contribution for the 2014 tax year. If this is your first Roth
contribution, your five-year holding period begins on January 1, 2014.
Tip: Because the five-year holding period runs from the first day
of the tax year for which you establish any Roth IRA you should establish a
Roth IRA as soon as you can, even if you can afford only a minimal
contribution. The earlier you satisfy the five-year holding period, the sooner
you may be able to receive tax-free qualified distributions from your Roth IRA.
Caution: Roth IRAs you inherit are subject to different five-year
holding periods.
Fewer restrictions on making
withdrawals prior to retirement
The ability
to make tax-free withdrawals from a Roth IRA under certain conditions
("qualified distributions") can be a compelling reason to use this
type of IRA. Furthermore, even if you make a withdrawal that fails to meet
those conditions (a "nonqualified" distribution), you may not be
taxed on the full amount of the withdrawal. That's because when you withdraw
funds from your Roth IRA, distributions are treated as consisting of your
contributions first and investment earnings last. Since amounts that represent
your contributions have already been taxed, they are not taxed again or
penalized (even if you are under age 59½) when you withdraw them from the Roth
IRA. Only the portion of a nonqualified distribution that represents investment
earnings will be taxed and possibly penalized.
Caution: If you convert funds from a traditional IRA to a Roth IRA,
special penalty provisions may apply if you subsequently withdraw funds from
the IRA within five years of the conversion (and prior to age 59½).
You can contribute to a Roth IRA after
age 70½
Unlike
traditional IRAs, you can contribute to a Roth IRA for every year that you
have taxable compensation, including the year in which you reach age 70½ and
every year thereafter.
Your funds can stay in a Roth IRA longer
than in a traditional IRA
The
IRS requires you to take annual required minimum distributions from traditional
IRAs beginning when you reach age 70½. These withdrawals are calculated to
dispose of all of the money in the traditional IRA over a given period of time.
Roth IRAs are not subject to the required minimum distribution rule. In fact,
you are not required to take a single distribution from a Roth IRA during your
lifetime (although distributions are generally required after your death). This
can be a significant advantage in terms of your estate planning.
You can contribute even if covered by
an employer-sponsored retirement plan
Your
ability to contribute to a Roth IRA does not depend on whether you or your
spouse is covered by an employer-sponsored retirement plan. The fact that one
of you is covered by such a plan has no bearing on your allowable contribution
to a Roth IRA. This is in contrast to traditional IRAs, where your ability to
deduct your contributions may be limited if you or your spouse are covered by
an employer plan. However, remember that your ability to make annual
contributions to a Roth IRA does depend on your tax filing status and MAGI for
the year.
Investment choices are broad and
diverse
Like
a traditional IRA, you can
establish a Roth IRA with a bank, mutual fund company, life insurance company,
or stockbroker. You can even have multiple IRA accounts with more than one
institution. Furthermore, you can choose from a wide range of specific
investments to fund your Roth IRA. Intense competition for IRA dollars has led
to a large number of IRA providers and investment choices.
Caution: All investing involves risk, including the possible loss of
principal. Before investing in a mutual fund,
carefully
consider its investment objectives,
risks,
fees, and expenses, which can be found
in
the prospectus available from the fund.
Read
it carefully before investing.
Caution: The IRS has ruled that the wash sales rules apply if you
sell stock or other securities outside of your IRA for a loss, and purchase
substantially identical stock or securities in your IRA (traditional or Roth)
within 30 days before or after the sale. The result is that you cannot take a
deduction for your loss on the sale of the stock or securities. In addition, your
basis in your IRA is not increased by the amount of the disallowed loss.
When you die, your beneficiaries may
pay no income tax on proceeds
As
long as any Roth IRA you have established has been in existence for at least
five years at the time of your death, your beneficiaries will not have to pay
any federal income tax on post-death distributions from any Roth IRA you own.
Even if you haven't satisfied the five-year holding period at the time of your
death, distributions to your beneficiary will still be tax free if he or she
waits until the date you would have satisfied the five-year holding period
before taking distributions from the Roth IRA. Tax-free distributions to your
beneficiary can make the Roth IRA a very valuable estate planning tool. However,
bear in mind that the value of your Roth IRA will be included in your taxable
estate to determine if federal estate tax is due.
If
your beneficiary is your surviving spouse, and your spouse rolls your Roth IRA
over to his or her own Roth IRA, or treats your Roth IRA as his or her own,
then distributions from the Roth IRA will be tax-free only if your spouse
satisfies the requirements for a qualified distribution (that is, your spouse
satisfies the five-year holding period, and the distribution is made after your
spouse attains age 59½, becomes disabled, dies, or incurs qualifying first-time
homebuyer expenses). The five-year holding period--for both the IRA inherited
from you and any other Roth IRAs your spouse may own--ends on the earlier of
(a) the end of your five-year holding period, or (b) the end of the five-year
holding period applicable to your spouse's own Roth IRAs.
Contributions are discretionary
Like
a traditional IRA, you do not have to make a contribution to your Roth IRA for
any year unless you choose to. You can exercise complete discretion in deciding
how much and when to save (subject to the annual dollar limit on
contributions).
A Roth IRA is relatively simple to
maintain
Like
a traditional IRA with deductible contributions, a Roth IRA is relatively simple to
maintain. There are no annual reporting requirements for Roth IRAs.
Traditional IRAs and certain employer
plan distributions can be converted to Roth IRAs
You
can convert your traditional IRA funds to a Roth IRA. ("Traditional
IRA" for this purpose includes SEP IRAs, and SIMPLE IRAs after two years
of participation. This may be advisable if you have determined that you will
reap more benefits from the Roth IRA than the traditional IRA. However, you
should carefully consider the income tax consequences and other issues
associated with converting funds Similarly, certain non-Roth distributions from
your 401(k) or other qualified plan, 403(a) annuity, 403(b) plan, or 457(b)
plan can be rolled over (converted) to a Roth IRA. See "Questions and
Answers," below.
"Catch-up" contributions are
allowed if you're at least 50
Individuals
age 50 and older may make an additional yearly "catch-up"
contribution up to $1,000 to a traditional or Roth IRA (over and above the
regular contribution limit). The purpose of this provision is to help older
individuals increase their savings as they approach retirement. (You're
considered to be age 50 for a year if you reach age 50 by December 31 of that
year.)
You may qualify for a tax credit
Certain
low- and middle-income taxpayers can claim a partial, nonrefundable income tax
credit for amounts contributed to a traditional or Roth IRA. The maximum annual
contribution eligible for the credit is $2,000. The maximum credit is $1,000
(50 percent of $2,000) per taxpayer, but the actual amount of the credit (if
any) depends on your MAGI. Here are the credit rates based on 2015 MAGI limits
(these limits are adjusted annually for inflation):
Joint Filers
|
Heads of Household
|
All Other Filers
|
Credit Rate
|
Maximum Credit (Per Taxpayer)
|
$0 - $36,500
|
$0 - $27,375
|
$0 - $18,250
|
50% of contribution (up to $2,000)
|
$1,000
|
$36,501 - $39,500
|
$27,376 - $29,625
|
$18,251 - $19,750
|
20%
|
$400
|
$39,501 - $61,000
|
$29,626 - $45,750
|
$19,751 - $30,500
|
10%
|
$200
|
Over $61,000
|
Over $45,750
|
Over $30,500
|
0%
|
$0
|
To
claim the credit, you must be at least 18 years old and not a full-time student
or a dependent on another taxpayer's return. The credit is in addition to any
income tax deduction you might qualify for with respect to your IRA
contribution.
Caution: The amount of any contribution eligible for the credit may
be reduced by any taxable distributions you (or your spouse if you file a joint
return) receive from an IRA or employer-sponsored retirement plan (or any
nontaxable distributions from a Roth IRA) during the same tax year, during the
period for filing your tax return for that year (including extensions), or
during the prior two years.
Tradeoffs
You can contribute only after-tax
dollars
Contributions
to a Roth IRA are never tax
deductible on your federal income tax return. In other words, you can
contribute only after-tax dollars to a Roth IRA. This is in contrast to a
traditional IRA, which may allow you to deduct your contributions under certain
conditions.
Contributions are limited to the annual
maximum (or possibly even less)
You
cannot contribute a total of more than $5,500 per year to all of your IRAs
(Roth and traditional) for 2015 ($6,500 if you're age 50 or older by the end of
the calendar year).
Example(s): You have two traditional IRAs and a Roth IRA. You can
contribute no more than $5,500 overall in 2015. You can contribute the entire
$5,500 to any of the three IRAs, or you can divide the $5,500 contribution
among them in any manner you choose.
Tip: The annual contribution limits don't apply to rollover
contributions.
Tip: You may also be able to contribute up to $5,500 to an IRA in
your spouse's name in 2015 even if he or she has little or no taxable
compensation ($6,500 if your spouse is age 50 or older).
Caution: An active reservist or guardsman who receives a qualified
reservist distribution can repay all or part of that distribution to an IRA at
any time during the two year period beginning on the day after active duty
ends. The regular IRA contribution limits don't apply to these repayments.
Your ability to contribute in 2014
depends on your income and tax filing status
See
"Your ability to make annual contributions depends on your income and
filing status," above.
Withdrawals are taxable under certain
conditions
A
withdrawal from a Roth IRA
(including both contributions and investment earnings) is completely tax free
only if it is a qualified distribution (see "Strengths," above).
If
your withdrawal is a nonqualified distribution, the portion of your
distribution that represents investment earnings will be subject to federal
income tax, and may also be subject to a 10 percent premature distribution tax
if you are under age 59½ (unless an exception applies). Only the portion of a
nonqualified distribution that represents your contributions will not be taxed
or penalized, since those dollars were taxed once already. (When you make a
withdrawal, your own nontaxable distributions are generally deemed distributed
first.)
Special penalty provisions may apply to
withdrawals of Roth IRA funds that were converted from a traditional IRA
If
you roll over or convert funds from a traditional IRA to a Roth IRA, special
rules apply. If you are under age 59½, any nonqualified withdrawal that you
make from the Roth IRA within five years of the rollover or conversion may be
subject to the 10 percent premature distribution tax (to the extent that the
withdrawal consists of converted funds that were taxed at the time of
conversion). The reason for this special rule is to ensure that taxpayers don't
convert funds from a traditional IRA solely to avoid the early distribution
penalty.
Tip: The five-year holding period begins on January 1 of the tax
year in which you convert the funds from the traditional IRA to the Roth IRA.
When applying this special rule, a separate five-year holding period applies
each time you convert funds from a traditional IRA to a Roth IRA.
Caution: This five-year period may not be the same as the five-year
period used to determine whether your withdrawal is a qualified distribution.
Example(s): In 2012, you open your first Roth IRA account by converting
a $10,000 traditional IRA to a Roth IRA. You include $10,000 in your taxable
income for 2012. You make no further contributions. In 2015, at age 55, your
Roth IRA is worth $12,000, and you withdraw $10,000. The distribution is not a
qualified distribution because five years have not elapsed from the date you
first established a Roth IRA. And because you are making a nonqualified
withdrawal within five years of your conversion, the entire $10,000 is subject
to a 10 percent premature distribution tax unless you qualify for an exception.
This "recaptures" the early distribution tax you would have paid at
the time of the conversion.
You
open a regular Roth IRA
account in 2008 with a contribution of $100, and make no further contributions
to the account. In 2012, at age 60, you convert a $100,000 traditional IRA to a
Roth IRA. In 2015 you withdraw $50,000 from this Roth IRA. Because you are over
age 59½ in 2015, and because more than five years have elapsed from January 1,
2008 (the year you first established any Roth IRA), your withdrawal is a
qualified distribution and is totally free of federal income taxes. Even though
your withdrawal was within five years of the conversion, no penalty tax
applies.
States differ in their treatment of
Roth IRAs
Although
most states follow the federal income tax treatment of Roth IRAs, some may not.
You should check with your tax advisor regarding the tax treatment of Roth IRAs
in your particular state. In addition, some states may provide Roth IRA funds
with less creditor protection than they provide traditional IRA funds.
Tip: Federal law provides protection for up to $1,245,475 (as of
April 1, 2013) of your aggregate Roth and traditional IRA assets if you declare
bankruptcy. (Amounts rolled over to your Roth IRA from an employer qualified
plan or 403(b) plan, plus any earnings on the rollover, aren't subject to this
dollar cap and are fully protected.) The laws of your particular state may
provide additional bankruptcy protection, and may provide protection from the
claims of your creditors in cases outside of bankruptcy. (Inherited IRAs may be
afforded less protection from creditors under federal and state law--seek
professional guidance.)
The law may change in the future
Most
of the advantages offered by the Roth IRA depend on the federal government's
promise that qualifying distributions from Roth IRAs will always be tax free.
It is unlikely, but if the law changes, all bets are off. Remember that Social
Security benefits were once not subject to federal income tax, but federal law
was later changed to tax a percentage of such benefits in certain situations.
How to do it
Establish a Roth IRA
Where
you choose to establish your Roth IRA and the specific investments you choose
depends on your own personal needs and preferences. You have a wide variety of
choices, and you should carefully consider the matter before making your
decision. How fast your Roth IRA
dollars grow is more a function of investment strategy and performance than of
tax exemption. Consider whether you want to establish a Roth IRA with a:
·
Bank
·
Financial
institution
·
Mutual
fund company
·
Stockbroker
·
Life
insurance company
You
should also consider the types of investments (e.g., stocks, bonds, mutual
funds, CDs, annuities) that will best suit your goals and risk tolerance, as
well as the fees that are associated with opening and maintaining your Roth
IRA. Finally, keep in mind that you can establish multiple IRA accounts with
more than one institution.
Tip: Employers who maintain certain retirement plans (like
401(k), 403(b), or 457(b) plans) can allow employees to make their regular IRA
contribution--traditional or Roth--to a special account set up under their
retirement plan. These accounts, called "deemed IRAs," function just
like regular IRAs. Advantages include the fact that your retirement assets can
be consolidated in one place, contributions can be made automatically through
payroll deduction, you can take advantage of any special investment
opportunities offered in your employer's plan, and your protection from
creditors may be greater than that available in a stand-alone IRA. The downside
is that your investment choices in your employer's plan may be very limited in
comparison to the universe of investment options available to you in a separate
IRA. Also, the distribution options available to you and your beneficiaries in
a deemed IRA may be more limited than in a stand-alone IRA. Because of the
administrative complexity involved, most employers have so far been reluctant
to offer these arrangements. Check with your plan administrator to see if this
is an option for you.
You have until the due date of your
federal tax return for the year (usually April 15) to make a contribution for
that year
If
you want to make a Roth IRA contribution for the year, you have until the due
date of that year's federal income tax return. For most people, this is April
15 of the following year. Your contribution deadline is not extended by any
extension you may receive to file your return. So, if you obtain an automatic
four-month extension, you may have additional time to file your tax return but
you don't have any additional time to make a Roth IRA contribution.
Tip: You can direct the IRS to deposit all or part of your
federal income tax refund directly to an IRA (subject to the normal rules
governing the amount, timing, and deductibility of IRA contributions.
Tip: Your five-year holding period for qualified distributions
from Roth IRAs begins on January 1 of the tax year for which you first make a
contribution (annual, rollover, or conversion) to any Roth IRA. For example, if
you make an annual contribution to a Roth IRA on April 15, 2015, and designate
that contribution for 2014, and that is your first Roth IRA contribution, then
your five-year holding period will begin January 1, 2014.
Designate the IRA as a Roth IRA
To
be a Roth IRA, the IRA must
be designated as a Roth IRA at the time you establish it.
Designate the year for which the
contribution is made
If
you contribute to your Roth IRA after December 31, you should tell the Roth IRA
trustee or custodian for which year the contribution is being made. For
example, if you make a contribution in February 2015 for the 2014 tax year, you
should clearly identify the contribution as being made for 2014. Otherwise, the
trustee or custodian may assume that the contribution is for 2015 (the year in
which it is received) and report it as such. Talk to your custodian or trustee
about how you should identify your contribution.
Tax considerations
Income Tax
Contributions to a Roth IRA are made
with after-tax dollars
Unlike
deductible contributions to a traditional IRA, you do not have the option of
deducting Roth IRA contributions and reducing your taxable income on your
federal income tax return. You can contribute only after-tax dollars to a Roth
IRA.
Qualified distributions are tax free
A
withdrawal from a Roth IRA (including both contributions and investment
earnings) is completely tax free (and penalty free) at the federal level if
made at least five years after you first establish any Roth IRA, and if one of
the following also applies:
·
You
have reached age 59½ by the time of the withdrawal
·
The
withdrawal is made due to qualifying disability
·
The
withdrawal is made to pay for first-time homebuyer expenses ($10,000 lifetime
limit)
·
The
withdrawal is made by your beneficiary or estate after your death
Tip: The five-year holding period begins on January 1 of the tax
year for which you make your first contribution (regular, rollover, or
conversion) to any Roth IRA. Each taxpayer has only one five-year holding
period for this purpose.
Even if a withdrawal does not qualify
for tax-free treatment, only the portion representing earnings is taxable
If
you make a withdrawal from a Roth
IRA that does not meet the above conditions, the portion of the withdrawal
that represents investment earnings will be subject to federal income tax at
ordinary income tax rates (even if the funds represent long-term capital gains
or qualifying dividends), and may also be subject to a 10 percent premature
distribution tax if you are under age 59½. However, the portion of the
withdrawal that represents your Roth IRA contributions will not be subject to
federal income tax or penalty as those dollars were already taxed. Roth IRA
withdrawals are treated as being made from your nontaxable contributions first
and investment earnings last. All of your Roth IRAs (other than Roth IRAs you
inherit) are aggregated when determining the taxable portion of your
nonqualified distribution.
Technical Note: Technically, a distribution from a Roth IRA that is not a
qualified distribution, and is not rolled over to another Roth IRA, is included
in your gross income to the extent that the distribution, when added to the
amount of any prior distributions (qualified or nonqualified) from any of your
Roth IRAs, and reduced by the amount of those prior distributions that were
previously included in your gross income, exceed your contributions to all your
Roth IRAs. For this purpose any amount distributed to you as a corrective
distribution is treated as if it was never contributed.
Caution: If you convert funds from a traditional IRA to a Roth IRA,
special rules may apply if you subsequently withdraw funds from the Roth IRA.
See "Special penalty provisions may apply to withdrawals of Roth IRA funds
that were converted from a traditional IRA," above.
Gift and Estate Tax
Unless
you name your spouse as beneficiary (unlimited marital deduction) or a charity
as beneficiary (charitable deduction), the full value of your Roth IRA at the
time of your death is included in your taxable estate to determine if federal
gift and estate tax is due. In addition, your state may impose a state death
tax.
Questions & Answers
Are there restrictions on making
withdrawals from a Roth IRA?
Yes
and no. You are free to make withdrawals at any time from your Roth IRA, but
only qualified distributions receive tax-free treatment. A qualified
distribution is not subject to federal income tax or a 10 percent premature
distribution tax. See "Tax Considerations," above.
If
your withdrawal is nonqualified the portion of such distribution that
represents investment earnings is subject to federal income tax and may also be
subject to the 10 percent premature distribution tax if you are under age 59½
(unless an exception applies). However, the portion that represents your Roth IRA contributions is not
subject to tax or penalty as those dollars have been taxed once already.
Example(s): In 2015, you establish your first Roth IRA and you
contribute $5,500 in after-tax dollars. You make no further contribution to the
Roth IRA. Two years later, your Roth IRA has grown to $5,800. You withdraw the
entire $5,800. Because you withdrew the funds within five tax years, your
withdrawal does not meet the requirements for a qualified distribution. You
already paid tax on the $5,500 you contributed, so that portion of your
withdrawal is not taxed or penalized. However, the $300 that represents
investment earnings is subject to tax and possibly the 10 percent premature
distribution tax (unless an exception applies).
Tip: Distributions from Roth IRAs are generally treated as being
made from your nontaxable contributions first and earnings last (see ordering
rules below). In the previous example, if you withdrew only $5,500 (leaving
$300 in the Roth IRA), the withdrawal would be tax-free (and penalty-free)
since the entire amount would be considered a return of your contributions.
Can you roll over funds to a Roth IRA?
Yes.
Funds can be rolled over or converted from a traditional IRA, from another Roth
IRA, from a Roth 401(k), 403(b), or 457(b) plan, or from a non-Roth 401(k),
403(b), or 457(b) plan.
Caution: These rules generally apply to IRA owners during their
lifetimes. Special rules apply to spouse and nonspouse beneficiaries.
Funds
in one Roth IRA can be rolled over tax free to another Roth IRA. This can be
done as a direct transfer of funds from one Roth IRA trustee or custodian to
another, or you can have the funds distributed to you and then roll them over
to the new Roth IRA trustee or custodian yourself. If you choose the latter
method and fail to complete the rollover within 60 days (from the date you
received the funds), you may be subject to tax and penalty on the investment
earnings portion of the funds (unless you qualify for tax-free withdrawals from
the Roth IRA).
Caution: Under recent IRS guidance, you can make only one tax-free,
60 day, rollover from one IRA to another IRA in any one-year period no matter
how many IRAs (traditional, Roth, SEP, and SIMPLE) you own. This does not apply
to direct (trustee-to-trustee) transfers, or Roth IRA conversions. A special
transition rule applies for 2015: a tax-free rollover you made in 2014 is
disregarded when determining whether a 2015 distribution can be rolled over,
but only if the 2015 distribution is from an IRA that did not make, or receive,
the 2014 rollover.
Funds
can also be rolled over tax-free from a Roth 401(k), Roth 403(b, or 457(b))
account to a Roth IRA. You can roll over an eligible distribution from a Roth
401(k)/403(b)/457(b) account even if you would not otherwise be able to make
regular or conversion contributions to a Roth IRA because of income limits. If
the distribution from the Roth 401(k)/403(b)/457(b) account is a tax-free
qualified distribution, then the entire amount of the rollover is treated as
part of your basis in the Roth IRA. If the distribution from the Roth
401(k)/403(b)/457(b) account is nonqualified, then only the nontaxable portion
of the distribution (representing your Roth contributions) is treated as part
of your basis in the Roth IRA, and the taxable portion is treated as earnings.
Rollovers can be either direct or 60-day rollovers.
Caution: Separate five-year holding periods generally apply to (a)
all Roth IRAs you own, and (b) each Roth 401(k)/403(b)/457(b) designated Roth
account you own. A rollover from a Roth 401(k)/403(b)/457(b) account does not
affect your Roth IRAs' five-year holding period, regardless of how long the
dollars rolled over resided in the 401(k)/403(b)/457(b) plan.
Caution: You cannot make a rollover from a Roth IRA to a Roth
401(k)/403(b)/457(b) account.
Funds
can also be rolled over, or "converted," from a traditional IRA to a
Roth IRA. The amount rolled over/converted will be subject to federal income
tax in the year of the conversion, except for the portion that represents any
nondeductible (after-tax) contributions you've made to the traditional IRA. The
10 percent early distribution penalty tax does not apply. ("Traditional
IRA" for this purpose includes SEP IRAs, and SIMPLE IRAs after two years
of participation.)
You
can also roll over non-Roth funds from a 401(k) or other qualified plan,
403(b), or governmental 457(b) account to a Roth IRA. These rollovers are
also sometimes referred to as "conversions." This may be done either
by means of a direct rollover, or an indirect (60-day) rollover. The taxable
portion of your distribution from the 401(k). 403(b), or 457(b) plan will be
included in your gross income in the year you make the rollover. The 10 percent
early distribution penalty tax does not apply.
Caution: Certain distributions from IRAs and employer plans can not be
rolled over. These include (among others) required minimum distributions,
certain periodic payments, hardship distributions, certain distributions of
excess contributions and deferrals, and certain deemed distributions (for
example, a loan treated as a distribution because it exceeded applicable
limits).
When you withdraw funds from a Roth
IRA, in what order are the funds considered withdrawn?
Withdrawals
from Roth IRAs are considered made in the following order:
·
Regular
(annual) Roth IRA contributions (i.e., contributions other than rollover or
conversion contributions).
·
Rollover
or conversion contributions, in the order made (i.e., first in, first out). If
any rollover or conversion included your nondeductible (after-tax)
contributions, the withdrawal is considered made first from funds that were
subject to federal income tax at the time of the rollover or conversion.
·
Any
investment earnings.
All
Roth IRAs you own (other than Roth
IRAs you've inherited) are aggregated (i.e., treated as a single Roth IRA)
for purposes oRoth
IRAs
What is it?
A Roth individual retirement account
(IRA) is a personal savings plan that offers certain tax benefits to encourage
retirement savings. Contributions to a Roth IRA are never tax deductible on
your federal income tax return, which means that you can contribute only
after-tax dollars. But amounts contributed to the Roth IRA grow tax deferred
and, if certain conditions are met, distributions (including both contributions
and investment earnings) will be completely tax free at the federal level.
A
Roth IRA, like a traditional IRA, is not an investment, but a tax-advantaged
vehicle in which you can hold some of your investments. You need to decide how
to invest your Roth IRA dollars based on your own tolerance for risk and
investment philosophy. How fast your Roth IRA dollars grow is largely a
function of the investments you choose.
Caution: All investing involves risk, including the possible loss of
principal.
For
2015, you can contribute up to the lesser of $5,500 ($6,500 if you're age 50 or
older) or 100 percent of your taxable compensation to a Roth IRA. You may also
be able to contribute up to $5,500 to a Roth IRA in your spouse's name even if
he or she receives little or no taxable compensation ($6,500 if your spouse is 50 or older).
However, not everyone qualifies to use the Roth IRA. Even if you do, you may
not qualify to contribute the annual maximum. The amount you can contribute to
a Roth IRA (if any) depends on your modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) for
the year and your federal income tax filing status.
Tip: Consider contributing to a Roth IRA rather than a
traditional deductible IRA if you expect that you may be in the same or a
higher federal income tax bracket when you retire. If you can't make deductible
contributions to a traditional IRA and are trying to decide between making
nondeductible contributions to a traditional IRA or contributing to a Roth IRA,
you should probably choose the Roth IRA. If you are eligible to contribute to a
Roth IRA, there is generally no advantage to making nondeductible contributions
to a traditional IRA.
Tip: If you participate in a 401(k), 403(b), or 457(b) plan at
work, you may be able to make Roth contributions to the plan. Qualified
distributions of these contributions and related earnings may be income tax
free (and penalty free) at the federal level. Your employer may also match your
contributions, in whole or in part. The ability to make Roth contributions to
your employer's plan may be a factor in deciding whether (or how much) to
contribute to a Roth IRA. Be sure to discuss your situation with a qualified
professional before making any decisions.
Caution: Special rules apply if you inherit an IRA.
Caution: Special rules apply to certain distributions to reservists
and national guardsmen called to active duty after September 11, 2001.
When can it be used?
You must receive taxable compensation
during the year
To
contribute to an IRA (Roth or traditional),
you must receive taxable compensation during the year. For purposes of IRA
contributions, taxable compensation includes wages, salaries, commissions,
self-employment income, and taxable alimony or separate maintenance. Other
taxable income, such as interest earnings, dividends, rental income, pension
and annuity income, and deferred compensation, does not qualify as taxable
compensation for this purpose. Your contribution for a given year cannot exceed
your taxable compensation for that year.
Tip: Members of the Armed Forces can include nontaxable combat
pay as part of their taxable compensation when determining how much they can
contribute to an IRA (their own or a spousal IRA). For service members with
only nontaxable combat pay, Roth IRA contributions will generally make more
sense than nondeductible contributions to a traditional IRA.
Tip: An individual who receives a military death gratuity or
Service member's Group Life Insurance ("SGLI") program payment to
contribute the funds to a Roth IRA within one year of receiving the death
benefits. These contributions are treated as rollover contributions to the Roth
IRA account, and are not subject to normal income or contribution limits. In
the event of a subsequent distribution from a Roth IRA that is not a qualified
distribution, the amount of the distribution attributable to the contribution
of the military death gratuity or SGLI payment is treated as nontaxable
investment in the contract.
Tip: Differential pay received by service members is considered
compensation for IRA contribution purposes. Differential pay is defined as any
payment which: (1) is made by an employer to an individual with respect to any
period during which the individual is performing service in the uniformed
services while on active duty for a period of more than 30 days; and (2)
represents all or a portion of the wages that the individual would have
received from the employer if the individual were performing services for the
employer.
Your ability to make annual contributions
depends on your income and filing status
If
you file your federal income tax return as single or head of household and your
MAGI for 2015 is $116,000 or less, you can make a full contribution to your
Roth IRA. Similarly, if you file your return as married filing jointly or
qualifying widow(er) and your MAGI for 2015 is $183,000 or less, you can make a
full contribution. Otherwise, your allowable annual Roth IRA contribution is
reduced or eliminated as follows:
If your federal filing status is:
|
Your Roth IRA contribution is reduced if your MAGI is:
|
You cannot contribute to a Roth IRA if your MAGI is:
|
Single or head of household*
|
More than $116,000 but less than $131,000 (for
2015)($114,000-$129,000 for 2014)
|
$131,000 or more (for 2015)($129,000 or more for 2014)
|
Married filing jointly or qualifying widow(er)*
|
More than $183,000 but less than $193,000 (for
2015)($181,000-$191,000 for 2014)
|
$193,000 or more (for 2015)($191,000 or more for 2014)
|
Married filing separately
|
More than $0 but less than $10,000
|
$10,000 or more
|
*These
income ranges are indexed for inflation each year.
If
you are married filing a joint return, you may be able to contribute to a Roth
IRA for your spouse even if he or she has little or no taxable compensation. If
you are married filing separate returns and you lived apart from your spouse at
all times during the taxable year, you are treated as a single taxpayer for
purposes of the Roth IRA rules.
Tip: To calculate the exact amount of your allowable Roth IRA
contribution, a step-by-step worksheet is available. See IRS Publication 590,
Individual Retirement Arrangements (IRAs).
Tip: These income limits do not apply to rollover contributions
to your Roth IRA.
Even
though your ability to make annual
Roth contributions may be limited depending on your income and filing
status, there's an easy workaround if you want to make annual Roth
contributions. You can simply make your annual contribution first to a
traditional IRA, and then take advantage of the new liberal conversion rules
and convert that traditional IRA to a Roth IRA. (You can make nondeductible
contributions to a traditional IRA if you have taxable compensation and you
haven't yet reached age 70½.) There are no limits to the number of Roth
conversions you can make. (Note: you'll need to aggregate all traditional IRAs
and SEP/SIMPLE IRAs you own (other than IRAs you've inherited) when you
calculate the taxable portion of your conversion.)
You must not have already contributed
the annual maximum to your traditional IRA
Total
contributions to all of your IRAs (traditional and Roth) cannot exceed $5,500
for 2015 ($6,500 if you're age 50 or older). If you contribute the maximum
allowed to your traditional IRA for any year, you cannot contribute to your
Roth IRA at all for that year. If you make a partial contribution to your
traditional IRA, your allowable Roth IRA contribution for that year is equal to
the difference between the annual IRA contribution limit and the amount
contributed to your traditional IRA (or vice versa).
Example(s): You have a traditional IRA and a Roth IRA. You contribute
$2,900 to your traditional IRA for 2015. You can contribute no more than $2,600
to your Roth IRA for 2015 ($3,600 if age 50 or older).
Tip: The annual contribution limits ($5,500 in 2014 and 2015)
don't apply to rollover contributions.
Caution: An active reservist or guardsman who receives a qualified
reservist distribution can repay all or part of that distribution to an IRA at
any time during the two year period beginning on the day after active duty
ends. The regular IRA contribution limits don't apply to these repayments. A
qualified reservist distribution is a payment from an IRA, or a payment of
elective deferrals and earnings from a 401(k) plan or 403(b) plan, to an active
reservist or guardsman who is called to duty after September 11, 2001, for a
period in excess of 179 days (or for an indefinite period).
Strengths
Qualified distributions are completely
tax free
A
withdrawal from a Roth IRA
(including both your contributions and investment earnings) is completely tax
free (and penalty free) if (1) made at least five years after you first
establish any Roth IRA, and (2) one of the following also applies:
·
You
have reached age 59½ by the time of the withdrawal
·
The
withdrawal is made due to qualifying disability
·
The
withdrawal is made for first-time homebuyer expenses ($10,000 lifetime limit)
·
The
withdrawal is made by your beneficiary or estate after your death
Withdrawals
that meet these conditions are referred to as qualified distributions. If the
above conditions aren't met, any portion of a withdrawal that represents
investment earnings will be subject to federal income tax and may also be
subject to a 10 percent premature distribution tax if you are under age 59½
(unless an exception applies). See "Questions & Answers," below.
Tip: The five-year holding period begins on January 1 of the tax
year for which you make your first contribution (regular or rollover) to any
Roth IRA. Each taxpayer has only one five-year holding period for this purpose.
Example(s): You make an annual Roth contribution on April 15, 2015, and
designate the contribution for the 2014 tax year. If this is your first Roth
contribution, your five-year holding period begins on January 1, 2014.
Tip: Because the five-year holding period runs from the first day
of the tax year for which you establish any Roth IRA you should establish a
Roth IRA as soon as you can, even if you can afford only a minimal
contribution. The earlier you satisfy the five-year holding period, the sooner
you may be able to receive tax-free qualified distributions from your Roth IRA.
Caution: Roth IRAs you inherit are subject to different five-year
holding periods.
Fewer restrictions on making
withdrawals prior to retirement
The ability
to make tax-free withdrawals from a Roth IRA under certain conditions
("qualified distributions") can be a compelling reason to use this
type of IRA. Furthermore, even if you make a withdrawal that fails to meet
those conditions (a "nonqualified" distribution), you may not be
taxed on the full amount of the withdrawal. That's because when you withdraw
funds from your Roth IRA, distributions are treated as consisting of your
contributions first and investment earnings last. Since amounts that represent
your contributions have already been taxed, they are not taxed again or
penalized (even if you are under age 59½) when you withdraw them from the Roth
IRA. Only the portion of a nonqualified distribution that represents investment
earnings will be taxed and possibly penalized.
Caution: If you convert funds from a traditional IRA to a Roth IRA,
special penalty provisions may apply if you subsequently withdraw funds from
the IRA within five years of the conversion (and prior to age 59½).
You can contribute to a Roth IRA after
age 70½
Unlike
traditional IRAs, you can contribute to a Roth IRA for every year that you
have taxable compensation, including the year in which you reach age 70½ and
every year thereafter.
Your funds can stay in a Roth IRA longer
than in a traditional IRA
The
IRS requires you to take annual required minimum distributions from traditional
IRAs beginning when you reach age 70½. These withdrawals are calculated to
dispose of all of the money in the traditional IRA over a given period of time.
Roth IRAs are not subject to the required minimum distribution rule. In fact,
you are not required to take a single distribution from a Roth IRA during your
lifetime (although distributions are generally required after your death). This
can be a significant advantage in terms of your estate planning.
You can contribute even if covered by
an employer-sponsored retirement plan
Your
ability to contribute to a Roth IRA does not depend on whether you or your
spouse is covered by an employer-sponsored retirement plan. The fact that one
of you is covered by such a plan has no bearing on your allowable contribution
to a Roth IRA. This is in contrast to traditional IRAs, where your ability to
deduct your contributions may be limited if you or your spouse are covered by
an employer plan. However, remember that your ability to make annual
contributions to a Roth IRA does depend on your tax filing status and MAGI for
the year.
Investment choices are broad and
diverse
Like
a traditional IRA, you can
establish a Roth IRA with a bank, mutual fund company, life insurance company,
or stockbroker. You can even have multiple IRA accounts with more than one
institution. Furthermore, you can choose from a wide range of specific
investments to fund your Roth IRA. Intense competition for IRA dollars has led
to a large number of IRA providers and investment choices.
Caution: All investing involves risk, including the possible loss of
principal. Before investing in a mutual fund,
carefully
consider its investment objectives,
risks,
fees, and expenses, which can be found
in
the prospectus available from the fund.
Read
it carefully before investing.
Caution: The IRS has ruled that the wash sales rules apply if you
sell stock or other securities outside of your IRA for a loss, and purchase
substantially identical stock or securities in your IRA (traditional or Roth)
within 30 days before or after the sale. The result is that you cannot take a
deduction for your loss on the sale of the stock or securities. In addition, your
basis in your IRA is not increased by the amount of the disallowed loss.
When you die, your beneficiaries may
pay no income tax on proceeds
As
long as any Roth IRA you have established has been in existence for at least
five years at the time of your death, your beneficiaries will not have to pay
any federal income tax on post-death distributions from any Roth IRA you own.
Even if you haven't satisfied the five-year holding period at the time of your
death, distributions to your beneficiary will still be tax free if he or she
waits until the date you would have satisfied the five-year holding period
before taking distributions from the Roth IRA. Tax-free distributions to your
beneficiary can make the Roth IRA a very valuable estate planning tool. However,
bear in mind that the value of your Roth IRA will be included in your taxable
estate to determine if federal estate tax is due.
If
your beneficiary is your surviving spouse, and your spouse rolls your Roth IRA
over to his or her own Roth IRA, or treats your Roth IRA as his or her own,
then distributions from the Roth IRA will be tax-free only if your spouse
satisfies the requirements for a qualified distribution (that is, your spouse
satisfies the five-year holding period, and the distribution is made after your
spouse attains age 59½, becomes disabled, dies, or incurs qualifying first-time
homebuyer expenses). The five-year holding period--for both the IRA inherited
from you and any other Roth IRAs your spouse may own--ends on the earlier of
(a) the end of your five-year holding period, or (b) the end of the five-year
holding period applicable to your spouse's own Roth IRAs.
Contributions are discretionary
Like
a traditional IRA, you do not have to make a contribution to your Roth IRA for
any year unless you choose to. You can exercise complete discretion in deciding
how much and when to save (subject to the annual dollar limit on
contributions).
A Roth IRA is relatively simple to
maintain
Like
a traditional IRA with deductible contributions, a Roth IRA is relatively simple to
maintain. There are no annual reporting requirements for Roth IRAs.
Traditional IRAs and certain employer
plan distributions can be converted to Roth IRAs
You
can convert your traditional IRA funds to a Roth IRA. ("Traditional
IRA" for this purpose includes SEP IRAs, and SIMPLE IRAs after two years
of participation. This may be advisable if you have determined that you will
reap more benefits from the Roth IRA than the traditional IRA. However, you
should carefully consider the income tax consequences and other issues
associated with converting funds Similarly, certain non-Roth distributions from
your 401(k) or other qualified plan, 403(a) annuity, 403(b) plan, or 457(b)
plan can be rolled over (converted) to a Roth IRA. See "Questions and
Answers," below.
"Catch-up" contributions are
allowed if you're at least 50
Individuals
age 50 and older may make an additional yearly "catch-up"
contribution up to $1,000 to a traditional or Roth IRA (over and above the
regular contribution limit). The purpose of this provision is to help older
individuals increase their savings as they approach retirement. (You're
considered to be age 50 for a year if you reach age 50 by December 31 of that
year.)
You may qualify for a tax credit
Certain
low- and middle-income taxpayers can claim a partial, nonrefundable income tax
credit for amounts contributed to a traditional or Roth IRA. The maximum annual
contribution eligible for the credit is $2,000. The maximum credit is $1,000
(50 percent of $2,000) per taxpayer, but the actual amount of the credit (if
any) depends on your MAGI. Here are the credit rates based on 2015 MAGI limits
(these limits are adjusted annually for inflation):
Joint Filers
|
Heads of Household
|
All Other Filers
|
Credit Rate
|
Maximum Credit (Per Taxpayer)
|
$0 - $36,500
|
$0 - $27,375
|
$0 - $18,250
|
50% of contribution (up to $2,000)
|
$1,000
|
$36,501 - $39,500
|
$27,376 - $29,625
|
$18,251 - $19,750
|
20%
|
$400
|
$39,501 - $61,000
|
$29,626 - $45,750
|
$19,751 - $30,500
|
10%
|
$200
|
Over $61,000
|
Over $45,750
|
Over $30,500
|
0%
|
$0
|
To
claim the credit, you must be at least 18 years old and not a full-time student
or a dependent on another taxpayer's return. The credit is in addition to any
income tax deduction you might qualify for with respect to your IRA
contribution.
Caution: The amount of any contribution eligible for the credit may
be reduced by any taxable distributions you (or your spouse if you file a joint
return) receive from an IRA or employer-sponsored retirement plan (or any
nontaxable distributions from a Roth IRA) during the same tax year, during the
period for filing your tax return for that year (including extensions), or
during the prior two years.
Tradeoffs
You can contribute only after-tax
dollars
Contributions
to a Roth IRA are never tax
deductible on your federal income tax return. In other words, you can
contribute only after-tax dollars to a Roth IRA. This is in contrast to a
traditional IRA, which may allow you to deduct your contributions under certain
conditions.
Contributions are limited to the annual
maximum (or possibly even less)
You
cannot contribute a total of more than $5,500 per year to all of your IRAs
(Roth and traditional) for 2015 ($6,500 if you're age 50 or older by the end of
the calendar year).
Example(s): You have two traditional IRAs and a Roth IRA. You can
contribute no more than $5,500 overall in 2015. You can contribute the entire
$5,500 to any of the three IRAs, or you can divide the $5,500 contribution
among them in any manner you choose.
Tip: The annual contribution limits don't apply to rollover
contributions.
Tip: You may also be able to contribute up to $5,500 to an IRA in
your spouse's name in 2015 even if he or she has little or no taxable
compensation ($6,500 if your spouse is age 50 or older).
Caution: An active reservist or guardsman who receives a qualified
reservist distribution can repay all or part of that distribution to an IRA at
any time during the two year period beginning on the day after active duty
ends. The regular IRA contribution limits don't apply to these repayments.
Your ability to contribute in 2014
depends on your income and tax filing status
See
"Your ability to make annual contributions depends on your income and
filing status," above.
Withdrawals are taxable under certain
conditions
A
withdrawal from a Roth IRA
(including both contributions and investment earnings) is completely tax free
only if it is a qualified distribution (see "Strengths," above).
If
your withdrawal is a nonqualified distribution, the portion of your
distribution that represents investment earnings will be subject to federal
income tax, and may also be subject to a 10 percent premature distribution tax
if you are under age 59½ (unless an exception applies). Only the portion of a
nonqualified distribution that represents your contributions will not be taxed
or penalized, since those dollars were taxed once already. (When you make a
withdrawal, your own nontaxable distributions are generally deemed distributed
first.)
Special penalty provisions may apply to
withdrawals of Roth IRA funds that were converted from a traditional IRA
If
you roll over or convert funds from a traditional IRA to a Roth IRA, special
rules apply. If you are under age 59½, any nonqualified withdrawal that you
make from the Roth IRA within five years of the rollover or conversion may be
subject to the 10 percent premature distribution tax (to the extent that the
withdrawal consists of converted funds that were taxed at the time of
conversion). The reason for this special rule is to ensure that taxpayers don't
convert funds from a traditional IRA solely to avoid the early distribution
penalty.
Tip: The five-year holding period begins on January 1 of the tax
year in which you convert the funds from the traditional IRA to the Roth IRA.
When applying this special rule, a separate five-year holding period applies
each time you convert funds from a traditional IRA to a Roth IRA.
Caution: This five-year period may not be the same as the five-year
period used to determine whether your withdrawal is a qualified distribution.
Example(s): In 2012, you open your first Roth IRA account by converting
a $10,000 traditional IRA to a Roth IRA. You include $10,000 in your taxable
income for 2012. You make no further contributions. In 2015, at age 55, your
Roth IRA is worth $12,000, and you withdraw $10,000. The distribution is not a
qualified distribution because five years have not elapsed from the date you
first established a Roth IRA. And because you are making a nonqualified
withdrawal within five years of your conversion, the entire $10,000 is subject
to a 10 percent premature distribution tax unless you qualify for an exception.
This "recaptures" the early distribution tax you would have paid at
the time of the conversion.
You
open a regular Roth IRA
account in 2008 with a contribution of $100, and make no further contributions
to the account. In 2012, at age 60, you convert a $100,000 traditional IRA to a
Roth IRA. In 2015 you withdraw $50,000 from this Roth IRA. Because you are over
age 59½ in 2015, and because more than five years have elapsed from January 1,
2008 (the year you first established any Roth IRA), your withdrawal is a
qualified distribution and is totally free of federal income taxes. Even though
your withdrawal was within five years of the conversion, no penalty tax
applies.
States differ in their treatment of
Roth IRAs
Although
most states follow the federal income tax treatment of Roth IRAs, some may not.
You should check with your tax advisor regarding the tax treatment of Roth IRAs
in your particular state. In addition, some states may provide Roth IRA funds
with less creditor protection than they provide traditional IRA funds.
Tip: Federal law provides protection for up to $1,245,475 (as of
April 1, 2013) of your aggregate Roth and traditional IRA assets if you declare
bankruptcy. (Amounts rolled over to your Roth IRA from an employer qualified
plan or 403(b) plan, plus any earnings on the rollover, aren't subject to this
dollar cap and are fully protected.) The laws of your particular state may
provide additional bankruptcy protection, and may provide protection from the
claims of your creditors in cases outside of bankruptcy. (Inherited IRAs may be
afforded less protection from creditors under federal and state law--seek
professional guidance.)
The law may change in the future
Most
of the advantages offered by the Roth IRA depend on the federal government's
promise that qualifying distributions from Roth IRAs will always be tax free.
It is unlikely, but if the law changes, all bets are off. Remember that Social
Security benefits were once not subject to federal income tax, but federal law
was later changed to tax a percentage of such benefits in certain situations.
How to do it
Establish a Roth IRA
Where
you choose to establish your Roth IRA and the specific investments you choose
depends on your own personal needs and preferences. You have a wide variety of
choices, and you should carefully consider the matter before making your
decision. How fast your Roth IRA
dollars grow is more a function of investment strategy and performance than of
tax exemption. Consider whether you want to establish a Roth IRA with a:
·
Bank
·
Financial
institution
·
Mutual
fund company
·
Stockbroker
·
Life
insurance company
You
should also consider the types of investments (e.g., stocks, bonds, mutual
funds, CDs, annuities) that will best suit your goals and risk tolerance, as
well as the fees that are associated with opening and maintaining your Roth
IRA. Finally, keep in mind that you can establish multiple IRA accounts with
more than one institution.
Tip: Employers who maintain certain retirement plans (like
401(k), 403(b), or 457(b) plans) can allow employees to make their regular IRA
contribution--traditional or Roth--to a special account set up under their
retirement plan. These accounts, called "deemed IRAs," function just
like regular IRAs. Advantages include the fact that your retirement assets can
be consolidated in one place, contributions can be made automatically through
payroll deduction, you can take advantage of any special investment
opportunities offered in your employer's plan, and your protection from
creditors may be greater than that available in a stand-alone IRA. The downside
is that your investment choices in your employer's plan may be very limited in
comparison to the universe of investment options available to you in a separate
IRA. Also, the distribution options available to you and your beneficiaries in
a deemed IRA may be more limited than in a stand-alone IRA. Because of the
administrative complexity involved, most employers have so far been reluctant
to offer these arrangements. Check with your plan administrator to see if this
is an option for you.
You have until the due date of your
federal tax return for the year (usually April 15) to make a contribution for
that year
If
you want to make a Roth IRA contribution for the year, you have until the due
date of that year's federal income tax return. For most people, this is April
15 of the following year. Your contribution deadline is not extended by any
extension you may receive to file your return. So, if you obtain an automatic
four-month extension, you may have additional time to file your tax return but
you don't have any additional time to make a Roth IRA contribution.
Tip: You can direct the IRS to deposit all or part of your
federal income tax refund directly to an IRA (subject to the normal rules
governing the amount, timing, and deductibility of IRA contributions.
Tip: Your five-year holding period for qualified distributions
from Roth IRAs begins on January 1 of the tax year for which you first make a
contribution (annual, rollover, or conversion) to any Roth IRA. For example, if
you make an annual contribution to a Roth IRA on April 15, 2015, and designate
that contribution for 2014, and that is your first Roth IRA contribution, then
your five-year holding period will begin January 1, 2014.
Designate the IRA as a Roth IRA
To
be a Roth IRA, the IRA must
be designated as a Roth IRA at the time you establish it.
Designate the year for which the
contribution is made
If
you contribute to your Roth IRA after December 31, you should tell the Roth IRA
trustee or custodian for which year the contribution is being made. For
example, if you make a contribution in February 2015 for the 2014 tax year, you
should clearly identify the contribution as being made for 2014. Otherwise, the
trustee or custodian may assume that the contribution is for 2015 (the year in
which it is received) and report it as such. Talk to your custodian or trustee
about how you should identify your contribution.
Tax considerations
Income Tax
Contributions to a Roth IRA are made
with after-tax dollars
Unlike
deductible contributions to a traditional IRA, you do not have the option of
deducting Roth IRA contributions and reducing your taxable income on your
federal income tax return. You can contribute only after-tax dollars to a Roth
IRA.
Qualified distributions are tax free
A
withdrawal from a Roth IRA (including both contributions and investment
earnings) is completely tax free (and penalty free) at the federal level if
made at least five years after you first establish any Roth IRA, and if one of
the following also applies:
·
You
have reached age 59½ by the time of the withdrawal
·
The
withdrawal is made due to qualifying disability
·
The
withdrawal is made to pay for first-time homebuyer expenses ($10,000 lifetime
limit)
·
The
withdrawal is made by your beneficiary or estate after your death
Tip: The five-year holding period begins on January 1 of the tax
year for which you make your first contribution (regular, rollover, or
conversion) to any Roth IRA. Each taxpayer has only one five-year holding
period for this purpose.
Even if a withdrawal does not qualify
for tax-free treatment, only the portion representing earnings is taxable
If
you make a withdrawal from a Roth
IRA that does not meet the above conditions, the portion of the withdrawal
that represents investment earnings will be subject to federal income tax at
ordinary income tax rates (even if the funds represent long-term capital gains
or qualifying dividends), and may also be subject to a 10 percent premature
distribution tax if you are under age 59½. However, the portion of the
withdrawal that represents your Roth IRA contributions will not be subject to
federal income tax or penalty as those dollars were already taxed. Roth IRA
withdrawals are treated as being made from your nontaxable contributions first
and investment earnings last. All of your Roth IRAs (other than Roth IRAs you
inherit) are aggregated when determining the taxable portion of your
nonqualified distribution.
Technical Note: Technically, a distribution from a Roth IRA that is not a
qualified distribution, and is not rolled over to another Roth IRA, is included
in your gross income to the extent that the distribution, when added to the
amount of any prior distributions (qualified or nonqualified) from any of your
Roth IRAs, and reduced by the amount of those prior distributions that were
previously included in your gross income, exceed your contributions to all your
Roth IRAs. For this purpose any amount distributed to you as a corrective
distribution is treated as if it was never contributed.
Caution: If you convert funds from a traditional IRA to a Roth IRA,
special rules may apply if you subsequently withdraw funds from the Roth IRA.
See "Special penalty provisions may apply to withdrawals of Roth IRA funds
that were converted from a traditional IRA," above.
Gift and Estate Tax
Unless
you name your spouse as beneficiary (unlimited marital deduction) or a charity
as beneficiary (charitable deduction), the full value of your Roth IRA at the
time of your death is included in your taxable estate to determine if federal
gift and estate tax is due. In addition, your state may impose a state death
tax.
Questions & Answers
Are there restrictions on making
withdrawals from a Roth IRA?
Yes
and no. You are free to make withdrawals at any time from your Roth IRA, but
only qualified distributions receive tax-free treatment. A qualified
distribution is not subject to federal income tax or a 10 percent premature
distribution tax. See "Tax Considerations," above.
If
your withdrawal is nonqualified the portion of such distribution that
represents investment earnings is subject to federal income tax and may also be
subject to the 10 percent premature distribution tax if you are under age 59½
(unless an exception applies). However, the portion that represents your Roth IRA contributions is not
subject to tax or penalty as those dollars have been taxed once already.
Example(s): In 2015, you establish your first Roth IRA and you
contribute $5,500 in after-tax dollars. You make no further contribution to the
Roth IRA. Two years later, your Roth IRA has grown to $5,800. You withdraw the
entire $5,800. Because you withdrew the funds within five tax years, your
withdrawal does not meet the requirements for a qualified distribution. You
already paid tax on the $5,500 you contributed, so that portion of your
withdrawal is not taxed or penalized. However, the $300 that represents
investment earnings is subject to tax and possibly the 10 percent premature
distribution tax (unless an exception applies).
Tip: Distributions from Roth IRAs are generally treated as being
made from your nontaxable contributions first and earnings last (see ordering
rules below). In the previous example, if you withdrew only $5,500 (leaving
$300 in the Roth IRA), the withdrawal would be tax-free (and penalty-free)
since the entire amount would be considered a return of your contributions.
Can you roll over funds to a Roth IRA?
Yes.
Funds can be rolled over or converted from a traditional IRA, from another Roth
IRA, from a Roth 401(k), 403(b), or 457(b) plan, or from a non-Roth 401(k),
403(b), or 457(b) plan.
Caution: These rules generally apply to IRA owners during their
lifetimes. Special rules apply to spouse and nonspouse beneficiaries.
Funds
in one Roth IRA can be rolled over tax free to another Roth IRA. This can be
done as a direct transfer of funds from one Roth IRA trustee or custodian to
another, or you can have the funds distributed to you and then roll them over
to the new Roth IRA trustee or custodian yourself. If you choose the latter
method and fail to complete the rollover within 60 days (from the date you
received the funds), you may be subject to tax and penalty on the investment
earnings portion of the funds (unless you qualify for tax-free withdrawals from
the Roth IRA).
Caution: Under recent IRS guidance, you can make only one tax-free,
60 day, rollover from one IRA to another IRA in any one-year period no matter
how many IRAs (traditional, Roth, SEP, and SIMPLE) you own. This does not apply
to direct (trustee-to-trustee) transfers, or Roth IRA conversions. A special
transition rule applies for 2015: a tax-free rollover you made in 2014 is
disregarded when determining whether a 2015 distribution can be rolled over,
but only if the 2015 distribution is from an IRA that did not make, or receive,
the 2014 rollover.
Funds
can also be rolled over tax-free from a Roth 401(k), Roth 403(b, or 457(b))
account to a Roth IRA. You can roll over an eligible distribution from a Roth
401(k)/403(b)/457(b) account even if you would not otherwise be able to make
regular or conversion contributions to a Roth IRA because of income limits. If
the distribution from the Roth 401(k)/403(b)/457(b) account is a tax-free
qualified distribution, then the entire amount of the rollover is treated as
part of your basis in the Roth IRA. If the distribution from the Roth
401(k)/403(b)/457(b) account is nonqualified, then only the nontaxable portion
of the distribution (representing your Roth contributions) is treated as part
of your basis in the Roth IRA, and the taxable portion is treated as earnings.
Rollovers can be either direct or 60-day rollovers.
Caution: Separate five-year holding periods generally apply to (a)
all Roth IRAs you own, and (b) each Roth 401(k)/403(b)/457(b) designated Roth
account you own. A rollover from a Roth 401(k)/403(b)/457(b) account does not
affect your Roth IRAs' five-year holding period, regardless of how long the
dollars rolled over resided in the 401(k)/403(b)/457(b) plan.
Caution: You cannot make a rollover from a Roth IRA to a Roth
401(k)/403(b)/457(b) account.
Funds
can also be rolled over, or "converted," from a traditional IRA to a
Roth IRA. The amount rolled over/converted will be subject to federal income
tax in the year of the conversion, except for the portion that represents any
nondeductible (after-tax) contributions you've made to the traditional IRA. The
10 percent early distribution penalty tax does not apply. ("Traditional
IRA" for this purpose includes SEP IRAs, and SIMPLE IRAs after two years
of participation.)
You
can also roll over non-Roth funds from a 401(k) or other qualified plan,
403(b), or governmental 457(b) account to a Roth IRA. These rollovers are
also sometimes referred to as "conversions." This may be done either
by means of a direct rollover, or an indirect (60-day) rollover. The taxable
portion of your distribution from the 401(k). 403(b), or 457(b) plan will be
included in your gross income in the year you make the rollover. The 10 percent
early distribution penalty tax does not apply.
Caution: Certain distributions from IRAs and employer plans can not be
rolled over. These include (among others) required minimum distributions,
certain periodic payments, hardship distributions, certain distributions of
excess contributions and deferrals, and certain deemed distributions (for
example, a loan treated as a distribution because it exceeded applicable
limits).
When you withdraw funds from a Roth
IRA, in what order are the funds considered withdrawn?
Withdrawals
from Roth IRAs are considered made in the following order:
·
Regular
(annual) Roth IRA contributions (i.e., contributions other than rollover or
conversion contributions).
·
Rollover
or conversion contributions, in the order made (i.e., first in, first out). If
any rollover or conversion included your nondeductible (after-tax)
contributions, the withdrawal is considered made first from funds that were
subject to federal income tax at the time of the rollover or conversion.
·
Any
investment earnings.
All
Roth IRAs you own (other than Roth
IRAs you've inherited) are aggregated (i.e., treated as a single Roth IRA)
for purposes of classifying withdrawals.
Can you recognize a loss on Roth IRA
investments?
If
you have a loss on your Roth IRA investment, you can recognize (include) the
loss on your federal income tax return, but only when all the amounts in all of
your Roth IRA accounts have been distributed to you, and the total
distributions are less than your unrecovered basis, if any. Your basis is the
total amount of your contributions to your Roth IRAs. You claim the loss as a
miscellaneous itemized deduction, subject to the 2
percent-of-adjusted-gross-income limit that applies to certain miscellaneous
itemized deductions on Schedule A, Form 1040.
Example(s): Bill has made contributions to a Roth IRA totaling $2,000,
giving him a basis at the end of 2015 of $2,000. By the end of 2016, his IRA
earns $400 in interest income. In that year, Bill receives a distribution of
$700, reducing the value of his Roth IRA to $1,700 ($2,000 plus $400 minus
$700). The entire $700 is considered to be a return of Bill's contributions,
reducing his basis in the Roth IRA to $1,300. In 2017, Bill's Roth IRA has a
loss of $500. At the end of that year, Bill's Roth IRA balance is $1,200
($1,700 minus $500), and Bill withdraws the entire amount. Bill does not have
any other Roth IRAs. He can claim a loss for 2017 of $100 (the $1,300 basis
minus the $1,200 distribution of the Roth IRA balance).
IMPORTANT
DISCLOSURESBroadridge Investor Communication Solutions, Inc. does not provide
investment, tax, or legal advice. The information presented here is not
specific to any individual's personal circumstances.To the extent that this
material concerns tax matters, it is not intended or written to be used, and
cannot be used, by a taxpayer for the purpose of avoiding penalties that may be
imposed by law. Each taxpayer should
seek independent advice from a tax professional based on his or her individual
circumstances.These materials are provided for general information and
educational purposes based upon publicly available information from sources
believed to be reliable—we cannot assure the accuracy or completeness of these
materials. The information in these
materials may change at any time and without notice.f classifying withdrawals.
Can you recognize a loss on Roth IRA
investments?
If
you have a loss on your Roth IRA investment, you can recognize (include) the
loss on your federal income tax return, but only when all the amounts in all of
your Roth IRA accounts have been distributed to you, and the total
distributions are less than your unrecovered basis, if any. Your basis is the
total amount of your contributions to your Roth IRAs. You claim the loss as a
miscellaneous itemized deduction, subject to the 2
percent-of-adjusted-gross-income limit that applies to certain miscellaneous
itemized deductions on Schedule A, Form 1040.
Example(s): Bill has made contributions to a Roth IRA totaling $2,000,
giving him a basis at the end of 2015 of $2,000. By the end of 2016, his IRA
earns $400 in interest income. In that year, Bill receives a distribution of
$700, reducing the value of his Roth IRA to $1,700 ($2,000 plus $400 minus
$700). The entire $700 is considered to be a return of Bill's contributions,
reducing his basis in the Roth IRA to $1,300. In 2017, Bill's Roth IRA has a
loss of $500. At the end of that year, Bill's Roth IRA balance is $1,200
($1,700 minus $500), and Bill withdraws the entire amount. Bill does not have
any other Roth IRAs. He can claim a loss for 2017 of $100 (the $1,300 basis
minus the $1,200 distribution of the Roth IRA balance).
IMPORTANT
DISCLOSURESBroadridge Investor Communication Solutions, Inc. does not provide
investment, tax, or legal advice. The information presented here is not
specific to any individual's personal circumstances.To the extent that this
material concerns tax matters, it is not intended or written to be used, and
cannot be used, by a taxpayer for the purpose of avoiding penalties that may be
imposed by law. Each taxpayer should
seek independent advice from a tax professional based on his or her individual
circumstances.These materials are provided for general information and
educational purposes based upon publicly available information from sources
believed to be reliable—we cannot assure the accuracy or completeness of these
materials. The information in these
materials may change at any time and without notice.