IRA
and Retirement Plan Distributions
Presented by Jared Daniel of Wealth Guardian Group
What is it?
IRAs
and employer-sponsored retirement plans (e.g., 401(k) and profit-sharing plans)
play a central role in retirement planning. After all, the tax benefits are
hard to beat. With traditional IRAs and most employer-sponsored retirement
plans, pretax money is contributed and grows tax deferred. It's not until you
take funds out of the account that you pay income tax on the distributions.
With Roth IRAs and Roth 401(k)/403(b)/457(b)s, the money that you contribute
comes from after-tax dollars, and qualifying distributions are completely
income tax free.
But
to get the tax advantages of IRAs
and retirement plans, you need to be familiar with the complicated distribution
restrictions, requirements, and tax rules that apply to these retirement
investments. At their most basic level, the IRS rules try to discourage you
from receiving retirement funds too early or from leaving the funds in a
tax-deferred plan or account for too long.
Options for taking distributions from
employer-sponsored retirement plans and IRAs
Employer-sponsored retirement plans
In
general, the Internal Revenue Code and IRS regulations determine the
distribution options that are available under employer-sponsored retirement
plans. However, employers are not required to offer all of the available
distribution options in their plans. Therefore, it is important that you review
the specific terms of your plan to see which options are available to you.
These provisions normally include a lump-sum distribution of your entire
balance under certain conditions, an annuity payout after separation from
service, and a rollover to an IRA or another employer's plan. Other
distribution options may also be available upon your termination of employment,
upon your death, or even while you are still employed.
Whether
taxes are due on distributions depends on whether pretax or after-tax
contributions have been made. Where funds have not been previously taxed, they
are generally taxed upon distribution.
Employer
contributions, employee pretax contributions, and earnings are generally taxed
as income when withdrawn from the plan (subject to certain exceptions, such as
tax-free rollovers). An additional 10 percent premature distribution penalty
may also be assessed on taxable portion of distributions taken from the plan
prior to age 59½ (subject to certain exceptions).
Special
rules apply to after-tax Roth 401(k)/403(b)/457(b) contributions. These
contributions are free from federal income tax when paid to you from the plan
and, if certain conditions are met (a "qualified distribution") all
investment earnings on these contributions are also tax free and penalty free
when paid to you.
IRAs
IRA
distributions can be made purely at the IRA owner's discretion. The taxation of
distributions from IRAs depends on the type of IRA (traditional or Roth), the
source of the contributions (pretax or after-tax), and whether all tax
requirements have been met.
With
traditional IRAs, distributions
taken from the account may or may not be taxable income. Distributions of
contributions are generally taxable only if they were tax deductible at the
time you made them. Amounts you contributed that weren't eligible for a tax
deduction (after-tax contributions) can generally be withdrawn income tax free
(because tax has already been paid on those dollars). By contrast,
distributions of investment earnings from these accounts are always taxable.
Your
age is also a key factor in terms of the tax consequences and advisability of
withdrawing IRA funds. That's because a 10 percent premature distribution tax
applies to the taxable portion of IRA distributions taken prior to age 59½
(subject to certain exceptions).
Roth
IRAs are subject to special rules. Your Roth IRA contributions are free from
federal income tax when paid to you from your account and, if certain
conditions are met (a "qualified distribution") all investment
earnings on these contributions are also tax free and penalty free when paid to
you.
Designating a beneficiary for your IRA
or retirement plan
If
you have a traditional IRA or participate in an employer-sponsored retirement
plan, carefully consider your choice of beneficiary. Your beneficiary will
receive the money in your IRA or plan when you die. Your choice of beneficiary
can determine (1) the tax deferral and distribution timing options available to
your beneficiary and (2) whether the funds will be taxed in your estate for
death tax purposes.
Caution: Because Roth IRAs are unique, the considerations regarding
beneficiary designations for Roth IRAs are unique as well.
Inherited IRAs and employer-sponsored
retirement plans
If
you have inherited an IRA or retirement plan account, you need to be aware of
the available options for taking or deferring distributions. With traditional
IRAs and retirement plans, you usually have to pay income tax on the funds that
you receive. Rather than simply taking all of the money from the IRA or plan at
once (and paying tax on the lump-sum distribution), you may be able to defer and
delay distributions from an inherited account (or plan) for a period of time,
letting the dollars continue to grow tax deferred. The terms of the IRA or retirement plan will govern
the distribution options available to you.
Jared Daniel may be reached at www.WealthGuardianGroup.com or
our Facebook
page.
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.
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