QUESTION: CAN I AVOID
TAXATION ON THE APPRECIATION OF MY COMPANY STOCK?
NET UNREALIZED
APPRECIATION (NUA)
Money you make on the appreciation of an asset over time is called
capital gains. Those gains are measured by the price the stock is sold for,
minus the original purchase price of the stock when acquired. If your 401(k)
plan holds stock from your employer and that stock appreciates over time, its
fair market value will be considerably higher than its cost basis when you
retire. The difference in the value of the stock from the time of purchase to
the time of withdrawal is called Net Unrealized Appreciation.
A SPECIAL TAX BREAK
Special
tax rules regarding NUA allow you to withdraw company stock from your retirement
plan, retain ownership of the stock, and pay ordinary income tax on the
acquisition price rather than its fair market value at the time of
distribution.
WHAT HAPPENS WHEN I SELL THOSE SHARES?
Should
you choose to sell the shares, you pay the long-term capital gains tax rate in
effect on the appreciation and the applicable capital gains rate on any
additional appreciation since distribution.
OUR ATS EXPERTS CAN EXPLAIN OTHER STIPULATIONS IN THE CODE
INVOLVING NUA:
- To
qualify for the break, you must take the entire pension plan account
balance in a lump-sum distribution over the course of one tax year.
- Dividends
paid on the stock are not tax-deferred.
- For
inherited stock in an IRA, beneficiaries are taxed at a different cost
basis, called a step-up in basis. Your America’s Tax Solutions retirement
distribution specialist can describe for you how this strategy works, and
how it may affect you and your heirs.
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