Monday, January 4, 2016

Rolling Over Your Retirement Plan

QUESTION: HOW CAN “TAX-INFESTED” MONEY BECOME “TAX-DEFERRED”?

You have some crucial decisions to make about how you take distributions from your hard-earned savings. Not understanding rollover regulations can lead to unintended tax consequences that chip away at your retirement funds.

The funds held in your retirement accounts are called “qualified savings,” since they qualify for special tax-deferred status by the Federal Government. If you decide to withdraw all of the money at once from those accounts, it is called a “lump-sum distribution.”

Your America’s Tax Solutions retirement distribution specialist can explain the tax consequences of taking a lump-sum distribution and the benefits of rolling those funds into an IRA.

WATCH OUT
Plan administrators of your 401(k)s will not automatically assume you want to do a rollover. Also, the Tax Code provides for a 60-day window during which you can remove your qualified money from your pension plan or 401(k) and deposit into a traditional or Roth IRA. Be advised: The IRS does not trust that you will dutifully meet your 60-day obligation. If you request a lump-sum distribution, your employer is required to withhold 20% for federal income tax. Thus, on a $50,000 lump-sum distribution, you would pay $10,000 in withholding to the Federal Government.

FROM TAX-INFESTED TO TAX-FREE!
Your America’s Tax Solutions retirement distribution specialist can explain how you may bypass the 20% withholding requirement by structuring the transaction as a trustee-to-trustee transfer. Your ATS specialist will also explain the legacy advantages of rolling your 401(k) into an IRA, including the ability to stretch the period of tax-deferred earnings within an IRA beyond the lifetime of the person who set up the account at a compounded, tax-deferred rate.

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