Roth and Traditional Flashcards
Traditional IRA
Contribution $5500
Catch Up $1000 >50
Phaseouts
MFJ $98000-$118000
S $61000-$71000
Compensation:
wages, salaries, tips, professional fees, BOD fees, bonuses, alimony, separate maintenance payments.
Under 70 1/2
Deductibility
if neither spouse is active participant or single person not active participant then contributions are deductible.
One spouse active
AGI $184000-$194,000
All qualified plans, Simple, SEP, TSA, Union Plans…not 457
Spousal IRA
not working or low income
Can contribute as long as working spouse has income in excess of both contributions
Distribution prior 59 1/2
Taxable and 10% penalty unless:
death disability SEPP first home 10K qualified education medical ins premium after separation -subject to 10% agi floor unless been receiving unemployment for 12 weeks and withdrawal made in year of unemployment or year following.
NO LOANS..NO Pledges
could lose IRA status
Roth IRA
Phaseouts
S $117,000-$132,000
MFJ $184,000-$194,000
can contribute after 701/2 if have earned income
not affected buy participation in qualified plan
$5500 or 100% comp
No mandatory distributions at 701/2
Regular contributions are always tax free
Conversions
all taxpayers can convert to ROTH from qualified plans, SEP, Simple, 403B 457 traditional.
conversion does not satisfy a RMD
NON-Spouse Inherited qualified plan - can convert to Roth
Non- Spouse inherited IRA - no Roth Conversion
5 Year Holding Period
Assets must be held for 5 years in Roth plan
If not: no income tax but, 10% early withdrawal penalty unless death disability SEPP first home 10K qualified education medical ins premium after separation
Roth Distributions
Contributions
Conversions
Earnings
Roth rules at death
- Distributed with in 5 years of death or
- life expectancy of bene (need to start by year end following year of death)
- Sole heir is surviving spouse may delay until 701/2 or roll into their Roth(no distributions required)
Roth Recharacterization
undo a Roth conversion
WHY?
-value of investments have declined
-income was higher than expected or Roth pushed them into higher marginal tax bracket
-taxable income will be much lower in retirement
-lacks money to pay taxes
Oct 15 (including extension)
to convert again must wait later of
30 days after last re characterization or
the year following the year of the rollover conversion
Roth 401K/403B 457b
Contributions are included in gross income
All employer contributions go to traditional 401K account
5 year ageing applies
NO Exception for first time home purchases
5 year aging
59 1/2
or disabled
ABLE
529 disabled
14k annually
distributions for qualified disability expenses not included in income
Exempt from medicare and medicaid rules
Blind or disabled before 26