EARLY ROTH
IRA OWNERS CAN START TAKING
TAX-FREE
EARNING WITHDRAWALS SOON
Q. I opened a Roth individual
retirement account when they first became available in 1998, and Im now
61 years old. When can I start making tax-free withdrawals?
A. Right around the
cornerJanuary 2003. Actually, you can withdraw any or all of your
principal (the contributions you made to the IRA) free of tax at any time
after you open a Roth. Thats because a Roth IRA, unlike a traditional
IRA, is funded with after-tax contributions, not pre-tax. In fact,
whenever you make withdrawals from a Roth IRA, the law deems the
withdrawals to be made from contributions first. Only when the total
withdrawals exceed your total contributions are the withdrawals treated as
earnings and potentially subject to federal tax.
For the withdrawn earnings to be
considered qualified distributions and thus tax free, you must be at
least age 59 1/2 at the time of withdrawal and the Roth account must have
meet a five-year-holding rule. This rule applies whether the Roth account
is a new one funded from scratch or one you converted from a traditional
IRA.
For example, if you open a Roth at
age 50 you generally cant make tax-free withdrawals of earnings five
years later. You must wait until age 59 1/2. If you make earnings
withdrawals before 59 1/2, youll pay ordinary income taxes on them and
probably a ten-percent early withdrawal penalty (there are several
formulas for avoiding the penalty). Tax-free earnings, of course, are one
of several big pluses of a Roth.
Q. Explain the
five-year-holding rule. Does that apply only to earnings made on
contributions deposited at least five years ago?
A. No. Once you open an IRA,
the five-year clock starts ticking for all subsequent earnings regardless
of when they are earned. Lets say you opened the account in 1998 with
$2,000 (the maximum limit of new contributions, not counting conversions
of existing traditional IRAs) but didnt contribute any more money until
the year 2001, when you contributed another $2,000. Assume you take out
all your contributions and earnings from the account in January 2003. The
withdrawal of earnings made from the $2,000 you contributed in 2001
qualifies for tax-free treatment the same as the earnings made from your
initial 1998 contribution.
Q. Besides opening a Roth in
1998, I converted a regular IRA into a separate Roth account in 2001. Do I
have to wait until 2006 for tax-free earning withdrawals from the
converted Roth?
A. No, you can start
withdrawing in 2003. Multiple Roth accounts, even with different
custodians, regardless of when each is started, including those created by
converting traditional IRAs, are all governed by the date the first Roth
was established.
Q. I didnt open my Roth
until June of 1998. Do I have to wait until June 2003 to make tax-free
earnings withdrawals?
A. No. Regardless of when
during the tax year you open the account, the five-year clock starts
ticking on January 1 of that tax year. For example, you could have opened
your 1998 Roth as late as April 15 of 1999 and the five-year clock still
would have started January 1, 1998effectively making your wait less
than four years.
Q. When I turn 70 1/2, do I
have to start taking annual minimum required distributions like you do
with traditional IRAs?
A. No. Thats another one of
the great features of a Roth. You dont have to take out any of your
contributions or the earnings no matter how old you are, and when you do
take them out, they can be as small as you likeno minimum amount
required. Consequently, you can let the assets continue to build tax
deferred and pass the entire account to your heirs, if thats your
desire, instead of being forced to make annual withdrawals.
Whether
to leave the funds in or withdraw them is something youll want to
discuss with your financial planner. You should plan carefully how best to
withdraw funds from your retirement nest egg in order to stretch out your
resources. Should you start first with taxable accounts, traditional IRAs
versus Roth IRAs, 401(k) or other retirement accounts? The answer depends
on your personal and financial circumstances, needs and the tax laws.
December 2002 This column is produced by the
Financial Planning Association, the membership organization for the financial
planning community, and is provided by McGuire & Co., LLC, a local member in
good standing of the FPA.
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