| In a traditional
IRA, you can deduct what you contribute, up to a limit. But with the
Roth IRA, you cannot deduct what you contribute. You are depositing a
contribution after taxes. But you get other tax advantages that are not
available with a traditional IRA. For example:
 | You do not have to stop making contributions at a
certain age. |
 | You do not have to start taking money out at a
certain age. |
 | You do not get taxed on withdrawals, in
retirement. |
If you’re thinking about a Roth IRA, here are answers
to common questions:
How Much Can I Contribute Each Year to the Roth IRA?
You can contribute up to $3,000 each year (or up to
the amount of your compensation, if it’s less than $3,000). If you are
50 or older, you can pitch in another $500 a year. These rules are the
same as for a traditional IRA.
Can I Contribute to Both a Traditional IRA and a Roth
IRA?
Yes. You certainly can, but the total that you can
contribute to all of your traditional IRAs and Roth IRAs
combined is $3,000 per year ($3,500 per year if you’re 50 years old
or older). This means that if you contribute $2,500 to a traditional
IRA, the most you can contribute to a Roth IRA is $500 ($1,000 if you’re
50 years old or older).
Is the Money Taxable When I Take it Out of the Roth IRA?
No! Because you have already paid taxes on your
contributions to the Roth IRA, they are not taxed when you withdraw the
money. But here is good news: the income that your Roth IRA earns isn’t
taxable when you take it out, which is the major difference between the
Roth IRA and the traditional IRA. You can make nondeductible
contributions to a traditional IRA, but when you take the money out, the
earnings that have accumulated are taxable.
Are Withdrawals from my Roth IRA Always Tax-Free, Regardless of When I
Withdraw the Money?
Yes, if each withdrawal is a "qualified" distribution.
For a distribution to be qualified, you must leave the
money in your Roth IRA for five tax years, beginning with the first year
you made a contribution. Before you can start taking money out tax-free,
you must also be at least 59-1/2 years old, become disabled, die, or use
the money (up to $10,000) to buy a first home for you, your spouse,
child, or grandchild.
Remember: IRAs were created to provide another "safety
net" for your retirement years.
Do I Have to Stop Making Contributions to a Roth IRA
After I Reach a Certain Age?
No. You can contribute to a Roth IRA, even after you
reach the age of 70-1/2 (unlike a traditional IRA). Also, you can still
make contributions even after you retire—as long as you’re earning
money.
Do I Have
to Start Taking Money out of the Roth IRA by a Certain Age?
No. Unlike traditional IRAs, where you usually must
withdraw at least a minimum amount of money every year after you turn
70-1/2, Roth IRAs impose no age or amount restrictions on withdrawals.
Are Roth IRAs Available to All Taxpayers?
Unfortunately, no.
When your adjusted gross income hits $150,000 (for
married couples filing jointly) or $95,000 (for all others), the
contribution you’re allowed to make starts decreasing, and disappears
altogether after your income passes $160,000 (married filing jointly) or
$110,000 (all others).
Any contributions you make over the allowed amount are
subject to a 6% penalty. Refer to
IRS
Publication 590: Individual Retirement Arrangements for more
information about contribution limits.
Can I Rollover
Money from One Roth IRA to Another Roth IRA?
Yes. You can transfer the Roth IRA funds that you’ve
accumulated to another Roth IRA account, and because you are
transferring the funds to another IRA of the same type, you have
just performed a rollover.
The way you make the rollover dictates how much work
you will face when you do your taxes.
When you ask your bank or other IRA custodian to do a
direct transfer from your Roth IRA account to another Roth IRA account,
the IRS doesn’t require your bank to issue a Form 1099-R, which means
that you don’t have to report this transaction on your tax return.
If you pull money out of one Roth IRA account
yourself, then redeposit the money into another Roth IRA account within
60 days, you need to report the rollover to the IRS, even though you
don’t have to pay any taxes on it.
Can I Transfer Money from a Traditional IRA to a Roth IRA?
Yes, but not tax-free. This kind of transfer is called
a conversion. You normally get taxed on withdrawals from your
traditional IRAs. In other words, you can’t pull the money out of your
traditional IRAs and put it into a Roth IRA without getting taxed. Think
about it: the money you withdraw from a Roth IRA is not taxable: if you
weren’t taxed on your traditional IRA withdrawal, you would escape taxes
altogether! Congress has made sure this can’t happen.
There is one hitch, however: You can only transfer
your money from your traditional IRA to a Roth IRA if your modified
adjusted gross income (MAGI) is $100,000 or less.
If your MAGI is more than $100,000:
 | The amount you withdrew from your traditional IRA
is considered to be a distribution, and if you are under 59-1/2,
this is an early distribution subject to a penalty. |
 | The amount you converted to a Roth IRA is
considered to be a contribution, not a conversion, which means that
it is subject to the penalty for excess contributions to a Roth IRA. |
Also, if you’re married filing separately, you can’t
transfer money regardless of your income if you lived with your spouse
at any time during the year.
If conversion does not look right for you, consider
recharacterizing the money.
What is a Conversion?
A conversion is a transaction in which you remove
funds from a traditional IRA, a SEP IRA, or a SIMPLE IRA and put them
into a Roth IRA. You can convert the entire amount of your
non-Roth IRAs into a Roth IRA, as long as your adjusted gross income is
$100,000 or less.
You can’t convert funds from a Roth IRA to a
traditional, SEP, or SIMPLE IRA.
Why would you want to do this kind of conversion?
Remember that with Roth IRAs, you pay taxes on your contributions now,
not on the distribution when you retire. If you think you would be
better off paying the taxes on the distributions now instead of when you
are on more of a fixed income, you might want to convert your
traditional, SEP, or SIMPLE IRA to a Roth IRA, pay the taxes now, and
withdraw the funds completely tax free after your retirement.
What
is a Recharacterization?
Besides being an unwieldy term, a recharacterization
is a trustee-to-trustee transfer of funds from a traditional IRA (NOT
including a SEP IRA or SIMPLE IRA) to a Roth IRA, or from a Roth IRA to
a traditional IRA, SEP IRA, or SIMPLE IRA.
The trustee-to-trustee transfer is important: if the
transfer isn’t from trustee to trustee, it goes through you, and then
it’s considered a withdrawal, and subject to penalties.
Recharacterization isn’t a bad idea: you’re
redesignating one type of IRA as another type of IRA. The transfer
includes any gains or losses, but the amount recharacterized does not
include any gains or losses incurred after the initial contribution or
conversion.
 | You might want to recharacterize your original
contribution to a Roth IRA as a traditional IRA if you find that you
earned too much money to contribute to a Roth IRA. |
 | You might want to recharacterize your traditional
IRA as a Roth IRA if you find out that your traditional IRA
contribution won’'t be deductible because you make too much money,
but you still earn less than the maximum Roth IRA income amount. |
There are three possible types of recharacterizations:
- You can recharacterize a regular, annual
contribution to a traditional IRA as a Roth IRA as long as you do it
in the same year you made the contribution. You cannot
recharacterize any amounts in the traditional IRA that are not a
direct result of a regular contribution for the same year: those
amounts must be converted.
- You can recharacterize a regular, annual
contribution to a Roth IRA as a traditional IRA contribution. The
recharacterization must be for the same year that you made the
contribution. You cannot recharacterize any amounts in the Roth IRA
that are not a direct result of a regular contribution for the same
year.
- If you converted an amount from a non-Roth IRA to
a Roth IRA, and then found that you made more than $100,000 this
year and are therefore not eligible for the Roth IRA, you can avoid
penalties and go back to your non-Roth IRA by performing a
recharacterization. You can’t perform another conversion to go back
to where you were: you must recharacterize the Roth IRA as a
non-Roth IRA to avoid penalties and other problems.
In addition, the recharacterization must be the direct
result of a conversion. You cannot recharacterize any amounts in the
Roth IRA (such as regular contributions) that are not a direct result of
a conversion.
What Can I do if I Contributed Too Much to a Roth IRA?
You have two option withdrawing
or recharacterizing.
Withdrawing
You can withdraw the excess contribution before the
due date (including extensions) of your tax return. You must also
withdraw any earnings on the excess contributions. You will have to pay
tax on the earnings you withdraw, but not on the contribution itself.
If you are under age 59-1/2, you may also have to pay
a 10% early withdrawal penalty.
Recharacterizing
You can recharacterize part or all of the contribution
as a traditional IRA contribution. To do a recharacterization, you must
do a trustee-to-trustee transfer of the contribution from the Roth IRA
to a traditional IRA. You must also transfer any earnings on the
contribution you recharacterize.
Your contribution is treated as if you contributed it
to the traditional IRA on the same day you originally contributed it to
the Roth IRA--as if you never made the contribution to the Roth IRA. If
you recharacterize a contribution, the transaction is not taxable.
What do I do if I Make a Conversion From a Traditional
IRA to a Roth IRA and Then Find out I was Not Allowed to do so?
If you are in this situation, you must "undo" or
recharacterize the conversion. Just as with the recharacterization of a
regular contribution, you must do a trustee-to-trustee transfer of the
amount you converted. You must also transfer any earnings or losses on
the converted amount. The net result: the money goes back to the
traditional IRA as if the original conversion never took place.
Can I put Money into a Roth IRA Other Than by a Regular
Contribution or a Conversion?
Yes. If you make a contribution to a traditional IRA,
you can recharacterize that contribution as a contribution to a Roth IRA
for the same year. You must do a trustee-to-trustee transfer of the
contribution from the traditional IRA to the Roth IRA and must also
transfer any earnings on the contribution.
If you do this, your contribution is treated as if you
contributed it to the Roth IRA on the same day you originally
contributed it to the traditional IRA--as if you never made the
contribution to the traditional IRA.
Can I Recharacterize a Traditional IRA as a Roth IRA?
You can only recharacterize a contribution to a
traditional IRA that was made in the same year. Any money in a
traditional IRA that is not part of a current-year contribution must be
converted, not recharacterized.
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