Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Understanding the IRA Withdrawal Rules

For Traditional IRA owners: If you're going to turn age 70 1/2 this year (2013), the IRS requires that you begin taking minimum withdrawals from your account. Here's what you need to know to do it right.

Minimum Withdrawal Basics - If you're near that magic age of 70 1/2, then you probably already know that the tax law requires you to take mandatory payouts each year. If you turn 70 1/2 this year (2013), you must take your first minimum withdrawal no later than April 1 of 2014.

Tapping your IRA, of course, means you'll also get stuck with the resulting income-tax bills. In fact, the whole reason your friends in Congress enacted the minimum withdrawal rules was to force you to hand over the government's share of your IRA sooner rather than later. If you fail to take at least the minimum withdrawal amount each year, you'll owe a 50% penalty on the shortfall. Of course, you can always take out more than the minimum and pay the extra income taxes. In fact, the IRS will be delighted if you do.

Keep in mind, the IRA minimum withdrawal rules also apply to simplified employee pension, or SEP, accounts as well as SIMPLE IRAs, since they're both considered IRAs for this purpose. But Roth IRA owners are exempt from the minimum withdrawal rules as long as the original account owner is alive.

When to Start Withdrawals - Since nothing the IRS does is ever simple, knowing when you need to start taking mandatory withdrawals, is -- but of course -- tricky. As you approach 70 1/2, you're faced with a choice. You can take your first minimum withdrawal during the year you turn 70 1/2, or you can take it by April 1 of the year after you turn 70 1/2. Then for each subsequent year, you must take at least the required minimum withdrawal by Dec. 31 of that year.

Why does it matter when you start tapping your IRA? Well, it can have significant tax implications. After all, if you don't take your initial minimum withdrawal during the year you turn 70 1/2, you must take two -- and pay the resulting double dip of taxes -- in the following year.

Calculating Minimum Withdrawals - The amount of each minimum withdrawal depends on your IRA account balance at the end of the previous year divided by a joint life-expectancy figure for you and your account beneficiary (even if you don't have one!) found in tables published by the IRS. The younger you are, the longer the life-expectancy figure. The longer the life-expectancy figure, the bigger the divisor. And the bigger the divisor, the lower the minimum withdrawal amount. Of course, lower minimum withdrawals mean lower taxes -- which, obviously, is good.

The minimum withdrawal rules automatically assume you've designated a person 10 years your junior as your IRA beneficiary. Don't worry, it doesn't matter to the IRS if your actual designated beneficiary is older than the assumed age. In fact, it generally doesn't matter if you've actually designated a beneficiary or not. This might strike you as odd, but there is some history behind it. (We'll spare you the titillating details.)

The only exception to the "automatically-10-years-younger-beneficiary rule" is when your spouse is designated as the sole IRA beneficiary and he or she is more than 10 years younger. In this somewhat unusual circumstance, you're allowed to calculate your IRA minimum withdrawals using more favorable joint life-expectancy figures based on the actual ages of you and your spouse.

Source:  Bill Bischoff, Smart Money

The following on-line calculators can help you determine your Required Minimum Distribution:

http://apps.finra.org/calcs/1/rmd
http://www.bankrate.com/calculators/retirement/ira-minimum-distribution-calculator-tool.aspx


The information contained in this article does not constitute a recommendation, solicitation, or offer by D2 Capital Management, LLC or its affiliates to buy or sell any securities, futures, options or other financial instruments or provide any investment advice or service. D2, its clients, and its employees may or may not own any of the securities (or their derivatives) mentioned in this article.

The Jacksonville Business Journal has ranked D2 Capital Management in the top 25 of Certified Financial Planners in Jacksonville.  The Firm is also a member of the Financial Planning Association of Northeast Florida.


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