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Take tax control of your IRA conversion
As more companies eliminate or reduce their pension plans, people are taking closer and harder looks at their personal retirement saving options.
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| Tax smart strategies for IRAs |
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One possibility that appeals to owners of traditional
IRAs is converting those savings to Roth retirement accounts. Right now, higher-income
individuals can't take advantage of such a transfer, but that will change
in a couple of years.
Be careful, though, whether you're considering a conversion now
or down the road. While a Roth IRA has definite advantages for many
people, it's not
necessarily right for everyone.
And even if the move does make sense for you, you'll
pay a price. There are ways, however, to manage the financial bite
and ensure your IRA meets your retirement needs.
The
price of change
If you started an IRA as soon as the option became available 33
years ago, for what we now call a traditional account, you'd likely
have a nice nest egg. The one downside: When you start taking out
money, much of it will be taxed. And it will be taxed at your ordinary
income rate, which could be high as 35 percent, rather than the
more favorable rates usually afforded investment income.
That's not the case with a Roth. Once you've held the account for
five years, you won't owe the IRS anything when you withdraw the money at retirement.
Converting a traditional IRA to a Roth gives you that
future tax-free benefit, but at an immediate tax cost. You'll have
to pay taxes on contributions that you previously deducted, as well
as on the account's earnings.
Conversion
also could push you into a higher tax bracket, especially if you've accumulated
sizable earnings over the years. True, only the portion of your income that falls
into that new bracket will be taxed
at the higher rate, but it's still an added bonus for the IRS at your expense.
Then you must consider exactly how to cover the conversion
taxes. Some account holders end up using money from the traditional account to
meet this obligation. Not a good idea, say experts, because that reduces, sometimes
dramatically, your retirement holdings.
Plus, if you're younger than 59½, when you
take out the cash to pay the IRS, you'll also face a 10 percent early
distribution penalty.
Upon facing such tax
considerations, some traditional IRA holders decide to forgo conversion. But that
might not be the only, or best, option.
Gradual
conversion
It is a fact that you can't escape the tax pain of transferring
to a Roth account. You can, however, control it.
Simply move
your traditional IRA money to a Roth gradually through partial conversions for
several years.
"You can partially convert $100, $100,000 or
whatever," says Jeff Bogue, Certified Financial Planner and
principal of Bogue Asset Management LLC in Wells, Maine.
Even better, you don't have to transfer
the money from one account to another on any specific timetable. That way, you
have some control over your tax bill.
"You can stage the transfer over a period of
time," says Bill Rucci, CPA and partner in the Boston-based
accounting firm Rucci, Bardaro and Barrett. "That's where the
graduated tax brackets come into play. If you do it all in one year,
you might be pushed into a higher tax bracket and it wouldn't be
worth it. Stage the rollovers in such a way that you don't face
higher taxes."
| -- Updated: March 10, 2008 |
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