- advertisement -
  MARKETWATCH.COM  Member Sign In - Free Sign Up for personalized features
 
FRONT PAGE MARKETS GLOBAL MARKETS IPOS ECONOMY & POLITICS MUTUAL FUNDS COMMENTARY  
Bankrate.com   
Columns: Dr. Don
Don Taylor, Ph.D., CFA, CFP   Expert: Don Taylor, Ph.D., CFA, CFP
Ask Dr. Don
Reader misreads nature of investment
Ask Dr. Don

Converting IRA CD would be tax mistake
 

Dear Dr. Don,
I've had an IRA CD for the last 10 years. I'm now 63 and would like to convert it over to a regular CD so I can start taking the interest each month to supplement my income.

- advertisement -

Will I be taxed on the interest I got the last year I had it, or on the whole amount of the CD? Do I have to pay taxes on the interest I received in last 10 years or just in the last year before I converted it over?
-- Joan Juggle

Dear Joan,
You're going about this the wrong way. If the IRA CD was funded with pretax dollars -- and most are -- then every penny of it is subject to income taxes, including the principal and interest.

Fortunately, you will only owe taxes each time you take a distribution out of the account. However, converting the IRA CD to a regular CD would make the entire deposit subject to taxes immediately.

There are some easy ways for you to achieve your goal of taking distributions without moving the money out of an IRA account. The easiest is to ask your bank how you can take distributions from the account without closing the account. They may allow those distributions without requiring you to make any changes in the account.

The account is portable. You can move your funds to another IRA account and take distributions from that account. A money market mutual fund, for example, could give you interest income plus check-writing privileges on the balances.

Bankrate.com's corrections policy -- Posted: March 11, 2008
More Q&A stories from Dr. Don
Ask a question

Compare Rates
NATIONAL OVERNIGHT AVERAGES
IRA MMA 2.02%
1 yr IRA CD 2.92%
5 yr IRA CD 3.31%
ADVERTISING PARTNERS
Mortgage calculator
See your FICO Score Range -- Free
How much money can you save in your 401(k) plan?
Which is better -- a rebate or special dealer financing?
VIEW MORE CALCULATORS
- advertisement -
- advertisement -

News & Advice | Compare Rates | Calculators
Mortgage | Home Equity | Auto | Investing | Checking & Savings | Credit Cards | Debt Management | College Finance | Taxes | Personal Finance
About Bankrate | Privacy | Online Media Kit | Partnerships | Investor Relations | Press/Broadcast | Contact Us | Sitemap
NASDAQ: RATE | RSS Feeds | Order Rate Data | Bankrate Canada | Bankrate China

* Mortgage rate may include points. See rate tables for details. Click here.
* To see the definition of overnight averages click here.

Bankrate.com ®, Copyright © 2008 Bankrate, Inc., All Rights Reserved, Terms of Use.



News & Commentary | Personal Finance | My Portfolios | Research & Tools | MarketWatch TV & Radio
Message Boards | MarketWatch Mobile | MarketPlace | Free Membership | Login
Site Index | NewsFinder | Search News | Help | Feedback
Newsroom | Company Info | Advertising | Investor Relations | Jobs

Make MarketWatch.com your Home Page

Marketwatch.com

FTMarketwatch.com | FT.com | FTYourMoney.com | BigCharts.com

© 2005 MarketWatch, Inc. All rights reserved. Disclaimer. Privacy Policy

Intraday data provided by S&P Comstock and subject to terms of use.
Historical and current end-of-day data provided by FT Interactive Data.
Intraday data is at least 15-minutes delayed. All times are EDT.