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Irs Eases Retirement Account Rollover Nightmares But Taxpayers Need To Remain Cautious |
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The IRS is easing some of the
nightmare financial consequences of mishandled
tax-free rollovers from individual retirement
accounts and retirement plans—but taxpayers
need to remain vigilant to avoid unnecessary
taxes and penalties.
A rollover occurs when you
take money out of either an IRA or qualified
retirement plan such as a 401(k) or 403(b) and
move it into another IRA or qualified plan—or
return it to the IRA or plan you took it from.
The rollover is free of tax,
and free of the 10 percent early withdrawal
penalty (which would apply if you are younger
than age 59 1/2), as long as you follow two
rules: (1) You must complete the rollover within
60 days of the initial withdrawal; (2) you can
do only one rollover from each account within
a one-year period starting from the day of the
withdrawal. If you fail to complete the rollover
within 60 days of the withdrawal, you risk owing
income taxes and penalties, though that’s
where the IRS is carving out some exceptions.
Before we get to the exceptions,
though, realize that you can avoid rollover
problems by doing what’s called a direct
trustee-to-trustee transfer. That’s where
the money is moved directly between the financial
institutions without you ever personally controlling
the funds at any point. With this process, you
don’t face the 60-day issue or the once-in-a-year
rule.
Direct transfers also avoid
another major problem with some rollovers. In
cases where you take money out of a qualified
retirement plan (but not an IRA), a mandatory
20 percent of the withdrawal is withheld for
taxes. The withholding will be refunded when
you file your next tax return as long as you
make up that 20 percent with new money in time
to complete the full rollover within 60 days.
Otherwise, the withheld 20 percent will be treated
as a taxable withdrawal!
While direct transfers are
usually the preferred method, you may still
end up, for a variety of reasons, making a rollover.
So what happens if there’s a problem and
you fail to complete the rollover within 60
days? Are you automatically stuck with the taxes
and possible penalties? That depends on the
cause of the problem.
Until 2001, the 60-day rollover
rule was pretty inflexible. Other than rollovers
involving military personnel in combat or taxpayers
caught up in a presidentially declared disaster
area, exceptions were rare. In the 2001 tax
act, Congress gave the IRS more leeway in waiving
the 60-day rule. Since then, the IRS has issued
a Revenue Procedure and numerous private letter
rulings (PLRs) that provide some guidance for
when and how exceptions can be made. (Technically,
a PLR applies only to the taxpayer involved,
though tax experts generally agree they provide
insight into IRS thinking on the issue.)
So what exceptions has the
IRS allowed? If a financial services institution
involved in handling the rollover makes an error,
the taxpayer is typically off the hook. Perhaps
the institution gives the taxpayer erroneous
advice (in one case, the taxpayer was told the
rollover period was 90 days, not 60), mistakenly
distributes the funds to the wrong account,
or fails to follow the account holder’s
instructions. If the taxpayer can show such
failures, the IRS has been sympathetic about
waiving the 60-day rule. The same relief has
applied where the plan administrator has made
an error.
The IRS has granted exceptions
to taxpayers who failed to make timely rollovers
due to physical problems or mental problems,
such as confusion or memory loss resulting from
an accident. If the account owner dies before
completing the rollover, an exception also might
be made.
The IRS has been far less willing
to grant relief where the taxpayer took out
money as a short-term loan instead of with the
objective of rolling it into another account,
though even here the IRS has made exceptions.
Thus, taxpayers must be very careful of the
circumstances if they hope to gain IRS relief.
To obtain a waiver, taxpayers
usually must request a private letter ruling,
though in the case where it is the sole fault
of the financial institution, they can automatically
get relief without requesting a PLR.
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