Traditional IRA explained

A traditional IRA is an individual retirement arrangement (IRA), established in the United States by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA) (codified in part at). Normal IRAs also existed before ERISA.[1]

Overview

An author described the traditional IRA in 1982 as "the biggest tax break in history".[2] The IRA is held at a custodian institution such as a bank or brokerage, and may be invested in anything that the custodian allows (for instance, a bank may allow certificates of deposit, and a brokerage may allow stocks and mutual funds). Unlike the Roth IRA, the only criterion for being eligible to contribute to a traditional IRA is sufficient income to make the contribution. Contributions are tax-deductible but with eligibility requirements based on income, filing status, and availability of other retirement plans (mandated by the Internal Revenue Service). Transactions and profits in the account are not taxed. Withdrawals are subject to federal income tax (see below for details).

This is in contrast to a Roth IRA, in which contributions are never tax-deductible, but qualified withdrawals are tax free. The traditional IRA also has more restrictions on withdrawals than a Roth IRA. With both types of IRA, transactions and profits inside the account are not taxed.[3]

According to IRS pension/retirement department as of July 13, 2009, traditional IRAs (originally called Regular IRAs) were created in 1975 and made available for tax reporting that year as well. The original contribution amount in 1975 was limited to $1,500 or 15% of the wages/salaries/tips reported on line 8 of Form 1040 (1975).[4] Annual traditional IRA contributions are limited as follows:

Year !Age 49 and below !Age 50 and above - 2005 $4,000 $4,500 - 2006–2007 $4,000 $5,000 - 2008–2012* $5,000 $6,000 - 2013–2018 $5,500 $6,500 - 2019–2021[5] [6] $6,000 $7,000
Since 2009, contribution limits have been assessed for potential increases based on inflation.[7]

Advantages

Contradictory benefit claims include:

Disadvantages

Eligibility to contribute to a traditional IRA

Income limits only apply to certain taxpayers

All United States income taxpayers can make IRA contributions and defer the taxation on the earnings. However, not all IRA contributions are deductible from a taxpayer's income tax.

If one or more members of a household participates in an employer-sponsored retirement plan, and the taxpayer's Modified Adjusted Gross Income is above the amount listed in the table below, then some or all of the taxpayer's IRA contribution will not be tax deductible.[14] Consequently, traditional IRAs are sometimes further classified and referred to as either "deductible" or "non-deductible." Except as otherwise noted, all columns below are for IRA contributors who participate in an employer-sponsored retirement plan.

The lower number represents the point at which the taxpayer is still allowed to deduct the entire maximum yearly contribution. The upper number is the point as of which the taxpayer is no longer allowed to deduct any of that year's contribution. The deduction is reduced proportionally for taxpayers in the range. Note that people who are married and lived together, but who file separately, are only allowed to deduct a relatively small amount.

Year !Married filing jointly !Married filing jointly (IRA contributor is
not covered by a workplace retirement plan
but is married to someone who is covered) !
Single !Married filing separately - 2007 $83,000–$103,000 $156,000–$166,000 $52,000–$62,000 $0–$10,000 - 2008 $85,000–$105,000 $159,000–$169,000 $53,000–$63,000 $0–$10,000 - 2009 $89,000–$109,000 $166,000–$176,000 $55,000–$65,000 $0–$10,000 - 2010 $89,000–$109,000 $167,000–$177,000 $56,000–$66,000 $0–$10,000 - 2011 $90,000–$110,000 $169,000–$179,000 $56,000–$66,000 $0–$10,000 - 2013 $95,000–$115,000 $178,000–$188,000 $59,000–$69,000 $0–$10,000 - 2014 $96,000–$116,000 $181,000–$191,000 $60,000–$70,000 $0–$10,000 - 2015 $98,000–$118,000 $183,000–$193,000 $61,000–$71,000 $0–$10,000 - 2016 $98,000–$118,000 $184,000–$194,000 $61,000–$71,000 $0–$10,000 - 2017 $99,000–$119,000 $186,000–$196,000 $62,000–$72,000 $0–$10,000 - 2018 $101,000–$121,000 $189,000–$199,000 $63,000–$73,000 $0–$10,000 - 2019 $103,000–$123,000 $193,000–$203,000 $64,000–$72,000 $0–$10,000 - 2020 $104,000–$124,000 $196,000–$206,000 $65,000–$75,000 $0–$10,000 - 2021 $105,000–$125,000 $198,000–$208,000 $66,000–$76,000 $0–$10,000

Converting a traditional IRA to a Roth IRA

Conversion of all or a part of a traditional IRA account to a Roth IRA results in the converted funds being taxed as income in the year they are converted (with the exception of non-deductible assets).[15]

Prior to 2010, two circumstances prohibit a conversion to a Roth IRA: Modified Adjusted Gross Income exceeding $100,000 or the participant's tax filing status is Married Filing Separately. With recent legislation, as part of the Tax Increase Prevention and Reconciliation Act of 2005 (TIPRA), the modified AGI requirement of $100,000 and not be married filing separately criteria were removed in 2010.

There may be a benefit from conversion in addition to the preferential timing of tax. The taxes due need not come from the account balance converted. If the taxes are paid from another taxable account, the effect is as if the income from those dollars are sheltered from tax.

Transfers versus rollovers

Transfers and rollovers are two ways of moving IRA sheltered assets between financial institutions.

A transfer is normally initiated by the institution receiving the funds. A request is sent to the disbursing institution for a transfer and a check (made payable to the other institution) is sent in return. This transaction is not reported to the IRS.[16] Transfers are allowed to and from traditional IRAs or from employer plans.

A rollover (sometimes referred to as a 60-day rollover) can also be used to move IRA money between institutions. A distribution is made from the institution disbursing the funds. A check would be made payable directly to the participant. The participant would then have to make a rollover contribution to the receiving financial institution within 60 days in order for the funds to retain their IRA status. This type of transaction can only be done once every 12 months with the same funds.[17] Contrary to a transfer, a rollover is reported to the IRS. The participant who received the distribution will have that distribution reported to the IRS. Once the distribution is rolled into an IRA, the participant will be sent a Form 5498 to report on their taxes to nullify any tax consequence of the initial distribution.

See also

External links

Notes and references

  1. Web site: Traditional IRA. SelfDirected.org. 2017-04-03.
  2. Keynes . J.M. . August 1982 . An operating system for financial survival . MONEY DOS . 80 Micro . 24,26.
  3. Web site: Traditional IRA vs. Roth IRA. Spors. Kelly. rothira.com. 2016-09-04.
  4. Web site: What were Traditional IRA and Roth IRA Contribution Limits in the Past?. May 30, 2019. personal-finance.extension.org. 2020-10-16.
  5. Web site: 401(k) contribution limit increases to $19,000 for 2019; IRA limit increases to $6,000 . www.irs.gov. 2018-11-10.
  6. News: Income ranges for determining IRA eligibility change for 2021. IRS. October 26, 2020. February 21, 2021.
  7. Web site: Emigrant.com - IRAs. www.emigrant.com. 2016-09-04. https://web.archive.org/web/20171029120947/https://www.emigrant.com/Information/personalbanking/IRAs.jsp. 2017-10-29. dead.
  8. Web site: Excel spreadsheet calculates benefit factors.
  9. Web site: How To Properly Frame 401(k) Benefits.
  10. Web site: Quora: US-CAN benefits same.
  11. Web site: Traditional IRA. 2003-11-24. investopedia.com. en-US. 2016-09-03.
  12. Web site: How to Reduce Your 2014 Tax Bill By Over $1,000. Brandon. Emily. January 12, 2015. money.usnews.com. 2016-09-04.
  13. Web site: Traditional IRA. 2003-11-24. investopedia.com. en-US. 2016-09-03.
  14. Web site: IRA Rules: FAQs Roth & Traditional IRA Fidelity. 2020-12-23. www.fidelity.com. en-US.
  15. Web site: Roth IRA Conversion Rules. www.rothira.com. 2016-09-04.
  16. Web site: Reporting 401(k) and IRA Rollovers. September 17, 2014. www.bankrate.com. 2. 2016-09-04.
  17. Web site: IRS: Only one IRA rollover per year. Slott. Ed. 2014-04-13. investmentnews.com. 2016-09-03.