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Aug 16 2008, 07:35 AM
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#1
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Registered User Group: Registered Posts: 13 Joined: 16-August 08 Member No.: 27,233 |
I heard some people talking on a radio show about a strategy for converting only the post-tax portion of a Traditional IRA to a Roth IRA. I believe that it involved moving money into an existing 401k account. Can anyone provide (or direct me to a source for) a step-by-step guide for doing this?
Thanks. Michael |
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Aug 16 2008, 12:25 PM
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#2
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Registered User Group: Registered Posts: 893 Joined: 17-May 05 Member No.: 14,641 |
Before anything else, make sure your 401(k) will accept rollovers from IRA's.
If you rollover the maximum amount possible from your IRA to a 401(k), this would leave only basis in the Trad IRA. See this recent thread: http://benefitslink.com/boards/index.php?s...c=39412&hl= Specifically see page 24 of IRS Pub 590: http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p590.pdf (underline added for emphasis) QUOTE Tax treatment of a rollover from a traditional IRA to an eligible retirement plan other than an IRA. Ordinarily, when you have basis in your IRAs, any distribution is considered to include both nontaxable and taxable amounts. Without a special rule, the nontaxable portion of such a distribution could not be rolled over. However, a special rule treats a distribution you roll over into an eligible retirement plan as including only otherwise taxable amounts if the amount you either leave in your IRAs or do not roll over is at least equal to your basis. The effect of this special rule is to make the amount in your traditional IRAs that you can roll over to an eligible retirement plan as large as possible. You can then read elsewhere in that publication about doing a conversion to a Roth IRA. -------------------- "He attacked everything in life with a mix of extraordinary genius and naive incompetence, and it was often difficult to tell which was which." - Douglas Adams (last updated: 10/12/09)
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