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carelessostrich

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Everything posted by carelessostrich

  1. Yes, good point. I had thought this was usually only a plan restriction. I have no point to make, but I am trying to understand this plan's rules around in-plan roth conversions. (BTW I have an answer, but no explanation, from the plan sponsor - so this is for my education) 1. The plan document allows conversion from subaccounts that contain pre-tax. But some subaccounts contain a mix. A strict interpretation: subaccount does not contain pre-tax until it earns $0.01 pre-tax earnings, then suddenly becomes eligible for conversion. Or: all subaccounts (except a designated roth account) categorize earnings as pre-tax, so all subaccounts allow conversion 2. Suppose a plan allows in-service distribution (out of plan) above retirement age. Then would that age restriction then apply to in-plan roth conversion as well, or only "actual" distributions? The IRS says they generally treat in-plan roth conversion as a distribution and transfer (with certain explicit differences). So it seems to me like in-plan roth conversion would then be restricted to above retirement age also. Thank you both!
  2. well, voluntary after-tax contributions then in-plan roth conversion would allow the mega backdoor roth, correct? Part that is confusing me is that the voluntary contributions subaccount sometimes contains pre-tax earnings and sometimes it doesn't (it seems voluntary pre-tax contributions ended in 1987). For exampled if the voluntary after-tax contributions earned some interest. So we are debating if being pre-tax is a property of the subaccount and not the contents. For example it seems like the IRS refers to Traditional IRA rollover into pre-tax subaccounts of qualified plans. but that Traditional IRA might include some (or entirely) nondeductible after-tax contributions.
  3. plan document specifies subaccounts that contains pre-tax earnings or contributions, can be in-plan converted by eligible rollover distributions, into designated roth subaccounts. voluntary after-tax contributions go into a separate subaccount, than elective deferrals and employer contributions. Does a subaccount still count as pre-tax, if it does not actually contain any pre-tax earning or contributions, but otherwise can potentially contain pre-tax earnings? It is clearly not a designated roth subaccount. inservice distributions otherwise not permitted.
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