To Roth Or Not To Roth

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Effective January 1, 2010, the Election to convert an IRA to a Roth IRA is easier, but it is not for everyone

Transcript of To Roth Or Not To Roth

To Roth Or Not to Roth

Brian T. Whitlock CPA, JD, LLM

ICPAS – Central ChapterJanuary 19, 2010

Roth IRA Benefits

• Income tax free growth

• Income tax free distributions after age 59 ½

• No Required Minimum Distributions for owner

• Beneficiaries of ROTH account can stretch benefits tax free over their lifetimes

Roth IRA Qualified Distribution Restrictions

Earnings are taxed or subject to 10% penalty if Withdrawn within 5 years of conversion– Death is not an exception to 5 year rule

• After 5th year penalty free withdrawals permitted: – After age 59 ½

– Following death or disability

– Unreimbursed medical exp over 7.5% of AGI

– Medical insurance premium after job loss

– Qualified Higher Ed for self, spouse, kids or GC

– 1st time homebuyers up to $10,000 lifetime limit

Roth IRA Distribution Ordering Rules

Order of Withdrawals

• Annual Contributions first (tax-free)

• Conversion contributions next (tax-free but subject to early withdrawal penalty)

• Earnings on account (tax-free provided five year rule and exceptions apply)

Prior to December 31, 2009, existing IRA could be converted to ROTH only if Modified AGI was below $100,000.

Beginning January 1, 2010, the $100,000 Modified AGI ceiling will be Permanently Repealed.

ROTH IRA Conversion Rule

Election to convert in 2010.

No taxable income in 2010, just measure the FMV of the plan assets.

• One Half of FMV is Ordinary income in 2011.

• One Half of FMV is Ordinary income in 2012

How the Election Works

Taxpayer can change election by reconverting back to a regular IRA prior to the extended due date for filing 2010 Form 1040 - October 15, 2011.

Why reconvert?

– If income tax rates rise to an untenable level

– If the value of the account falls, reconvert

Taxpayer can re-elect 30 days after reconversion 2010, just measure the FMV of the plan assets.

Reconversion Options

• Owner of Regular IRA

• Spousal Roll over IRAs

• Owners of Qualified Plan assets and both Spouse and Non-Spouse beneficiary of Qualified Plans Assets

Who Can Convert?

• NOT Everyone

• Clients that have significant basis in non-deductible IRAs

• Clients can afford to let the funds grow for more than 10 years

• Elderly Clients with taxable estates that want to leave their accounts to children/grandchildren

Who Should Convert?

Elderly Client - Taxable Estate

Description Life Time After Death

FMV of IRA $ 5,000,000 $ 5,000,000

Other Assets 10,000,000 10,000,000

Life Conversion Tax (1,500,000) 0

Taxable Estate $ 13,500,000 $ 15,000,000

Fed & IL Estate Tax (5,000,000)

(5,750,000)

Income Tax on IRD (962,500)

Net to Heirs 8,500,000 8,287,500

Savings $ 212,500

Do not Convert, if

• You need the funds short-term • You are over 65 and you need for retirement• Charity is named as the beneficiary of your IRA• You HATE to pay any tax early • You cannot pay the tax on the conversion from

funds outside of the IRA• You believe you will earn less than 3% and be in

a marginally lower (>6%) income tax bracket• You believe you will be in significantly lower tax

brackets in the future (Breakeven is a 11% decline in tax rates).

Multiple IRA Accounts create flexible options:

• Leave taxable IRA to charity

• Convert multiple IRA accounts

• Invest accounts differently

• Reconvert accounts that decrease in value

Create Flexibility for Clients

• After Retirement but before 70 ½ convert a portion each year to utilize low brackets

• Take advantage of business losses

• Take advantage of NOLs

• Take advantage of Charitable Deduction carryovers

• Offset conversion income with charitable contribution deductions

Roth Planning Ideas

• WATCH OUT FOR UBIT –– Unrelated Business Income Tax impacts IRAs and ROTH

IRAs– UBI in Partnerships which hold a trade or business– UBI in debt financed real estate– UBI in hedge funds and leveraged investments

• Inherited IRAs and Inherited ROTH IRAs are subject to claims of creditor – use Conduit Trusts

• Regular and Roth IRA are not permitted S Corporation Shareholders– Taproot v. Commissioner (2009)

Traps and Final Warnings

Questions and Comments

BK Blog:http://blog.untaxinglyyours.comTwitter @TaxGems

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