Shall we dance? In the past, if you rolled over funds from a 401(k) plan to a Roth IRA, you had to do a Texas two-step: 1) Transfer the cash from your 401(k) to a traditional IRA 2) Convert the traditional IRA into a Roth IRA, paying income tax on the amount you convert.
Now, thanks to a recent tax law change, the choreography is simpler, with just one step required. Furthermore, new IRS guidance gives 401(k) plan participants a slight edge on Roth conversions.
With a 401(k) plan, you accumulate funds on a pre-tax basis. You make annual salary deferrals (of up to $16,500 in 2010, plus $5,500 if you’re age 50 or older) that may be partially matched by contributions from your employer. Some plans also permit after-tax contributions. Plan investments compound tax free, but distributions from the 401(k) during retirement are taxed at ordinary income rates, currently as high as 35% plus the state tax obligation.
A Roth IRA works the other way around. Money goes in after taxes have already been paid, but qualified distributions, assuming the Roth has been around for at least five years, aren’t taxed. To qualify for a tax-free, penalty-free distribution, you have to be at least age 59½, though exceptions are made in the event of death or disability, or to pay expenses for a first-time homebuyer (up to a lifetime limit of $10,000).
You can convert a traditional IRA, built with pre-tax funds, into a Roth only in a year in which your adjusted gross income is $100,000 or less. Beginning in 2010, however, there will be no income ceiling. That change is a provision of the Pension Protection Act of 2006, which also eliminated the need for a two-step move from a 401(k) to a Roth. Now, you can avoid the interim step of moving your money to a traditional IRA, though you’ll still have to deal with the $100,000 income ceiling until 2010. (Some employers now offer an after-tax Roth 401(k) option, and these plans also can be rolled over directly to a Roth IRA.)
In a recent notice, the IRS sweetened this deal with the news that no tax is owed if you convert only non-deductible 401(k) contributions. In contrast, in any conversion from a traditional IRA to a Roth, all distributions must be based on the ratio of non-deductible contributions (ie., contributions that you can’t deduct from taxes) to the total value in all of your IRAs.
Suppose you have $200,000 in an IRA and $200,000 in a 401(k) to which you made $40,000 in non-deductible contributions to each. That five-to-one ratio means that if you convert $10,000 from the IRA to a Roth IRA, only $2,000 will be exempt from tax. But if you convert $10,000 in after-tax contributions from your 401(k) to a Roth, no tax will be owed.
Determining whether a Roth IRA conversion is right for you depends on a number of factors including your age and tax bracket. Though the Roth conversion dance is simpler now, you may still need a partner. We can help you determine whether a one-step rollover is right for your unique situation. |