Leimberg’s - SFSP
Leimberg’s
Think About It
Think About It is written by
Stephan R. Leimberg, JD, CLU
and co-authored by Linas Sudzius
October 2009 # 404
ROLLOVER BEETHOVEN:
MAKING TAX-FREE TRANSFERS BETWEEN QUALIFIED ACCOUNTS
Introduction
When clients change jobs, they often must make decisions with regard to accumulated balances in employer-sponsored qualified plans, such as 401(k) accounts. In many cases, the employee leaving a position will want to take personal control of the money, and also minimize any income taxes associated with the qualified plan money.
If a client starts a new job, sometimes the new employer will offer options for participating in another qualified plan. The new plan may allow transfers of other qualified balances into it. The client will want to know the tax and practical consequences of making a transfer.
Other clients with substantial IRA balances may be interested in moving their accounts to different IRA fiduciaries, or possibly to their employer-sponsored pension plans. Still others with IRAs may want to split those accounts between administrators for tax or practical reasons.
When an IRA or pension participant dies, the account beneficiary may want to transfer any benefits to which he or she is entitled to another vehicle under the beneficiary’s control.
Clients will need our help to understand how they can make transfers of qualified accounts to another account on an income tax-free basis. Tax-free transfers might be made by trustee-to-trustee transfer, direct rollover or 60-day rollover.
Clients will want to know:
• Does the account they’re starting with qualify for a tax-free transfer to another qualified account?
• Is the vehicle into which they intend to transfer a qualified plan balance one that can accept a tax-free transfer?
• What administrative procedures need to be followed to accomplish the transfer?
• What special considerations need to be evaluated to help determine whether the proposed transfer makes sense?
Definitions
Before beginning any discussion of the rules regarding tax-free transfers, it’s important to define the types of plans to which the rules apply, as well as the types of transfers that are tax-free.
Employer-Sponsored Plans
Eligible rollover distributions from the following plans are eligible for tax-free transfers:
• Qualified pension plans
• Tax-sheltered annuities (403(b) plans)
• Governmental 457(b) plans
• A 403(a) annuity
When we refer to employer-sponsored pension plans in this section, we are including all of these.
IRAs
Eligible rollover distributions from traditional individual retirement accounts or individual retirement annuities (IRAs) are also eligible for tax-free transfers. SEP IRAs are treated the same way as traditional IRAs for this purpose. So are SIMPLE IRA distributions after the participant’s plan account has been in existence for at least two years.
Conversions to Roth IRAs are not tax-free transactions, and we will not discuss them in this newsletter. However, transfers between Roth IRAs may be tax-free - if the traditional IRA rollover or trustee-to-trustee rules are followed.
Eligible rollover distributions
An eligible rollover distribution for tax-free transfer purpose is any distribution from the plans above, except:
• Any hardship distribution from a qualified plan
• Any required minimum distribution (RMD)
• Any payment taken as part of a series of substantially equal payments for life, or as part of a payout plan to be made for ten years or more
In addition to these non-eligible rollover distributions, there are a few other special distributions that don’t qualify for rollover. These special distributions include refunds of excess contributions and certain dividends paid on employer securities.
60-Day Rollover
A taxpayer may make a 60-day rollover of an eligible rollover distribution if, after receiving the distribution, the amount is deposited into another eligible plan or IRA. The taxpayer must make the rollover contribution by the 60th day after receiving the eligible rollover distribution.
The IRS may create a special extension to the 60-day requirement in cases where failure to meet the normal deadline is due to circumstances completely out of the control of the taxpayer. Extensions are not routinely granted.
Direct Rollover
A direct rollover is an eligible rollover distribution that is paid directly from one qualified plan to another. It also includes situations where the qualified plan sends a check to the participant, but the check is made out to the new administrator, such as an IRA custodian.
In most cases, the administrator of a qualified plan, a Section 403(b) tax sheltered annuity, or an eligible Section 457 governmental plan must provide a participant the option to have an eligible rollover distribution transferred by direct rollover.
Qualified plans and tax sheltered annuities are not required to accept rollovers, direct or otherwise. Traditional IRAs are required to accept direct rollovers.
Trustee-to-Trustee Transfer
There are special non-rollover circumstances where money is transferred from one qualified plan to another, without having the taxpayer take receipt, in a trustee-to-trustee transfer. This type of transfer is substantially similar to the direct rollover.
Triggering Events
In many cases, a plan participant is theoretically able to transfer a qualifying rollover distribution to another plan on a tax-free basis.
However, the participant may not be eligible for a qualifying rollover distribution unless there is a triggering event.
For example, if an employee has a vested benefit in a defined benefit plan at the old employer, the participant may not be entitled to an eligible rollover distribution at all. Certain kinds of other plans may prevent distributions until the employee dies, attains age 59½, has a severance from employment, becomes disabled or encounters financial hardship.
Between Employer-Sponsored Pension Plans
When an employee leaves one job and starts another, the employee may be eligible to transfer a qualified plan balance from the old employer plan to the new one.
Theoretically Allowable Transfers
Eligible rollover distributions from employer-sponsored pension plans to the following plans are theoretically eligible for tax-free treatment:
• Qualified pension plans
• Tax-sheltered annuities (403(b) plans)
• Governmental 457(b) plans
• 403(a) annuities
Amounts rolled into a governmental 457(b) plan must be accounted for separately from the normal 457(b) plan balance.
Plan Documents
Sometimes provisions in the old employer’s pension plan or the rules of the new plan can prevent the successful tax-free rollover of employee balance. See the discussion of triggering events above.
The new employer’s qualified plan is not required to accept rollover contributions from other pension plans, or even from IRAs. Even if rollovers are allowed, the new plan may also have special rules for how such rollover amounts are treated. The plan document and plan administrator should be consulted for details.
Methods of Transfer
In general, tax-free transfers from one employer-sponsored plan to another must be accomplished by either direct rollover or 60-day rollover. If the 60-day rollover method is
chosen, the participant must be aware of the potential adverse impact of the 20% mandatory withholding, described more fully below.
As with the rules regarding whether rollovers may be done at all, plan documents may create restrictions on the types of transfers or special rules for how such rollovers must be done.
Special Circumstances
QDRO
Under a qualified domestic relations order (QDRO), a participant’s pension plan assets are divided pursuant to divorce or separation. A QDRO generally creates the right of a spouse or child to receive a portion of a participant’s interest in an employer-sponsored plan. The method by which the account is split is a trustee-to-trustee transfer.
Once the account is transferred to a spouse or former spouse beneficiary of the participant, the rollover rules apply to the newly created account as if the beneficiary spouse were the participant.
Thus the beneficiary spouse can make a tax-free rollover of the account balance obtained pursuant to a QDRO if the balance otherwise meets the eligible rollover distribution test.
As with the plan participant, the spouse-beneficiary of a QDRO may have to wait until a triggering event occurs before actually being able to transfer money from an existing plan to a new one.
Designated Roth Account
Section 401(k) plans or 403(b) annuities may have designated Roth accounts. These accounts are not generally eligible for rollover to a qualified pension plan or to an IRA. The accounts may be transferred trustee-to-trustee between other 401(k) or 403(b) Roth accounts. They are also eligible for rollover to a Roth IRA.
Practical Concerns
Where the taxpayer intends a tax-free rollover of a pension plan account, the process may be complicated by the existence of a plan loan, pension-owned life insurance, or net unrealized appreciation in the employer’s stock. See the section below on transfers from an employer-sponsored plan to an IRA for a full discussion.
From an Employer-Sponsored Pension Plan to IRA
While an eligible rollover distribution from an employer-sponsored plan to an IRA is always eligible for a tax-free rollover, it’s important to check the plan document to confirm that the participant may take an eligible rollover distribution.
Transfers of eligible rollover distributions may be accomplished by 60-day rollover or direct rollover.
Withholding
Generally, if an eligible rollover distribution is paid directly to the taxpayer, the payer must withhold 20% of the taxable portion of the distribution for income tax purposes. That can create some difficulty in completing the rollover.
Here’s an example:
Say that George terminates employment, and is entitled to an eligible rollover distribution from his former employer’s 401(K) plan of $100,000. Assume that all of the distribution is pre-tax money. George requests a complete distribution, and asks that it be paid to himself, intending to complete a 60-day rollover later.
George’s former employer withholds 20% of the amount--$20,000—for income taxes, and sends George a check for the $80,000 balance.
If George wants to avoid taxes on the distribution, within 60 days he must deposit into the new pension or IRA the $80,000 he receives plus an additional $20,000 of his own money to equal the pre-withholding balance of his 401(K) plan.
Taxpayers with limited liquidity will find it problematic for them to raise the money for the rollover to replace the amount withheld. That’s why, in most instances where a tax-free transfer from a qualified plan is desired, direct rollover - rather than 60-day rollover - is recommended.
In this example, if George had requested a direct rollover, the special 20% income tax withholding would not have been required.
Practical Concerns
Life Insurance
An IRA may not own life insurance. If a participant’s pension account includes a life policy, the employee must consider how the policy should be handled prior to any rollover of the account to an IRA.
For example, the pension-owned life policy may be distributed to the participant as a taxable distribution. It may also be sold to the employee for fair market value under the rules in Prohibited Transaction Exemption 92-6.
Company Stock/Basis
If a qualified plan participant invests some of the plan account in employer stock, the participant may qualify for special tax treatment of net unrealized appreciation (NUA). The special tax treatment may be lost if the account is rolled over to an IRA.
NUA is the excess of the fair market value of employer securities at the time of a lump sum distribution over the basis of the securities. Any NUA is excluded from the employee’s income at the time of distribution, to the extent that the securities are attributable to employer and nondeductible employee contributions. The employee has the option to have NUA taxed only when the securities are sold. When sold, the NUA is taxed as long term capital gain.
If the pension account is transferred to and subsequently held in an IRA, the favorable capital gains treatment of the NUA is lost. Prior to rolling over any qualified plan balance, the tax consequences of lost NUA should be evaluated.
Loans
Some qualified plans permit participants to take loans secured by the account assets. Upon partial distribution of the account to the participant, some of the distribution may be used to repay the loan. Upon complete distribution, the entire loan must be repaid.
If the participant lets the pension balance be used to repay the outstanding loan, the amount used for repayment is considered a taxable distribution. If during the rollover process the participant replaces those funds used for loan repayment, the taxpayer will be able to avoid taxation of the loan balance.
From an IRA to an Employer-Sponsored Pension Plan
An individual may generally roll over an eligible rollover distribution from an IRA within 60 days into a tax deferred annuity. After-tax contributions may not be rolled over from a traditional IRA into a tax deferred annuity.
An individual may also generally roll over an eligible rollover distribution from an IRA into a governmental 457 plan, but only if the plan administrator accounts separately for the rollover funds and earnings. After-tax contributions are not eligible for rollover from an IRA into a governmental 457 plan.
Tax-free transfers from traditional IRAs to other employer-sponsored pension plans are theoretically allowed by rollover. As with other transfers to pension plans, the plan document must be consulted for possible prohibitions, restrictions or special rules.
Special Rule
Normally, if an IRA balance includes non-deductible contributions, any distributions are considered in part to be a non-taxable return of the non-deductible contributions.
However, if distributions from an IRA are rolled over to a qualified plan, an IRC Section 403(b) tax sheltered annuity, or an eligible IRC Section 457 governmental plan, they are treated as coming first from all non-after-tax contributions and earnings in all of the IRAs of the owner. This special rule allows the IRA owner to roll over the maximum IRA amount to the qualified plan.
Other IRA Rollovers
IRA to IRA
Those with traditional IRAs often want to move money from one IRA to another for various reasons. Complete transfers may be made for the simple purpose of changing administrators. Partial transfers might help with goals such as risk diversification, or to dedicate an account for a 72 (t) systematic withdrawal plan.
One Rollover Per Year
Generally, if you make a tax-free 60-day rollover of any part of a distribution from a traditional IRA, you cannot, within one year, make a tax-free rollover of any later distribution from that same IRA. You also cannot make a tax-free rollover of any amount distributed, within one year, from the IRA into which you made the tax-free rollover.
The one year waiting period does not apply to
• Rollovers from employer-sponsored pension plans to IRAs, or
• Direct rollovers.
Roth Considerations
Roth IRAs are eligible for rollover—direct or 60-day—to other Roth IRA accounts. They are not eligible for rollover to designated 401(k) or 403(b) Roth accounts.
IRA to Charity
In 2009, some clients are able to make tax-favored charitable donations from their IRAs.
Prior to 2006, if a person wanted to make a charitable distribution using IRA money, he’d have to take a taxable distribution from the IRA and write a check to the charity. Many taxpayers who did that were unable to claim a full charitable deduction for the money donated, because they didn’t itemize their deductions or because they otherwise failed to qualify for the deduction.
In 2009, taxpayers who are older than 70 ½ may donate money to charity directly from their IRA account.
• The distributions to charity will be tax-free.
• Taxpayers are allowed to donate up to $100,000 per year from their IRAs.
• Since the distribution will not be included in taxable income, individuals will not be able to claim a tax deduction for the charitable contribution.
This special provision will expire at the end of this year.
Spouse as Beneficiary
Often the beneficiary of an IRA or other qualified account is a surviving spouse. A surviving spouse, unlike any other beneficiary, may do a rollover of the qualified money into an IRA in the surviving spouse’s own name. This option is sometimes referred to as spousal continuation. Many planners automatically encourage the surviving spouse to choose that option.
Rollover vs. Inherited Account
Are there tax benefits to maintaining the current account as a regular beneficiary account—or inherited account--instead of choosing spousal continuation? Sometimes. There are two key
considerations in deciding whether to elect the inherited account for a surviving spouse instead of doing a rollover: the 10% early distribution penalty and the required minimum distribution (RMD) rules.
Ordinarily, distributions from a qualified account prior to age 59-1/2 are subject to a 10% early distribution penalty. One major exception to the premature distribution penalty is a distribution on account of the death of the owner.
Thus, if a surviving spouse younger than 59-1/2 maintains the money as an inherited account, she may make withdrawals at any time for any purpose without the 10% penalty as a distribution
on account of the death of the owner, her deceased spouse.
On the other hand, if the surviving spouse beneficiary rolls the money into an IRA in her own name, any distributions prior to age 59-1/2 generally will be subject to the 10% penalty unless falling under some exception.
If a surviving spouse rolls over the deceased spouse’s account into an IRA in her own name, the RMDs will be based on her age. If the surviving spouse is younger than 70-1/2, there will be no RMDs. If she’s older than 70-1/2, there will be RMDs based on her age.
If the account is maintained as an inherited account, RMDs will be governed by the deceased spouse-owner’s age. If the deceased spouse-owner was under age 70-1/2, then no RMDs from the inherited account are due until the year the deceased spouse-owner would have attained age 70-1/2 had he lived. In the year the deceased spouse-owner would have attained age 70-1/2, and each year thereafter, RMDs from an inherited account must be taken. The beneficiary spouse may choose to base the payout on either the age of the deceased spouse or her own age.
The RMD rules pose another drawback to maintaining an inherited account for families wishing to delay payout of the account for more than one generation.
If the surviving spouse rolls over the account into her own name, she may then name children as the beneficiary, and on her subsequent death, the children may do a stretch based upon their respective ages.
On the other hand, if the surviving spouse maintains the account as an inherited account and dies prior to exhaustion of the account, the children will inherit the account, but will not have the option of doing a stretch based on their ages. They will have to continue the payment method on the schedule started by the surviving spouse.
If the surviving spouse chooses spousal continuation, the account is eligible for rollover under the normal rules. If the surviving spouse chooses an inherited account, the account is only eligible for trustee-to-trustee transfer to a new beneficiary IRA, as described below.
Non-Spouse Beneficiary Account
After the death of a taxpayer with a pension account balance or IRA account, a non-spousal named beneficiary usually has the right to stretch out the income tax result by taking distributions over the beneficiary’s lifetime.
Often the beneficiary may want to transfer the account balance. Funds payable to a non-spouse beneficiary may not be rolled over to the beneficiary’s own IRA or pension account. However, the balance may qualify for a tax-free trustee-to-trustee transfer to a new beneficiary IRA. The new beneficiary IRA would have special restrictions and rules about required minimum distributions that would be consistent with stretch IRA treatment.
Procedurally, the trustee-to-trustee transfer is similar to a direct rollover. However, there is no special 60-day transfer window available for the beneficiary, as there is with a taxpayer’s traditional IRA or pension. A taxpayer who receives a beneficiary account balance personally has no options for a subsequent tax-free transfer, and recognizes income tax on the entire amount received.
Conclusion
Most of our clients will be faced with decisions about qualified plan distributions during their working lifetimes. We will be asked to help evaluate whether a rollover might be the right fit for them.
When done properly, rollovers offer clients the opportunity to continue tax-deferred growth on their retirement assets. If done improperly, an attempted rollover may result in a large unexpected income tax liability, and cause a young client to be liable for an extra 10% penalty tax.
Responsible planners will help their clients save for retirement, and make tax-efficient retirement income choices. Helping clients avoid rollover pitfalls is an important part of that process.
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