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The IRS has finalized rules on required withdrawals for certain inherited individual retirement accounts and other plans. In final regulations last week, the agency confirmed most non-spouse beneficiaries have 10 years after the original owner's death to deplete inherited retirement accounts. These heirs also must take yearly required minimum distributions, or RMDs, which had been a lingering question among tax professionals for years. Before the Secure Act of 2019, heirs could "stretch" retirement account withdrawals over their lifetime, which reduced yearly taxes. Regardless, heirs are "missing the boat" because they should consider withdrawing more from inherited accounts now while tax rates are lower, said IRA expert and certified public accountant Ed Slott.
Persons: Ed Slott, Kamala Harris, Slott Organizations: IRS, Finance Locations: U.S
If you're weighing a Roth individual retirement account conversion, you could save on taxes by leveraging a limited window of time, experts say. Roth conversions transfer pretax or nondeductible IRA money to a Roth IRA, which kickstarts future tax-free growth. After you stop working, but before you start required withdrawals from retirement accounts, is "the sweet spot" for Roth conversions, according to JoAnn May, a Berwyn, Illinois-based certified financial planner at Forest Asset Management. Plus, many investors want to leverage lower income tax brackets through 2025 before provisions could sunset from former President Donald Trump's signature tax overhaul, she said. After a Roth conversion, you'll owe regular income taxes on the converted amount.
Persons: Roth, JoAnn May, IRAs —, Donald Trump's, you'll Organizations: Roth IRA, Asset Management, Finance Locations: Berwyn , Illinois
Following the Supreme Court's ruling on President Joe Biden's student loan forgiveness plan, interest on student debt will begin to accrue in September, with payments due in October. Borrowers with federal student loan payments currently owe $37,338, on average, with a median monthly payment of $250, according to the Education Data Initiative. But for certain workers — especially those with piles of student debt — finding room in the budget to invest for retirement can be difficult. Under the new law, employers can make matching contributions to workplace plans — including 401(k)s, 403(b)s, 457(b)s and SIMPLE IRAs — based on an employee's qualified student loan payments. In order to qualify for the match, workers must simply certify that student loan payments have been made.
Persons: Joe Biden's Organizations: Education Data
Roth provisions in Secure 2.0: What you should know
  + stars: | 2023-02-13 | by ( Jeanne Sahadi | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +4 min
How Secure 2.0 broadens accessHere are four key Roth-related changes in the new retirement law. Catch-up contributions for high earners: If you’re at least 50 and max out your contributions to your 401(k), you will be permitted to save an additional $7,500 in catch-up contributions. SIMPLE and SEP IRAs: Both SEP IRAs and SIMPLE IRAs — which are used by small businesses — are now permitted to be designated as Roth IRAs if a small business owner chooses. The only way to remedy that is to roll your Roth 401(k) money into a Roth IRA. But, starting in 2024, your Roth 401(k) will no longer be subject to required minimum distribution rules.
The retail brokerage will pay a 1% "match" on contributions its customers make to a Robinhood individual retirement account, the firm said Tuesday. The firm is billing it as the first-ever match paid to retail IRA customers (i.e., outside of a workplace retirement plan.) A 401(k) match is a common retirement benefit offered by employers that sponsor a workplace retirement plan. How the match worksA 401(k) match is generally structured as a share of employee contributions. There aren't any contribution or account minimums to get the Robinhood match, and trades don't carry commissions.
The U.S. has a voluntary retirement savings system. But most IRA funds aren't contributed directly — they were first saved in a workplace retirement plan and then rolled into an IRA. 1 issue," Will Hansen, chief government affairs officer at the American Retirement Association, a trade group, said of workplace retirement savings. "[However], the retirement system is actually a good system for those who have access," Hansen said. In such cases, it may not be fair to place primary blame on the structure of the U.S. retirement system, Hansen said.
Choose where to open your IRAThe first step is to choose what type of institution you'll open your IRA through. Select your IRA account typeThere are several types of IRA accounts to choose from. They work similarly to a traditional IRA: They're funded with pre-tax earnings and withdrawals are taxable in retirement. Some will send the money directly to your new IRA account. If you rollover funds to a traditional IRA, you won't need to pay taxes on the funds (until you start making withdrawals).
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