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New IRS Final Regulations Benefit IRA ParticipantsNew IRS Final Regulations Benefit IRA Participants

They permit allocation of earnings to disbursements from designated Roth accounts to multiple destinations.

Bruce D. Steiner, Attorney

May 24, 2016

2 Min Read
Roth IRA sign

Some participants in 401(k) plans made nondeductible after-tax contributions to their accounts. Upon retirement, they wanted to segregate the after-tax portion of their benefits from the pre-tax portion, so they could roll the pre-tax portion into a traditional individual retirement account and the after-tax portion into a Roth IRA.

In Notice 2009-68, the Internal Revenue Service said that if all of the funds are rolled over, the basis would be allocated pro rata, so that a portion of the amount rolled into the Roth IRA would be a taxable conversion.

Taxpayers discovered a workaround. They would take a lump-sum distribution and deposit it into a taxable account. Then they would roll the pre-tax amount to a traditional IRA, leaving the after-tax portion behind.  Finally, they would roll the after-tax amount into a Roth IRA. All of this had to be completed within 60 days of receipt of the distribution.

In Notice 2014-64, the IRS reconsidered its position and allowed participants to select how the pre-tax amount is to be allocated among multiple destinations. 

Proposed Regulations

On Oct. 6, 2014, the IRS issued proposed regulations extending this concept to distributions from designated Roth accounts.

Previously, if a participant rolled over a portion of a distribution from a designated Roth account to a Roth IRA, it would include only a pro-rata portion of the earnings. The participant would be taxable on the remaining portion of the earnings if it wasn’t a qualified distribution. To be a qualified distribution, it must be made at least five years after the year of the first designated Roth contribution and after the participant turns age 59 ½ or has a disability.

Final Regulations

The IRS issued the regulations in final form effective May 18, 2016 (T.D. 9769). Under the final regulations, a participant may allocate the earnings to the portion rolled over into another designated Roth account or Roth IRA, thus minimizing the amount that would be taxable if the portion not rolled over isn’t a qualified distribution. The participant may also allocate the earnings in the case of rollovers to multiple destinations, such as another designated Roth account and a Roth IRA.

About the Author

Bruce D. Steiner

Attorney, Kleinberg, Kaplan, Wolff & Cohen P.C.

Bruce Steiner has over 35 years of experience in the areas of taxation, estate planning, business succession planning and estate and trust administration. He is a frequent lecturer at continuing education programs for bar associations, CPAs and other professionals. He is a commentator for Leimberg Information Services, Inc., is a member of the editorial advisory board of Trusts & Estates, is a technical advisor for Ed Slott’s IRA Advisor, and has written numerous articles for Estate Planning, BNA Tax Management’s Estates, Gifts & Trusts Journal, Trusts & Estates, the Journal of Taxation, Probate & Property, TAXES, the CPA Journal, the CLU Journal and other professional journals. Bruce has been quoted in various publications including Forbes, The New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Daily Tax Report, Lawyers Weekly, Bloomberg’s Wealth Manager, Financial Planning, Kiplinger’s Retirement Report, Newsday, the New York Post, the Naples Daily News, Individual Investor, TheStreet.com, and Dow Jones (formerly CBS) Market Watch. Bruce has served on the professional advisory boards of several major charitable organizations and was named a New York Super Lawyer in 2010, 2011 and 2012.

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