Are Roth IRA Withdrawals Taxed?

Are Roth IRA Withdrawals Taxed

Are Roth IRA withdrawals taxed? Yes, some withdrawals are taxable.

Even worse, some can be socked with a 10 percent early withdrawal penalty tax, and this can happen even when there’s no income tax hit.

Rules for Qualified Withdrawals Are Simple

Any withdrawals from any of your Roth accounts are federal-income-tax-free qualified withdrawals if you, as a Roth IRA owner,

  • are age 59 1/2 or older, and
  • have had at least one Roth IRA open for over five years.

Such withdrawals are usually state-income-tax-free too. Good!

You must pass both the age and the five-year tests to have a qualified withdrawal.

The five-year period for determining whether your withdrawals are qualified starts on January 1 of the first tax year for which you make a Roth contribution. It can be a regular annual contribution or a conversion contribution.

Example 1. Figuring the earliest date for qualified withdrawals.

You established your initial Roth IRA (Roth IRA-1) with a regular annual contribution made on April 15, 2020, for your 2019 tax year. Your five-year period started on January 1, 2019, even though you physically made your initial Roth contribution in 2020.

Anytime on or after January 1, 2024, you can take federal-income-tax-free qualified withdrawals from Roth IRA-1, assuming you are age 59 1/2 or older on the withdrawal date.

You opened up a second Roth account (Roth IRA-2) in 2022 with a conversion contribution from a traditional IRA.

You can take tax-free qualified withdrawals from Roth IRA-1 and/or Roth IRA-2 anytime on or after January 1, 2024, assuming you are age 59 1/2 or older on the withdrawal date

Rules for Non-Qualified Withdrawals Are Not So Simple

A non-qualified withdrawal is potentially subject to federal income tax.

In addition, non-qualified withdrawals taken before age 59 1/2 are potentially subject to a 10 percent early withdrawal penalty tax.

To make things a bit easier to understand, we will break down non-qualified withdrawals into two scenarios:

Withdrawals that are non-qualified because they are taken before age 59 1/2

Withdrawals that are non-qualified solely because they are taken before you’ve passed the five-year test

  Scenario 1: Withdrawal Is Non-Qualified because You Take It before Age 59 1/2 

In general, any Roth withdrawal taken before you have reached age 59 1/2 is a non-qualified withdrawal by definition. The only exceptions are

when the special first-time home purchase provision (explained later) applies, or

when the account owner (that would be you) is disabled or dead.

A non-qualified withdrawal is potentially subject to both federal income tax and the 10 percent early withdrawal penalty tax.

Non-qualified withdrawals can potentially come from four different layers. Different federal income tax rules apply to each layer.

Key point. If you have several Roth IRAs, you must aggregate them and treat them as a single account to determine which layer or layers each withdrawal comes from and the resulting federal income tax consequences.

  Withdrawals from Layer No. 1 (Annual Contributions)

Non-qualified withdrawals are deemed to come first from the layer consisting of annual Roth contributions, which we will call Layer No. 1. Withdrawals from this layer are always federal-income-tax-free and penalty-free. (Remember, this is the money you put into the Roth, not the earnings of the Roth.)

To determine how much is in Layer No. 1, combine the annual contributions to all Roth IRAs set up in your name.

To prove that you owe no federal income tax or early withdrawal penalty tax on a non-qualified withdrawal from Layer No.1, complete Part III of IRS Form 8606 Nondeductible IRAs, and include it with your Form 1040.

Enter the total amount of the withdrawal on line 4a of your Form 1040. Enter zero on line 4b, because withdrawals from Layer No. 1 are always federal-income-tax-free.

 

  Withdrawals from Layer No. 2 (Taxable Portion of Conversion Contributions)

After you’ve exhausted Layer No. 1, additional non-qualified withdrawals are deemed to come from the layer consisting of the taxable portion of any Roth conversion contributions, which we will call Layer No. 2.

Conversion contributions can come from converting a traditional IRA into a Roth account or from contributing a retirement plan distribution, such as from a 401(k) account to a Roth IRA. The taxable portion of a conversion contribution is the amount of gross income that was triggered by the conversion contribution (the total contribution amount minus any non-deductible contributions included in that contribution).

To determine how much is in Layer No. 2, combine all the taxable conversion contributions to all Roth IRAs set up in your name.

While withdrawals from Layer No. 2 are always federal-income-tax-free, you could still get hit with the 10 percent early withdrawal penalty tax. Specifically, the 10 percent penalty tax hits any amount withdrawn from Layer No. 2 within five years of the conversion contribution unless one of the penalty tax exceptions for IRAs is available.

The five-year period is deemed to begin on January 1 of the year during which you made the conversion contribution.

If you made several conversion contributions in different years, use the first-in-first-out (FIFO) principle to determine which contribution the withdrawal comes from for purposes of applying the five-year rule.

To prove that no federal income tax is owed on a non-qualified withdrawal from Layer No. 2, complete Part III of IRS Form 8606 and include it with your Form 1040.

If you owe the 10 percent early withdrawal penalty tax, complete IRS Form 5329, Additional Taxes on Qualified Plans (Including IRAs), and Other Tax-Favored Accounts, and include it with your Form 1040.

Enter the penalty tax amount on the appropriate line of Form 1040.

Enter the total amount of the withdrawal on line 4a of your Form 1040. Enter zero on line 4b, because withdrawals from Layer No. 2 are always federal income-tax-free even though they may be exposed to the 10 percent early withdrawal penalty tax.

  Withdrawals from Layer No. 3 (Non-Taxable Portion of Conversion Contributions)

After you’ve exhausted Layer No. 1 and Layer No. 2, additional non-qualified withdrawals are deemed to come from the layer consisting of the nontaxable portion of any Roth conversion contributions, which we will call Layer No. 3.

The non-taxable portion of a conversion contribution equals the amount of nondeductible contributions included in that conversion.

To determine how much is in Layer No. 3, combine all the non-taxable conversion contribution amounts to all Roth IRAs set up in your name.

Withdrawals from Layer No. 3 are always federal-income-tax-free and penalty-tax-free.

To prove that no federal income tax is owed on a non-qualified withdrawal from Layer No. 3, complete Part III of IRS Form 8606, and include the form with your Form 1040.

Enter the total amount of the withdrawal on line 4a of your Form 1040. Enter zero on line 4b, because withdrawals from Layer No. 3 are federal-income tax-free.

  Withdrawals from Layer No. 4 (Account Earnings)

Any additional non-qualified withdrawals come from the layer consisting of Roth IRA earnings, which we will call Layer No. 4.

Non-qualified withdrawals from Layer No. 4 are always 100 percent taxable. Complete Part III of IRS Form 8606, and enter the taxable amount from Layer No.

4 on Line 4b of your Form 1040.

In addition, you’ll owe the 10 percent early withdrawal penalty tax on non-qualified withdrawals taken from Layer No. 4 unless one of the exceptions to the penalty tax for IRAs is available.

If you owe the 10 percent early withdrawal penalty tax, complete IRS Form 5329 and include it with your Form 1040. Then enter the penalty tax amount on the appropriate line of your Form 1040.

Enter the total amount of the withdrawal on line 4a of your Form 1040. Enter the same amount on line 4b, because withdrawals from Layer No. 4 are always taxable.

  Scenario 2: Withdrawal Is Non-Qualified because You Fail the Five-Year Test

Any Roth withdrawal taken after you have reached age 59 1/2 (or died or become disabled) but before you pass the five-year test is a non-qualified withdrawal by definition.

As such, it’s potentially subject to federal income tax and the 10 percent early withdrawal penalty tax.

In Scenario 2, where you fail the five-year test, non-qualified withdrawals are handled under the same four-layer system that applies to Scenario 1 nonqualified withdrawals.

Key point. In this failed-the-five-year-test scenario, you are never hit with the 10 percent penalty tax on any withdrawals that are taken after you reach age 59 ½, become disabled, or die.

Reminder. If you have several Roth IRAs, you must aggregate them and treat them as a single account to determine which layer(s) each withdrawal comes from and the resulting federal income tax consequences.

 

  Don’t Overlook First-Time Home Purchase Exception for Under-Age-59-1/2 Account Owners

Assuming you’ve passed the five-year test, this exception allows federal-income-tax-free and penalty-free Roth IRA withdrawals to the extent you spend the money within 120 days on qualified acquisition costs for a principal residence.

This favorable exception is available even if you are under age 59 1/2. But there’s a $ 10,000-lifetime limit, and you must have passed the five-year test.

To the extent this exception applies, treat the applicable amount as a federal-income-tax-free qualified withdrawal.

Under this exception, the principal residence can be acquired by

  • you, as the Roth IRA account owner, or your spouse;
  • your child, grandchild, or grandparent; or
  • your spouse’s child, grandchild, or grandparent

The buyer of the principal residence (and the buyer’s spouse, if the buyer is married) must not have owned a present interest in a principal residence within the two-year period that ends on the acquisition date.  Qualified acquisition costs are defined as costs to acquire, construct, or reconstruct a principal residence—including closing costs.

When you take a withdrawal that qualifies for this exception, you should receive a Form 1099-R from the Roth IRA trustee or custodian.

Box 1 of Form 1099-R should report the gross amount of the withdrawal.

Usually, box 2b will be checked to indicate that the trustee or custodian has not determined the taxable amount (if any).

Box 7 may report distribution code J (early distribution) if the trustee or custodian thinks the 10 percent penalty tax is owed because you were not age 59 1/2 or older or disabled or dead when the withdrawal was taken.

For a Roth IRA withdrawal that qualifies for this exception, enter the total withdrawal amount on line 4a of Form 1040.21 Enter the qualified home purchase expenses (subject to the lifetime $10,000 limit) in Part III, line 20 of Form 8606 and follow the remaining instructions. Include the completed Form 8606 with your Form 1040.

 Takeaways From Are Roth IRA Withdrawals Taxed 

Know this: There is no federal income tax hit on a qualified Roth withdrawal.

You just have to make sure your withdrawal is actually qualified before pulling the trigger.

The tax rules for non-qualified Roth IRA withdrawals are complicated. That said, everything falls in place when you properly complete Part III of IRS Form 8606 and enter the proper amount (which might be zero) on line 4b of your Form 1040.

The other complicating factor for non-qualified withdrawals is the 10 percent early withdrawal penalty tax, which you must calculate on IRS Form 5329 when it applies.

If your plan is to take one or more big non-qualified Roth IRA withdrawals during the year, you need to speak with your tax pro and have him or her advise you on both the front and back ends of your withdrawal.

And if you have a Roth and want to take a non-qualified withdrawal, make sure you know the tax consequences. If you have questions, please call me on my direct line at 509-543-7600 or send a request HERE.

October 2021

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