Publication 575 |
2000 Tax Year |
General Information
Some of the terms used in this publication are defined in the
following paragraphs.
- A pension is generally a series of definitely
determinable payments made to you after you retire from work. Pension
payments are made regularly and are based on certain factors, such as
years of service with your employer or your prior compensation.
- An annuity is a series of payments under a
contract made at regular intervals over a period of more than one full
year. They can be either fixed (under which you receive a definite
amount) or variable (not fixed). You can buy the contract alone or
with the help of your employer.
- A qualified employee plan is an employer's stock
bonus, pension, or profit-sharing plan that is for the exclusive
benefit of employees or their beneficiaries and that meets Internal
Revenue Code requirements. It qualifies for special tax benefits, such
as tax deferral for employer contributions and rollover distributions,
and capital gain treatment or the 10-year tax option for lump-sum
distributions (if participants qualify).
- A qualified employee annuity is a retirement
annuity purchased by an employer for an employee under a plan that
meets Internal Revenue Code requirements.
- A tax-sheltered annuity (TSA) plan (often
referred to as a "403(b) plan" or a "tax-deferred annuity
plan") is a retirement plan for employees of public schools and
certain tax-exempt organizations. Generally, a TSA plan provides
retirement benefits by purchasing annuity contracts for its
participants.
- A nonqualified employee plan is an employer's
plan that does not meet Internal Revenue Code requirements for
qualified employee plans. It does not qualify for most of the tax
benefits of a qualified plan. For example, see Section 457
Deferred Compensation Plans, later.
Types of pensions and annuities.
Pensions and annuities include the following types.
- Fixed period annuities.
You receive definite
amounts at regular intervals for a specified length of time.
- Annuities for a single life.
You receive definite
amounts at regular intervals for life. The payments end at
death.
- Joint and survivor
annuities. The first
annuitant receives a definite amount at regular intervals for life.
After he or she dies, a second annuitant receives a definite amount at
regular intervals for life. The amount paid to the second annuitant
may or may not differ from the amount paid to the first
annuitant.
- Variable
annuities. You receive
payments that may vary in amount for a specified length of time or for
life. The amounts you receive may depend upon such variables as
profits earned by the pension or annuity funds, cost-of-living
indexes, or earnings from a mutual fund.
- Disability pensions. You receive disability
payments because you retired on disability and have not reached
minimum retirement age.
More than one program.
You may receive employee plan benefits from more than one program
under a single trust or plan of your employer. If you participate in
more than one program, you may have to treat each as a separate
contract, depending upon the facts in each case. Also, you may be
considered to have received more than one pension or annuity. Your
former employer or the plan administrator should be able to tell you
if you have more than one pension or annuity contract.
Example.
Your employer set up a noncontributory profit-sharing plan
for its employees. The plan provides that the amount held in the
account of each participant will be paid when that participant
retires. Your employer also set up a contributory defined benefit
pension plan for its employees providing for the payment of
a lifetime pension to each participant after retirement.
The amount of any distribution from the profit-sharing plan depends
on the contributions (including allocated forfeitures) made for the
participant and the earnings from those contributions. Under the
pension plan, however, a formula determines the amount of the pension
benefits. The amount of contributions is the amount necessary to
provide that pension.
Each plan is a separate program and a separate contract. If you get
benefits from these plans, you must account for each separately, even
though the benefits from both may be included in the same check.
Qualified domestic relations order (QDRO).
A spouse or former spouse who receives part of the benefits from a
retirement plan under a QDRO reports the payments received as if he or
she were a plan participant. The spouse or former spouse is allocated
a share of the participant's cost (investment in the contract) equal
to the cost times a fraction. The numerator (top part) of the fraction
is the present value of the benefits payable to the spouse or former
spouse. The denominator (bottom part) is the present value of all
benefits payable to the participant.
A distribution that is paid to a child or dependent under a QDRO is
taxed to the plan participant.
What is a QDRO?
A QDRO is a judgment, decree, or order relating to payment of child
support, alimony, or marital property rights to a spouse, former
spouse, child, or other dependent. The QDRO must contain certain
specific information, such as the name and last known mailing address
of the participant and each alternative payee, and the amount or
percentage of the participant's benefits to be paid to each alternate
payee. A QDRO may not award an amount or form of benefit that is not
available under the plan.
Variable Annuities
The tax rules in this publication apply both to annuities that
provide fixed payments and to annuities that provide payments that
vary in amount based on investment results or other factors. For
example, they apply to commercial variable annuity contracts, whether
bought by an employee retirement plan for its participants or bought
directly from the issuer by an individual investor. Under these
contracts, the owner can generally allocate the purchase payments
among several types of investment portfolios or mutual funds and the
contract value is determined by the performance of those investments.
The earnings are not taxed until distributed either in a withdrawal or
in annuity payments. The taxable part of a distribution is treated as
ordinary income.
For information on the tax treatment of a transfer or exchange of a
variable annuity contract, see Transfers of Annuity Contracts
under Taxation of Nonperiodic Payments, later.
Withdrawals.
If you withdraw funds before your annuity starting date
and your annuity is under a qualified retirement plan, a ratable part
of the amount withdrawn is tax free. The tax-free part is based on the
ratio of your cost to your account balance under the plan.
If your annuity is under a nonqualified plan (including a contract
you bought directly from the issuer), the amount withdrawn is
allocated first to earnings (the taxable part) and then to your cost
(the tax-free part). However, if you bought your annuity contract
before August 14, 1982, a different allocation applies to the
investment before that date and the earnings on that investment. To
the extent the amount withdrawn does not exceed that investment and
earnings, it is allocated first to your cost (the tax-free part) and
then to earnings (the taxable part).
If you withdraw funds (other than as an annuity) on or after
your annuity starting date, the entire amount withdrawn is
generally taxable.
The amount you receive in a full surrender of your
annuity contract at any time is tax free to the extent of any cost
that you have not previously recovered tax free. The rest is taxable.
For more information on the tax treatment of withdrawals, see
Taxation of Nonperiodic Payments, later. If you withdraw
funds from your annuity before you reach age 59 1/2, also
see Tax on Early Distributions under Special
Additional Taxes, later.
Annuity payments.
If you receive annuity payments under a variable annuity plan or
contract, you recover your cost tax free under either the Simplified
Method or the General Rule, as explained under Taxation of
Periodic Payments, later. For a variable annuity paid under a
qualified plan, you generally must use the Simplified Method. For a
variable annuity paid under a nonqualified plan (including a contract
you bought directly from the issuer), you must use a special
computation under the General Rule. For information, see Variable
annuities in Publication 939
under Computation Under
General Rule.
Death benefits.
If you receive a single-sum distribution from a variable annuity
contract because of the death of the owner or annuitant, the
distribution is generally taxable only to the extent it is more than
the unrecovered cost of the contract. If you choose to receive an
annuity, the payments are subject to tax as described above. If the
contract provides a joint and survivor annuity and the primary
annuitant had received annuity payments before death, you figure the
tax-free part of annuity payments you receive as the survivor in the
same way the primary annuitant did. See Survivors and
Beneficiaries, later.
Section 457 Deferred
Compensation Plans
If you work for a state or local government or for a tax-exempt
organization, you may be eligible to participate in a section 457
deferred compensation plan. You are not taxed currently on your pay
that is deferred under this plan. You or your beneficiary are taxed on
this deferred pay only when it is distributed or made available to
either of you.
For information on the limits on deferrals under section 457 plans
and how to treat excess deferrals, see Retirement Plan
Contributions under Employee Compensation in
Publication 525.
Is your plan eligible?
To find out if your plan is an eligible plan, check with your
employer. The following plans are not treated as section
457 plans.
- Bona fide vacation leave, sick leave, compensatory time,
severance pay, disability pay, or death benefit plans.
- Nonelective deferred compensation plans for nonemployees
(independent contractors).
- Deferred compensation plans maintained by churches for
church employees.
- Length of service award plans to bona fide volunteer
firefighters and emergency medical personnel. An exception applies if
the total amount paid to a volunteer exceeds $3,000 for a one year
period.
Tax treatment of plan distributions.
A section 457 plan is a nonqualified employee plan. Distributions
of deferred pay are not eligible for the 10-year tax option or
rollover treatment, discussed later. The tax on early distributions,
discussed later, does not apply to early distributions.
You may be subject to a tax on excess accumulation if you do not
begin receiving minimum distributions from the plan by your required
beginning date. For more information, see Tax on Excess
Accumulation, later.
A section 457 plan distribution is reported to you on Form
W-2 (not on Form 1099-R), unless you are the beneficiary
of a deceased employee.
Railroad
Retirement
Benefits paid under the Railroad Retirement Act fall into two
categories. These categories are treated differently for income tax
purposes.
The first category is the amount of tier 1 railroad
retirement benefits that equals the social security benefit that a
railroad employee or beneficiary would have been entitled to receive
under the social security system. This part of the tier 1 benefit is
the social security equivalent benefit (SSEB), and you treat it for
tax purposes like social security benefits. If you received or repaid
the SSEB portion of tier 1 benefits during 2000, you will receive Form
RRB-1099, Payments by the Railroad Retirement Board
(or Form RRB-1042S, Statement for Nonresident Aliens
of: Payments by the Railroad Retirement Board, if you are a
nonresident alien) from the U.S. Railroad Retirement Board (RRB).
For more information about the tax treatment of the SSEB portion of
tier 1 benefits and Forms RRB-1099 and RRB-1042S, see
Publication 915,
Social Security and Equivalent Railroad
Retirement Benefits.
The second category contains the rest of the tier 1
railroad retirement benefits, called the non-social security
equivalent benefit (NSSEB). It also contains any tier 2 benefit,
vested dual benefit (VDB), and supplemental annuity benefit. Treat
this category of benefits, shown on Form RRB-1099-R,
Annuities or Pensions by the Railroad Retirement Board, as
an amount received from a qualified employee plan. This allows for the
tax-free (nontaxable) recovery of employee contributions from the tier
2 benefits and the NSSEB part of the tier 1 benefits. (NSSEB and tier
2 benefits, less certain repayments, are combined into one amount
called the Contributory Amount Paid on Form RRB-1099-R.)
Vested dual benefits and supplemental annuity benefits are fully
taxable. See Taxation of Periodic Payments, later, for
information on how to report your benefits and how to recover the
employee contributions tax free.
Nonresident aliens.
Form RRB-1099-R is used for U.S. citizens, resident
aliens, and nonresident aliens. If you are a nonresident alien and
your tax withholding rate changed or your country of legal residence
changed during the year, you may receive more than one Form
RRB-1099-R. To determine your total benefits paid or
repaid and total tax withheld for the year, you should add the amounts
shown on all Forms RRB-1099-R you received for that year.
For information on filing requirements for aliens, see Publication 519,
U.S. Tax Guide for Aliens. For information on tax
treaties between the United States and other countries that may reduce
or eliminate U.S. tax on your benefits, see Publication 901,
U.S.
Tax Treaties.
Form RRB-1099-R.
The following discussion explains the items shown on Form
RRB-1099-R. The amounts shown on this form are before
any deduction for:
- Federal income tax withholding,
- Medicare premiums,
- Garnishments,
- Assignment,
- Recovery of a prior year overpayment of a NSSEB, tier 2
benefit, VDB, or supplemental annuity benefit, and
- Recovery of Railroad Unemployment Insurance Act benefits
received while awaiting payment of your railroad retirement
annuity.
The amounts shown on this form are after any offset for:
- Work deductions,
- Partition deductions,
- Actuarial deductions,
- Annuity waiver, or
- Recovery of a current-year overpayment of NSSEB, tier 2,
VDB, or supplemental annuity benefits.
The amounts shown on Form RRB-1099-R do not reflect any
special rules, such as capital gain treatment or the special 10-year
tax option for lump-sum payments, or tax-free rollovers. To determine
if any of these rules apply to your benefits, see the discussions
about them later.
There are three copies of this form. Copy B is to be included with
your income tax return. Copy C is for your own records. Copy 2 is
filed with your state, city or local income tax return, when required.
See the illustrated Copy B (Form RRB-1099-R) on the next
page.
Each beneficiary will receive his or her own Form
RRB-1099-R. If you receive benefits on more than one
railroad retirement record, you may get more than one Form
RRB-1099-R. So that you get your form timely, make sure
the RRB always has your current mailing address.
Form RRB-1099-R
Box 1--Claim Number and Payee Code.
Your claim number is a six- or nine-digit number preceded by an
alphabetical prefix. This is the number under which the U.S. Railroad
Retirement Board (RRB) paid your benefits. Your payee code follows
your claim number and is the last number in this box. It is used by
the RRB to identify you under your claim number. In all your
correspondence with the RRB, be sure to use the claim number and payee
code shown in this box.
Box 2--Recipient's Identification Number.
This is the social security number (SSN), individual taxpayer
identification number (ITIN), or employer identification number (EIN),
if known, for the person or estate listed as the recipient.
If you are a resident or nonresident alien who must furnish a
taxpayer identification number to the IRS and are not eligible to
obtain an SSN, use Form W-7, Application for IRS Individual
Taxpayer Identification Number, to apply for an ITIN. The
instructions for Form W-7 explain how and when to apply.
Box 3--Employee Contributions.
This is the amount of taxes withheld from the railroad employee's
earnings that exceeds the amount of taxes that would have been
withheld had the earnings been covered under the social security
system. This amount is the employee's cost (investment in the
contract) that you use to figure the tax-free part of the NSSEB and
tier 2 benefit you received (the amount shown in box 4). (For
information on how to figure the tax-free part, see Partly
Taxable Payments under Taxation of Periodic Payments,
later.) The amount shown is the total employee contributions, not
reduced by any amounts that the RRB calculated as previously
recovered. It is the latest amount reported for 2000 and may have
increased or decreased from a previous Form RRB-1099-R. If
this amount has changed, you may need to refigure the tax-free part of
your NSSEB/tier 2 benefit. If this box is blank, it means that the
amount of your NSSEB and tier 2 payments shown in box 4 is fully
taxable.
If you had a previous annuity entitlement that ended and you are
figuring the tax-free part of your NSSEB/tier 2 benefit for your
current annuity entitlement, you should contact the RRB for
confirmation of your correct employee contributions amount.
Box 4--Contributory Amount Paid.
This is the gross amount of NSSEB and tier 2 benefit you received
in 2000, less any 2000 benefits you repaid in 2000. (Any
benefits you repaid in 2000 for an earlier year or for an unknown year
are shown in box 8.) This amount is the total contributory pension
paid in 2000 and is usually partly taxable and partly tax free. You
figure the tax-free part as explained in Partly Taxable Payments
under Taxation of Periodic Payments, later, using the
latest reported amount of employee contributions shown in box 3 as the
cost (investment in the contract).
Box 5--Vested Dual Benefit.
This is the gross amount of vested dual benefit (VDB) payments paid
in 2000, less any 2000 VDB payments you repaid in 2000. It
is fully taxable. VDB payments you repaid in 2000 for an earlier year
or for an unknown year are shown in box 8.
Note.
The amounts shown in boxes 4 and 5 may represent payments for 2000
and/or other years after 1983.
Box 6--Supplemental Annuity.
This is the gross amount of supplemental annuity benefits paid in
2000, less any 2000 supplemental annuity benefits you
repaid in 2000. It is fully taxable. Supplemental annuity benefits you
repaid in 2000 for an earlier year or for an unknown year are shown in
box 8.
Box 7--Total Gross Paid.
This is the sum of boxes 4, 5, and 6. The amount represents the
total pension paid in 2000. Write this amount on line 16a of your Form
1040, line 12a of your Form 1040A, or line 17a of your Form 1040NR.
Box 8--Repayments.
This amount represents any NSSEB, tier 2 benefit, VDB, and
supplemental annuity benefit you repaid to the RRB in 2000 for years
before 2000 or for unknown years. The amount shown in this
box has not been deducted from the amounts shown in boxes 4, 5, and 6.
It only includes repayments of benefits that were taxable to you. This
means it only includes repayments in 2000 of NSSEB benefits paid after
1985, tier 2 and VDB benefits paid after 1983, and supplemental
annuity benefits paid in any year. If you included the benefits in
your income in the year you received them, you may be able to deduct
the repaid amount. For more information about repayments, see
Repayment of benefits received in an earlier year, later.
You may have repaid an overpayment of benefits by returning a
payment, by making a cash refund, or by having an amount withheld.
Box 9--Federal Income Tax Withheld.
This is the total federal income tax withheld from your NSSEB, tier
2 benefit, VDB, and supplemental annuity benefit. Include this on your
income tax return as tax withheld. If you are a nonresident alien and
your tax withholding rate and/or country of legal residence changed
during 2000, you will receive more than one Form
RRB-1099-R for 2000. Therefore, add the amounts in box 9
of all Forms RRB-1099-R you receive for 2000 to determine
your total amount of U.S. federal income tax withheld for
2000.
Box 10--Rate of Tax.
If you are taxed as a U.S. citizen or resident alien, this box does
not apply to you. If you are a nonresident alien, an entry
in this box indicates the rate at which tax was withheld on the NSSEB,
tier 2, VDB, and supplemental annuity payments that were paid to you
in 2000. If you are a nonresident alien whose tax was withheld at more
than one rate during 2000, you will receive a separate Form
RRB-1099-R for each rate change during 2000.
Box 11--Country.
If you are taxed as a U.S. citizen or resident alien, this box does
not apply to you. If you are a nonresident alien, an entry
in this box indicates the country of which you were a resident for tax
purposes at the time you received railroad retirement payments in
2000. If you are a nonresident alien who was a resident of more than
one country during 2000, you will receive a separate Form
RRB-1099-R for each country of residence during 2000.
Box 12--Medicare Premium Total.
This is for information purposes only. The amount shown in this box
represents the total amount of Part B Medicare premiums deducted from
your railroad retirement annuity payments in 2000. Medicare premium
refunds are not included in the Medicare total. The
Medicare total is normally shown on Form RRB-1099 (if you are a
citizen or resident of the United States) or Form RRB-1042S (if
you are a nonresident alien). However, if Form RRB-1099 or Form
RRB-1042S is not required for 2000, then this total will be
shown on Form RRB-1099-R. If your Medicare premiums were
deducted from your social security benefits, paid by a third party,
and/or you paid the premiums by direct billing, your Medicare total
will not be shown in this box.
Help from the RRB.
For assistance with questions about your Form
RRB-1099-R, you should contact your nearest RRB field
office (if you reside in the United States) or U.S. consulate/embassy
(if you reside outside of the United States). You may visit the RRB on
the Internet at www.rrb.gov.
Repayment of benefits received in an earlier year.
If you had to repay any railroad retirement benefits that you had
included in your income in an earlier year because at that time you
thought you had an unrestricted right to it, you can deduct the amount
you repaid in the year in which you repaid it.
If you repaid $3,000 or less, deduct it on line 22 of
Schedule A (Form 1040). The 2%-of-adjusted-gross-
income limit applies to this deduction. You cannot take this
deduction if you file Form 1040A.
If you repaid more than $3,000, you can either take a
deduction for the amount repaid on line 27 of Schedule A (Form 1040)
or you can take a credit against your tax. For more information, see
Repayments in Publication 525.
Withholding Tax
and Estimated Tax
Your retirement plan payments are subject to federal income tax
withholding. However, you can choose not to have tax withheld on
payments you receive unless they are eligible rollover distributions.
If you choose not to have tax withheld or if you do not have enough
tax withheld, you may have to make estimated tax payments. See
Estimated tax, later.
The withholding rules apply to the taxable part of
payments you receive from:
- An employer pension, annuity, profit-sharing, or stock bonus
plan,
- Any other deferred compensation plan,
- An individual retirement arrangement (IRA), and
- A commercial annuity.
For this purpose, a commercial annuity means an annuity,
endowment, or life insurance contract issued by an insurance company.
There will be no withholding on any part of a distribution that (it
is reasonable to believe) will not be includible in gross income.
These withholding rules also apply to disability pension
distributions received before your minimum retirement age. See
Disability Retirement, later.
Choosing no withholding.
You can choose not to have income tax withheld from retirement plan
payments unless they are eligible rollover distributions. This applies
to periodic and nonperiodic payments. The payer will tell you how to
make the choice. This choice remains in effect until you revoke it.
The payer will ignore your choice not to have tax withheld if:
- You do not give the payer your social security number (in
the required manner), or
- The IRS notifies the payer, before the payment is made, that
you gave an incorrect social security number.
To choose not to have tax withheld, a U.S. citizen or resident must
give the payer a home address in, and have the check delivered to an
address in, the United States or its possessions. Without that
address, the payer must withhold tax. For example, the payer has to
withhold tax if the recipient has provided a U.S. address for a
nominee, trustee, or agent to whom the benefits are delivered, but has
not provided his or her own U.S. home address.
If you do not give the payer a home address in the United States or
its possessions, you can choose not to have tax withheld only if you
certify to the payer that you are not a U.S. citizen, a U.S. resident
alien, or someone who left the country to avoid tax. But if you so
certify, you may be subject to the 30% flat rate withholding that
applies to nonresident aliens. This 30% rate will not apply if you are
exempt or subject to a reduced rate by treaty. For details, get
Publication 519.
Periodic payments.
Unless you choose no withholding, your annuity or periodic payments
(other than eligible rollover distributions) will be treated like
wages for withholding purposes. Periodic payments are amounts paid at
regular intervals (such as weekly, monthly, or yearly), for a period
of time greater than one year (such as for 15 years or for life). You
should give the payer a completed withholding certificate (Form
W-4P
or a similar form provided by
the payer). If you do not, tax will be withheld as if you were married
and claiming three withholding allowances.
Tax will be withheld as if you were single and were claiming no
withholding allowances if:
- You do not give the payer your social security number (in
the required manner), or
- The IRS notifies the payer (before any payment is made) that
you gave an incorrect social security number.
You must file a new withholding certificate to change the amount of
withholding.
Nonperiodic distributions.
For a nonperiodic distribution (a payment other than a periodic
payment) that is not an eligible rollover distribution, the
withholding is 10% of the distribution, unless you choose not to have
tax withheld. You can use Form W-4P to elect to have no income
tax withheld. You can also ask the payer to withhold an additional
amount using Form W-4P. The part of any loan treated as a
distribution (except an offset amount to repay the loan), explained
later, is subject to withholding under this rule.
Eligible rollover distributions.
In general, an eligible rollover distribution is any distribution
of all or any part of the balance to your credit in a qualified
retirement plan except:
- The nontaxable part of a distribution,
- A required minimum distribution (described under Tax on
Excess Accumulation, later), or
- Any of a series of substantially equal distributions paid at
least once a year over your lifetime or life expectancy (or the
lifetimes or life expectancies of you and your beneficiary), or over a
period of 10 years or more.
See Rollovers, later, for additional exceptions.
Withholding.
If you receive an eligible rollover distribution, 20% of it will
generally be withheld for income tax. You cannot choose not to have
tax withheld from an eligible rollover distribution. However, tax will
not be withheld if you have the plan administrator pay the eligible
rollover distribution directly to another qualified plan or an IRA in
a direct rollover. See Rollovers, later, for more
information.
Estimated tax.
Your estimated tax is the total of your expected income tax,
self-employment tax, and certain other taxes for the year, minus your
expected credits and withheld tax. Generally, you must make estimated
tax payments for 2001 if your estimated tax, as defined above, is
$1,000 or more and you estimate that the total amount of income tax to
be withheld will be less than the lesser of:
- 90% of the tax to be shown on your 2001 return, or
- 100% of the tax shown on your 2000 return.
If your adjusted gross income for 2000 was more than $150,000
($75,000 if your filing status for 2001 is married filing separately),
substitute 110% for 100% in (2) above. For more information, get
Publication 505,
Tax Withholding and Estimated Tax.
In figuring your withholding or estimated tax, remember that a part
of your monthly social security or equivalent tier 1 railroad
retirement benefits may be taxable. See Publication 915,
Social
Security and Equivalent Railroad Retirement Benefits. You can
choose to have income tax withheld from those benefits. You must use
Form W-4V, Voluntary Withholding Request, to make
this choice.
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