Publication 575 |
2001 Tax Year |
Taxation of Nonperiodic Payments
This section of the publication explains how any nonperiodic
distributions you receive under a pension or annuity plan are taxed.
Nonperiodic distributions are also known as amounts not received
as an annuity. They include all payments other than periodic
payments and corrective distributions.
For example, the following items are treated as nonperiodic
distributions.
- Cash withdrawals.
- Distributions of current earnings (dividends) on your
investment. However, do not include these distributions in your income
to the extent the insurer keeps them to pay premiums or other
consideration for the contract.
- Certain loans. See Loans Treated as Distributions,
later.
- The value of annuity contracts transferred without full and
adequate consideration. See Transfers of Annuity Contracts,
later.
Corrective distributions of excess plan contributions.
If the contributions made for you during the year to certain
retirement plans exceed certain limits, the excess is taxable to you.
To correct an excess, your plan may distribute it to you (along with
any income earned on the excess). Although the plan reports the
corrective distributions on Form 1099-R, the distribution is
not treated as a nonperiodic distribution from the plan. It
is not subject to the allocation rules explained in the following
discussion, it cannot be rolled over into another plan, and it is not
subject to the additional tax on early distributions.
If your retirement plan made a corrective distribution of excess
contributions (excess deferrals, excess contributions, or excess
annual additions), your Form 1099-R should have the code "8,"
"D," "P," or "E" in box 7.
For information on plan contribution limits and how to report
corrective distributions of excess contributions, see Retirement
Plan Contributions under Employee Compensation in
Publication 525.
Figuring the Taxable Amount
How you figure the taxable amount of a nonperiodic distribution
depends on whether it is made before the annuity starting date or on
or after the annuity starting date. If it is made before the annuity
starting date, its tax treatment also depends on whether it is made
under a qualified or nonqualified plan and, if it is made under a
nonqualified plan, whether it fully discharges the contract or is
allocable to an investment you made before August 14, 1982.
You may be able to roll over the taxable amount of a nonperiodic
distribution from a qualified retirement plan into another qualified
retirement plan or an IRA tax free. See Rollovers, later.
If you do not make a tax-free rollover and the distribution qualifies
as a lump-sum distribution, you may be able to elect an optional
method of figuring the tax on the taxable amount. See Lump-Sum
Distributions, later.
Annuity starting date.
The annuity starting date is either the first day of the first
period for which you receive an annuity payment under the contract or
the date on which the obligation under the contract becomes fixed,
whichever is later.
Distributions of employer securities.
If you receive a distribution of employer securities from a
qualified retirement plan, you may be able to defer the tax on the
net unrealized appreciation (NUA) in the securities. The
NUA is the increase in the securities' value while they were in the
trust. This tax deferral applies to distributions of the employer
corporation's stocks, bonds, registered debentures, and debentures
with interest coupons attached.
If the distribution is a lump-sum distribution, tax is deferred on
all of the NUA unless you choose to include it in your income for the
year of the distribution.
A lump-sum distribution for this purpose is the distribution or
payment of a plan participant's entire balance (within a single tax
year) from all of the employer's qualified plans of one kind (pension,
profit-sharing, or stock bonus plans), but only if paid:
- Because of the plan participant's death,
- After the participant reaches age 59 1/2,
- Because the participant, if an employee, separates from
service, or
- After the participant, if a self-employed individual,
becomes totally and permanently disabled.
If you choose to include NUA in your income for the year of the
distribution and the participant was born before 1936, you may be able
to figure the tax on the NUA using the optional methods described
under Lump-Sum Distributions, later.
If the distribution is not a lump-sum distribution, tax is deferred
only on the NUA resulting from employee contributions other than
deductible voluntary employee contributions.
The NUA on which tax is deferred should be shown in box 6 of the
Form 1099-R you receive from the payer of the distribution.
When you sell or exchange employer securities with tax-deferred
NUA, any gain is long-term capital gain up to the amount of
the NUA. Any gain that is more than the NUA is long-term or short-term
gain, depending on how long you held the securities after the
distribution.
How to report.
Enter the total amount of a nonperiodic distribution on line 16a of
Form 1040 or line 12a of Form 1040A. Enter the taxable amount of the
distribution on line 16b of Form 1040 or line 12b of Form 1040A.
However, if you make a tax-free rollover or elect an optional method
of figuring the tax on a lump-sum distribution, see How to
report in the discussions of those tax treatments, later.
Distribution On or After
Annuity Starting Date
If you receive a nonperiodic payment from your annuity contract
on or after the annuity starting date, you generally must
include all of the payment in gross income. For example, a
cost-of-living increase in your pension after the annuity starting
date is an amount not received as an annuity and, as such, is fully
taxable.
Reduction in subsequent payments.
If the annuity payments you receive are reduced because you
received the nonperiodic distribution, you can exclude part of the
nonperiodic distribution from gross income. The part you can exclude
is equal to your cost in the contract reduced by any tax-free amounts
you previously received under the contract, multiplied by a fraction.
The numerator (top part) is the reduction in each annuity payment
because of the nonperiodic distribution. The denominator (bottom part)
is the full unreduced amount of each annuity payment originally
provided for.
Single-sum in connection with the start of annuity payments.
If you receive a single-sum payment on or after your annuity
starting date in connection with the start of annuity payments for
which you must use the Simplified Method, treat the single-sum payment
as if it were received before your annuity starting date.
(See Simplified Method under Taxation of Periodic
Payments, earlier, for information on its required use.) Follow
the rules in the next discussion, Distribution Before Annuity
Starting Date From a Qualified Plan.
Distribution in full discharge of contract.
You may receive an amount on or after the annuity starting date
that fully satisfies the payer's obligation under the contract. The
amount may be a refund of what you paid for the contract or for the
complete surrender, redemption, or maturity of the contract. Include
the amount in gross income only to the extent that it exceeds the
remaining cost of the contract.
Distribution Before Annuity Starting Date From a Qualified
Plan
If you receive a nonperiodic distribution before the
annuity starting date from a qualified retirement plan, you
generally can allocate only part of it to the cost of the contract.
You exclude from your gross income the part that you allocate to the
cost. You include the remainder in your gross income.
For this purpose, a qualified retirement plan is:
- A qualified employee plan (or annuity contract purchased by
such a plan),
- A qualified employee annuity plan, or
- A tax-sheltered annuity plan (403(b) plan).
Use the following formula to figure the tax-free amount of the
distribution.
For this purpose, your account balance includes only amounts to
which you have a nonforfeitable right (a right that cannot be taken
away).
Example.
Before she had a right to an annuity, Ann Blake received $50,000
from her retirement plan. She had $10,000 invested (cost) in the plan.
Her account balance was $100,000. She can exclude $5,000 of the
$50,000 distribution, figured as follows:
Defined contribution plan.
Under a defined contribution plan, your contributions (and income
allocable to them) may be treated as a separate contract for figuring
the taxable part of any distribution. A defined contribution plan is a
plan in which you have an individual account. Your benefits are based
only on the amount contributed to the account and the income,
expenses, etc., allocated to the account.
Plans that permitted withdrawal of employee contributions.
If you contributed before 1987 to a pension plan that, as of May 5,
1986, permitted you to withdraw your contributions before your
separation from service, any distribution before your annuity starting
date is tax free to the extent that it, when added to earlier
distributions received after 1986, does not exceed your cost as of
December 31, 1986. Apply the allocation described in the preceding
discussion only to any excess distribution.
Distribution Before Annuity Starting Date From a Nonqualified
Plan
If you receive a nonperiodic distribution before the annuity
starting date from a plan other than a qualified retirement
plan, it is allocated first to earnings (the taxable part) and then to
the cost of the contract (the tax-free part). This allocation rule
applies, for example, to a commercial annuity contract you bought
directly from the issuer. You include in your gross income the smaller
of:
- The nonperiodic distribution, or
- The amount by which:
- The cash value of the contract (figured without considering
any surrender charge) immediately before you receive the distribution
exceeds
- Your investment in the contract at that time.
Example.
You bought an annuity from an insurance company. Before the annuity
starting date under your annuity contract, you received a $7,000
distribution. At the time of the distribution, the annuity had a cash
value of $16,000 and your investment in the contract was $10,000.
Because the distribution is allocated first to earnings, you must
include $6,000 ($16,000 - $10,000) in your gross income. The
remaining $1,000 is a tax-free return of part of your investment.
Exception to allocation rule.
Certain nonperiodic distributions received before the annuity
starting date are not subject to the allocation rule in the
preceding discussion. Instead, you include the amount of the payment
in gross income only to the extent that it exceeds the cost of the
contract.
This exception applies to the following distributions.
- Distributions in full discharge of a contract that you
receive as a refund of what you paid for the contract or for the
complete surrender, redemption, or maturity of the contract.
- Distributions from life insurance or endowment contracts
(other than modified endowment contracts, as defined in Section 7702A
of the Internal Revenue Code) that are not received as an annuity
under the contracts.
- Distributions under contracts entered into before August 14,
1982, to the extent that they are allocable to your investment before
August 14, 1982.
If you bought an annuity contract and made investments both
before August 14, 1982, and later, the distributed amounts are
allocated to your investment or to earnings in the following order.
- The part of your investment that was made before August 14,
1982. This part of the distribution is tax free.
- The earnings on the part of your investment that was made
before August 14, 1982. This part of the distribution is
taxable.
- The earnings on the part of your investment that was made
after August 13, 1982. This part of the distribution is
taxable.
- The part of your investment that was made after August 13,
1982. This part of the distribution is tax free.
Distribution of U.S. savings bonds.
If you receive U.S. savings bonds in a taxable distribution from a
retirement plan, report the value of the bonds at the time of
distribution as income. The value of the bonds includes accrued
interest. When you cash the bonds, your Form 1099-INT will show
the total interest accrued, including the part you reported when the
bonds were distributed to you. For information on how to adjust your
interest income for U.S. savings bond interest you previously
reported, see How To Report Interest Income in chapter 1 of
Publication 550,
Investment Income and Expenses.
Loans Treated as Distributions
If you borrow money from your retirement plan, you must treat the
loan as a nonperiodic distribution from the plan unless it qualifies
for the exception explained below. This treatment also applies to any
loan under a contract purchased under your retirement plan, and to the
value of any part of your interest in the plan or contract that you
pledge or assign (or agree to pledge or assign). It applies to loans
from both qualified and nonqualified plans, including commercial
annuity contracts you purchase directly from the issuer. Further, it
applies if you renegotiate, extend, renew, or revise a loan that
qualified for the exception below if the altered loan does not
qualify. In that situation, you must treat the outstanding balance of
the loan as a distribution on the date of the transaction.
You determine how much of the loan is taxable using the allocation
rules for nonperiodic distributions discussed under Figuring the
Taxable Amount, earlier. The taxable part may be subject to the
additional tax on early distributions. It is not an eligible rollover
distribution and does not qualify for the 10-year tax option.
Exception for qualified plan, 403(b) plan, and government
plan loans.
At least part of certain loans under a qualified employee plan,
qualified employee annuity, tax-sheltered annuity (403(b) plan), or
government plan is not treated as a distribution from the plan. This
exception applies only to a loan that either:
- Is used to buy your main home, or
- Must be repaid within 5 years.
To qualify for this exception, the loan must require
substantially level payments at least quarterly over the life of the
loan.
If a loan qualifies for this exception, you must treat it as a
nonperiodic distribution only to the extent that the loan, when added
to the outstanding balances of all your loans from all plans of your
employer (and certain related employers) exceeds the lesser of:
- $50,000, or
- Half the present value (but not less than $10,000) of your
nonforfeitable accrued benefit under the plan, determined without
regard to any accumulated deductible employee contributions.
You must reduce the $50,000 amount above if you already had an
outstanding loan from the plan during the 1-year period ending the day
before you took out the loan. The amount of the reduction is your
highest outstanding loan balance during that period minus the
outstanding balance on the date you took out the new loan. If this
amount is zero or less, ignore it.
Related employers and related plans.
Treat separate employers' plans as plans of a single employer if
they are treated that way under other qualified retirement plan rules
because the employers are related. You must treat all plans of a
single employer as one plan.
Employers are related if they are:
- Members of a controlled group of corporations,
- Businesses under common control, or
- Members of an affiliated service group.
An affiliated service group generally is two or more service
organizations whose relationship involves an ownership connection.
Their relationship also includes the regular or significant
performance of services by one organization for or in association with
another.
Denial of interest deduction.
If the loan from a qualified plan is not treated as a distribution
because the exception applies, you cannot deduct any of the interest
on the loan during any period that:
- The loan is secured by amounts from elective deferrals under
a qualified cash or deferred arrangement (section 401(k) plan) or a
salary reduction agreement to purchase a tax-sheltered annuity,
or
- You are a key employee as defined in Section 416(i) of the
Internal Revenue Code.
Reporting by plan.
If your loan is treated as a distribution, you should receive a
Form 1099-R showing code "L" in box 7.
Effect on investment in the contract.
If you receive a loan under a qualified plan (a qualified employee
plan or qualified employee annuity) or tax-sheltered annuity (403(b)
plan) that is treated as a nonperiodic distribution, you must reduce
your investment in the contract to the extent that the distribution is
tax free under the allocation rules for qualified plans explained
earlier. Repayments of the loan increase your investment in the
contract to the extent that the distribution is taxable under those
rules.
If you receive a loan under a nonqualified plan other than a 403(b)
plan, including a commercial annuity contract that you purchase
directly from the issuer, you increase your investment in the contract
to the extent that the distribution is taxable under the general
allocation rule for nonqualified plans explained earlier. Repayments
of the loan do not affect your investment in the contract. However, if
the distribution is excepted from the general allocation rule (for
example, because it is made under a contract entered into before
August 14, 1982), you reduce your investment in the contract to the
extent that the distribution is tax free and increase it for loan
repayments to the extent that the distribution is taxable.
Transfers of Annuity Contracts
If you transfer without full and adequate consideration an annuity
contract issued after April 22, 1987, you are treated as receiving a
nonperiodic distribution. The distribution equals the excess of:
- The cash surrender value of the contract at the time of
transfer, over
- The cost of the contract at that time.
This rule does not apply to transfers between spouses or
transfers incident to a divorce.
Tax-free exchange.
No gain or loss is recognized on an exchange of an annuity contract
for another annuity contract if the insured or annuitant remains the
same. However, if an annuity contract is exchanged for a life
insurance or endowment contract, any gain due to interest accumulated
on the contract is ordinary income.
If you transfer a full or partial interest in a tax-sheltered
annuity that is not subject to restrictions on early distributions to
another tax-sheltered annuity, the transfer qualifies for
nonrecognition of gain or loss.
If you exchange an annuity contract issued by a life insurance
company that is subject to a rehabilitation, conservatorship, or
similar state proceeding for an annuity contract issued by another
life insurance company, the exchange qualifies for nonrecognition of
gain or loss. The exchange is tax free even if the new contract is
funded by two or more payments from the old annuity contract. This
also applies to an exchange of a life insurance contract for a life
insurance, endowment, or annuity contract.
In general, a transfer or exchange in which you receive cash
proceeds from the surrender of one contract and invest the cash
in another contract does not qualify for nonrecognition of gain or
loss. However, no gain or loss is recognized if the cash distribution
is from an insurance company that is subject to a rehabilitation,
conservatorship, insolvency, or similar state proceeding. For the
nonrecognition rule to apply, you must also reinvest the proceeds in a
single contract issued by another insurance company and the exchange
of the contracts must otherwise qualify for nonrecognition. You must
withdraw all the cash you can and reinvest it within 60 days. If the
cash distribution is less than required for full settlement, you must
assign all rights to any future distributions to the new issuer.
If you want nonrecognition treatment for the cash distribution, you
must give the new issuer the following information.
- The amount of cash distributed.
- The amount of the cash reinvested in the new
contract.
- The amount of your investment in the old contract on the
date of the initial distribution.
You must attach the following items to your timely filed income tax
return for the year of the initial distribution.
- A copy of the statement you gave to the new issuer.
- A statement that contains the words "ELECTION UNDER REV.
PROC. 92-44," the new issuer's name, and the policy number or
similar identifying information for the new contract.
Tax-free exchange reported on Form 1099-R.
If you make a tax-free exchange of an annuity contract for another
annuity contract issued by a different company, the exchange will be
shown on Form 1099-R with a code "6" in box 7. You need not
report this on your tax return.
Treatment of contract received.
If you acquire an annuity contract in a tax-free exchange for
another annuity contract, its date of purchase is the date you
purchased the annuity you exchanged. This rule applies for determining
if the annuity qualifies for exemption from the tax on early
distributions as an immediate annuity.
Lump-Sum Distributions
If you receive a lump-sum distribution from a qualified employee
plan or qualified employee annuity and the plan participant was born
before 1936, you may be able to elect optional methods of figuring the
tax on the distribution. The part from active participation in the
plan before 1974 may qualify as capital gain subject to a 20% tax
rate. The part from participation after 1973 (and any part from
participation before 1974 that you do not report as capital gain) is
ordinary income. You may be able to use the 10-year tax option,
discussed later, to figure tax on the ordinary income part.
The 5-year tax option for figuring the tax on lump-sum
distributions has been repealed.
Each individual, estate, or trust who receives part of a lump-sum
distribution on behalf of a plan participant who was born before 1936
can choose whether to elect the optional methods for the part each
received. However, if two or more trusts receive the distribution, the
plan participant or the personal representative of a deceased
participant must make the choice.
Use Form 4972, to figure the separate tax on a lump-sum
distribution using the optional methods. The tax figured on Form 4972
is added to the regular tax figured on your other income. This may
result in a smaller tax than you would pay by including the taxable
amount of the distribution as ordinary income in figuring your regular
tax.
Alternate payee under qualified domestic relations order.
If you receive a distribution as an alternate payee under a
qualified domestic relations order (discussed earlier under
General Information), you may be able to choose the
optional tax computations for it. You can make this choice for a
distribution that would be treated as a lump-sum distribution had it
been received by your spouse or former spouse (the plan participant).
However, for this purpose, the balance to your credit does not include
any amount payable to the plan participant.
If you choose an optional tax computation for a distribution
received as an alternate payee, this choice will not affect any
election for distributions from your own plan.
More than one recipient.
One or all of the recipients of a lump-sum distribution can use the
optional tax computations. See Multiple recipients of a lump-sum
distribution in the instructions for Form 4972.
Lump-sum distribution defined.
A lump-sum distribution is the distribution or payment in 1 tax
year of a plan participant's entire balance from all of the employer's
qualified plans of one kind (for example, pension, profit-sharing, or
stock bonus plans). A distribution from a nonqualified plan (such as a
privately purchased commercial annuity or a section 457 deferred
compensation plan of a state or local government or tax-exempt
organization) cannot qualify as a lump-sum distribution.
The participant's entire balance from a plan does not include
certain forfeited amounts. It also does not include any deductible
voluntary employee contributions allowed by the plan after 1981 and
before 1987.
Reemployment.
A separated employee's vested percentage in his or her retirement
benefit may increase if he or she is rehired by the employer within 5
years following separation from service. This possibility does not
prevent a distribution made before reemployment from qualifying as a
lump-sum distribution. However, if the employee elected an optional
method of figuring the tax on the distribution and his or her vested
percentage in the previous retirement benefit increases after
reemployment, the employee must recapture the tax saved. This is done
by increasing the tax for the year in which the increase in vesting
first occurs.
Distributions that do not qualify.
The following distributions do not qualify as lump-sum
distributions for the capital gain treatment or 10-year tax option.
- Any distribution that is partially rolled over to another
qualified plan or an IRA.
- Any distribution if an earlier election to use either the 5-
or 10-year tax option had been made after 1986 for the same plan
participant.
- U.S. Retirement Plan Bonds distributed with a lump sum.
- Any distribution made during the first 5 tax years that the
participant was in the plan, unless it was made because the
participant died.
- The current actuarial value of any annuity contract included
in the lump sum. (The payer's statement should show this amount, which
you use only to figure tax on the ordinary income part of the
distribution.)
- Any distribution to a 5% owner that is subject to penalties
under section 72(m)(5)(A) of the Internal Revenue Code.
- A distribution from an IRA.
- A distribution from a tax-sheltered annuity (section 403(b)
plan).
- A distribution of the redemption proceeds of bonds rolled
over tax free to a qualified pension plan, etc., from a qualified bond
purchase plan.
- A distribution from a qualified plan if the participant or
his or her surviving spouse previously received an eligible rollover
distribution from the same plan (or another plan of the employer that
must be combined with that plan for the lump-sum distribution rules)
and the previous distribution was rolled over tax free to another
qualified plan or an IRA.
- A corrective distribution of excess deferrals, excess
contributions, excess aggregate contributions, or excess annual
additions.
- A lump-sum credit or payment from the Federal Civil Service
Retirement System (or the Federal Employees' Retirement System).
How to treat the distribution.
If you receive a lump-sum distribution, you may have the following
options for how you treat the taxable part.
- Report the part of the distribution from participation
before 1974 as a capital gain (if you qualify) and the part from
participation after 1973 as ordinary income.
- Report the part of the distribution from participation
before 1974 as a capital gain (if you qualify) and use the 10-year tax
option to figure the tax on the part from participation after 1973 (if
you qualify).
- Use the 10-year tax option to figure the tax on the total
taxable amount (if you qualify).
- Roll over all or part of the distribution. See
Rollovers, later. No tax is currently due on the part
rolled over. Report any part not rolled over as ordinary income.
- Report the entire taxable part of the distribution as
ordinary income on your tax return.
The first three options are explained in the following discussions.
Electing optional lump-sum treatment.
You can choose to use the 10-year tax option or capital gain
treatment only once after 1986 for any plan participant. If you make
this choice, you cannot use either of these optional treatments for
any future distributions for the participant.
Complete Form 4972
and attach it to your Form 1040 if you
choose to use the tax options. If you received more than one lump-sum
distribution for a plan participant during the year, you must add them
together in your computation. If you and your spouse are filing a
joint return and you both have received a lump-sum distribution, each
of you should complete a separate Form 4972.
Time for choosing.
You must decide to use the tax options before the end of the time,
including extensions, for making a claim for credit or refund of tax.
This is usually 3 years after the date the return was filed or 2 years
after the date the tax was paid, whichever is later. (Returns filed
before their due date are considered filed on their due date.)
Changing your mind.
You can change your mind and decide not to use the tax options
within the time period just discussed. If you change your mind, file
Form
1040X, Amended U.S. Individual
Income Tax Return, with a statement saying you do not want to
use the optional lump-sum treatment. You must pay any additional tax
due to the change with the Form 1040X.
How to report.
If you elect capital gain treatment (but not the 10-year tax
option) for a lump-sum distribution, include the ordinary income part
of the distribution on lines 16a and 16b of Form 1040. Enter the
capital gain part of the distribution in Part II of Form 4972.
If you elect the 10-year tax option, do not include any part of the
distribution on lines 16a or 16b of Form 1040. Report the entire
distribution in Part III of Form 4972 or, if you also elect capital
gain treatment, report the capital gain part in Part II and the
ordinary income part in Part III.
Include the tax from lines 7 and 29 of Form 4972 on line 40 of Form
1040.
Taxable and tax-free parts of the distribution.
The taxable part of a lump-sum distribution is the employer's
contributions and income earned on your account. You may recover your
cost
in the lump sum and any net
unrealized appreciation (NUA) in employer securities tax free.
Cost.
In general, your cost is the total of:
- The plan participant's nondeductible contributions to the
plan,
- The plan participant's taxable costs of any life insurance
contract distributed,
- Any employer contributions that were taxable to the plan
participant, and
- Repayments of any loans that were taxable to the plan
participant.
You must reduce this cost by amounts previously distributed tax
free.
NUA.
The NUA in employer securities (box 6 of Form 1099-R)
received as part of a lump-sum distribution is generally tax free
until you sell or exchange the securities. (See Distributions of
employer securities under Figuring the Taxable Amount,
earlier.) However, if you choose to include the NUA in your income for
the year of the distribution and there is an amount in box 3 of Form
1099-R, part of the NUA will qualify for capital gain treatment.
Use the NUA Worksheet in the instructions for Form 4972 to
find the part that qualifies.
Losses.
You may be able to claim a loss on your return if you receive a
lump-sum distribution that is less than the plan participant's cost.
You must receive the distribution entirely in cash or worthless
securities. The amount you can claim is the difference between the
participant's cost and the amount of the cash distribution, if any.
To claim the loss, you must itemize deductions on Schedule A (Form
1040). Show the loss as a miscellaneous deduction subject to the
2%-of-adjusted-gross-
income limit.
You cannot claim a loss if you receive securities that are not
worthless, even if the total value of the distribution is less than
the plan participant's cost. You recognize gain or loss only when you
sell or exchange the securities.
Capital Gain Treatment
Capital gain treatment applies only to the taxable part of a
lump-sum distribution resulting from participation in the plan before
1974. The amount treated as capital gain is taxed at a 20% rate. You
can elect this treatment only once for any plan participant, and only
if the plan participant was born before 1936.
Complete Part II of Form 4972 to choose the 20% capital gain
election.
Figuring the capital gain and ordinary income parts.
Generally, figure the capital gain and ordinary income parts of a
lump-sum distribution by using the following formulas.
|
|
|
|
Capital Gain: |
|
|
Total |
|
|
|
Taxable |
x |
Months of active participation before
1974 |
|
Amount |
|
Total
months of active participation |
Ordinary Income: |
|
|
Total |
|
|
|
Taxable |
x |
Months of active participation after
1973 |
|
Amount |
|
Total months of
active participation |
In figuring the months of active participation before 1974, count
as 12 months any part of a calendar year in which the plan participant
actively participated under the plan. For active participation after
1973, count as one month any part of a calendar month in which the
participant actively participated in the plan.
The capital gain part
should be shown in box 3
of Form 1099-R, or other statement given to you by the payer of
the distribution.
Reduction for federal estate tax.
If any federal estate tax (discussed under Survivors and
Beneficiaries, later) was paid on the lump-sum distribution, you
must decrease the capital gain by the amount of estate tax applicable
to it. Follow the Form 4972 instructions for Part II, line 6, to
figure the part of the estate tax applicable to the capital gain and
the part applicable to the ordinary income. If you do not make the
capital gain election, enter on line 18 of Part III the estate tax
attributable to both parts of the lump-sum distribution. For
information on how to figure the estate tax attributable to the
lump-sum distribution, get the instructions for Form 706, United
States Estate (and Generation-Skipping Transfer) Tax Return, or
contact the administrator of the decedent's estate.
10-Year Tax Option
The 10-year tax option is a special formula used to figure a
separate tax on the ordinary income part of a lump-sum distribution.
You pay the tax only once, for the year in which you receive the
distribution, not over the next 10 years. You can elect this treatment
only once for any plan participant, and only if the plan participant
was born before 1936.
The ordinary income part of the distribution is the amount shown in
box 2a of the Form 1099-R given to you by the payer, minus the
amount, if any, shown in box 3. You can also treat the capital gain
part of the distribution (box 3 of Form 1099-R) as ordinary
income for the 10-year tax option if you do not choose
capital gain treatment for that part.
Complete Part III of Form 4972 to choose the 10-year tax option.
You must use the special tax rates shown in the instructions for Part
III to figure the tax.
Examples
The following examples show how to figure the separate tax on Form
4972.
Example 1.
Robert Smith, who was born in 1933, retired from Crabtree
Corporation in 2001. He withdrew the entire amount to his credit from
the company's qualified pension plan. In December 2001, he received a
total distribution of $175,000 ($25,000 of employee contributions plus
$150,000 of employer contributions and earnings on all contributions).
The payer gave Robert a Form
1099-R, which shows the
capital gain part of the distribution (the part attributable to
participation before 1974) to be $10,000. Robert elects 20% capital
gain treatment for this part. A filled-in copy of Robert's Form
1099-R and Form 4972 follows. He enters $10,000 on
Form 4972, Part II, line 6, and $2,000
($10,000 × 20%) on Part II, line 7.
The ordinary income part of the distribution is $140,000 ($150,000
minus $10,000). Robert elects to figure the tax on this part using the
10-year tax option. He enters $140,000 on Form 4972, Part III, line 8.
Then he completes the rest of Form 4972 and includes the tax of
$24,270 in the total on line 40 of his Form 1040.
Example 2.
Mary Brown, who was born in 1935, sold her business in 2001. She
withdrew her entire interest in the qualified profit-sharing plan she
had set up as the sole proprietor.
The cash part of the distribution, $160,000, is all ordinary income
and is shown on her
Form 1099-R on page 22.
She chooses to figure the tax on this amount using the 10-year tax
option. Mary also received an annuity contract as part of the
distribution from the plan. Box 8, Form 1099-R, shows that the
current actuarial value of the annuity was $10,000. She enters these
figures on Form 4972 (see page 23).
After completing Form 4972, she includes the tax of $28,070 in the
total on line 40, Form 1040.
Page 1 of illustrated Form 1099-R for robert smith
Page 1 of illustrated Form 4972 for Robert Smith
Illustrated Form 1099-R for Mary Brown
Page 1 of illustrated Form 4972 for Mary Brown
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