IRS Pub. 17, Your Federal Income Tax
An individual retirement arrangement (IRA) is a personal savings
plan that offers you tax advantages to set aside money for your
retirement or, in some plans, for certain education expenses. Two
advantages are:
- That you may be able to deduct your contributions in whole
or in part, depending on the kind of IRA and your circumstances,
and,
- Generally, amounts in your IRA, including earnings and gains
are not taxed until distributed, or, in some cases, are not taxed at
all if distributed according to the rules.
This chapter discusses:
- The rules for a traditional IRA,
- The new Roth IRA, which features nondeductible
contributions and tax-free withdrawals, and
- Another new IRA, the education IRA, which can be
set up to finance higher education expenses.
Simplified Employee Pensions (SEPs) and Savings Incentive Match
Plans for Employees (SIMPLE) are not discussed in this chapter. For
more information on these plans and employees' SEP-IRAs and SIMPLE
IRAs that are part of these plans, see Publication 590.
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