Pub. 17, Chapter 11 - Retirement Plans, Pensions, & Annuities
Generally, if you did not pay any part of the cost of your employee
pension or annuity and your employer did not withhold part of the cost
of the contract from your pay while you worked, the amounts you
receive each year are fully taxable. You must report them on your
income tax return.
Partly taxable payments.
If you paid part of the cost of your annuity, you are not taxed on
the part of the annuity you receive that represents a return of your
cost. The rest of the amount you receive is taxable. Your annuity
starting date (defined later) determines which method you must or may
use.
If you contributed to your pension or annuity plan, you figure the
tax-free and the taxable parts of your annuity payments under either
the Simplified Method or the General Rule. If your annuity starting
date is after November 18, 1996, and your payments are from
a qualified plan, you must use the Simplified Method.
Generally, you must use the General Rule only for nonqualified plans.
If your annuity starting date is after July 1, 1986, but
before November 19, 1996, you can use either the
General Rule or, if you qualify, the Simplified Method.
More than one program.
If you receive benefits from more than one program, such as a
pension plan and a profit-sharing plan, you must figure the taxable
part of each separately. Make separate computations even if the
benefits from both are included in the same check. For example,
benefits from one of your programs could be fully taxable, while the
benefits from your other program could be taxable under the General
Rule or the Simplified Method. Your former employer or the plan
administrator should be able to tell you if you have more than one
pension or annuity contract.
Railroad retirement benefits.
Part of the railroad retirement benefits you receive is treated for
tax purposes like social security benefits, and part is treated like
an employee pension. For information about railroad retirement
benefits treated as an employee pension, see Railroad Retirement
in Publication 575.
Credit for the elderly or the disabled.
If you receive a pension or annuity, you may be able to take the
credit for the elderly or the disabled. See chapter 34.
Withholding and estimated tax.
The payer of your pension, profit-sharing, stock bonus, annuity, or
deferred compensation plan will withhold income tax on the taxable
parts of amounts paid to you. You can choose not to have tax withheld
except for amounts paid to you that are eligible rollover
distributions. See Eligible rollover distributions under
Rollovers, later. You make this choice by filing
Form W-4P.
For payments other than eligible rollover distributions, you can
tell the payer how to withhold by filing Form W-4P. If an
eligible rollover distribution is paid directly to you, 20% will
generally be withheld. There is no withholding on a direct rollover of
an eligible rollover distribution. See Direct rollover option
under Rollovers, later. If you choose not to have tax
withheld or you do not have enough tax withheld, you may have to pay
estimated tax.
For more information, see Pensions and Annuities under
Withholding in chapter 5.
Loans.
If you borrow money from your qualified pension or annuity plan,
tax-sheltered annuity program, government plan, or contract purchased
under any of these plans, you may have to treat the loan as a
nonperiodic distribution. This means that you may have to include in
income all or part of the amount borrowed unless certain exceptions
apply. Even if you do not have to treat the loan as a nonperiodic
distribution, you may not be able to deduct the interest on the loan
in some situations. For details, see Loans Treated as
Distributions in Publication 575.
For information on the
deductibility of interest, see chapter 25.
Elective deferrals.
Some retirement plans allow you to choose (elect) to have part of
your compensation (pay) contributed by your employer to a retirement
fund, rather than have it paid to you. You do not pay tax on this
money until you receive it in a distribution from the plan. Generally,
you may not defer more than a total of $10,000 for all qualified plans
by which you are covered.
Elective deferrals generally include elective employer
contributions to cash or deferred arrangements (known as
section 401(k)
plans) and elective contributions to section 501(c)(18)(D)
plans, salary reduction simplified employee pension (SARSEP) plans,
SIMPLE plans, and tax-sheltered annuities.
Certain
deferrals that are not included in your gross income are included in
compensation. Therefore, the amounts deferred in certain employee benefit
plans will increase the tax-deferred amount that can be contributed
by the employer at the election of the employee.
For information on the tax treatment of elective deferrals,
including their limits, see Limits on Exclusion for Elective
Deferrals in Publication 575.
For information about
tax-sheltered annuities, see Publication 571,
Tax-Sheltered
Annuity Programs for Employees of Public Schools and Certain
Tax-Exempt Organizations.
Keogh plans.
Keogh plans (also called H.R. 10 plans) are retirement plans that
can only be set up by a sole proprietor or a partnership (but not a
partner). They can cover self-employed persons, such as the sole
proprietor or partners, as well as regular (common-law) employees.
Distributions from a Keogh plan are usually fully taxable because
most recipients have no cost basis. If you have an investment (cost)
in the plan, however, your pension or annuity payments from a
qualified plan are taxed under the Simplified Method. For more
information about Keogh plans, see Publication 560,
Retirement
Plans for Small Business.
Deferred compensation plans of state and local governments
and tax-exempt organizations. If you participate in one of these
nonqualified plans (known as section 457 plans), you will not
be taxed currently on your pay that is deferred under the plan. You
or your beneficiary will be taxed on this deferred pay only when it
is distributed or otherwise made available to either of you.
Distributions of deferred pay are not eligible for the 5- or
10-year tax option and rollover treatment (discussed later).
Distributions are, however, subject to the tax for failure to make
minimum distributions, discussed later.
For general information on these deferred compensation plans and
their limits, see Section 457 Deferred Compensation Plans
in Publication 575.
Cost
Before you can figure how much, if any, of your pension or annuity
benefits is taxable, you must determine your cost in the plan (your
investment). Your total cost in the plan includes everything that you
paid. It also includes amounts your employer paid that were taxable at
the time paid. Cost does not include any amounts you deducted or
excluded from income.
From this total cost paid or considered paid by you, subtract any
refunds of premiums, rebates, dividends, unrepaid loans, or other
tax-free amounts you received by the later of the annuity starting
date or the date on which you received your first payment.
The annuity starting date is the later of the first day
of the first period for which you receive a payment from the plan or
the date on which the plan's obligation becomes fixed.
Your employer or the organization that pays you the benefits (plan
administrator) should show your cost in Box 5 of your Form
1099-R.
Foreign employment contributions.
If you worked in a foreign country and your employer contributed to
your retirement plan, a part of those payments may be considered part
of your cost. This applies to contributions that were made either:
- Before 1963, or
- After December 1996 if you performed the services of a
foreign missionary.
For details, see Foreign employment contributions under
Investment in the Contract (Cost) in Publication 575.
Simplified Method
Under the Simplified Method, you figure the tax-free part of each
monthly annuity payment by dividing your cost by the total number of
expected monthly payments. For an annuity that is payable for the
lives of the annuitants, this number is based on the annuitants' ages
on the annuity starting date and is determined from a table. For any
other annuity, this number is the number of monthly annuity payments
under the contract.
Who must use the Simplified Method.
You must use the Simplified Method if your annuity starting date is
after November 18, 1996, and you receive pension or annuity
payments from a qualified plan or annuity unless you were
at least 75 years old and entitled to annuity payments from a
qualified plan that are guaranteed for 5 years or more.
Who must use the General Rule.
You must use the General Rule if you receive pension or annuity
payments from:
- A nonqualified plan (such as a private annuity, a purchased
commercial annuity, or a nonqualified employee plan), or
- A qualified plan if you are age 75 or older on your annuity
starting date and your annuity payments are guaranteed for at least 5
years (regardless of your annuity starting date).
You can use the General Rule
for a qualified plan if your annuity starting date is before
November 19, 1996 (but after July 1, 1986), and you do not
qualify to use, or choose not to use, the Simplified Method.
You cannot use the General Rule
for a
qualified plan if your annuity starting date is after November 18,
1996. Complete information on the General Rule, including the tables
you need, is contained in Publication 939.
If
you are age 75 or older, and your annuity starting date is after
November 18, 1996, you must use the General Rule if the payments are
guaranteed for at least 5 years. You must use the Simplified Method
if the payments are guaranteed for fewer than 5 years.
Note.
If you are not sure whether your retirement plan is a qualified
plan (that meets certain Internal Revenue Code requirements), ask your
employer or plan administrator.
Guaranteed payments.
Your annuity contract provides guaranteed payments if a minimum
number of payments or a minimum amount (for example, the amount of
your investment) is payable even if you and any survivor annuitant do
not live to receive the minimum. If the minimum amount is less than
the total amount of the payments you are to receive, barring death,
during the first 5 years after payments begin (figured by ignoring any
payment increases), you are entitled to fewer than 5 years of
guaranteed payments.
If you are the survivor of a deceased retiree, you can use the
Simplified Method if the retiree used it.
Exclusion limit.
Your annuity starting date determines the total amount that you can
exclude from your taxable income over the years.
If your annuity starting date is after 1986, your exclusion is
limited to your cost. If it was after July 1, 1986 (and before January
1, 1987), you can continue to take your monthly exclusion for as long
as you receive your annuity.
In both cases, any unrecovered cost at your (or the last
annuitant's) death is allowed as a miscellaneous itemized deduction on
the final return of the decedent. This deduction is not subject to the
2%-of- adjusted-gross-income limit.
How to use it.
Complete the Simplified Method Worksheet to figure your taxable
annuity for 1999. If the annuity is payable only over your life, use
your age at the birthday preceding your annuity starting date. For
annuity starting dates beginning in 1998, if your annuity is payable
over your life and the lives of other individuals, use your combined
ages at the birthdays preceding the annuity starting date.
If
your annuity starting date begins in 1998 and your annuity is payable
over the lives of more than one annuitant, the total number of monthly
annuity payments expected to be received is based on the combined ages
of the annuitants at the annuity starting date. However, if your annuity
starting date began before January 1, 1998, the total number of monthly
annuity payments expected to be received is based on the primary annuitant's
age at the annuity starting date.
Be
sure to keep a copy of the completed worksheet; it will help you figure
your taxable annuity in later years.
Example.
Bill Kirkland, age 65, began receiving retirement benefits on
January 1, 1999, under a joint and survivor annuity. Bill's annuity
starting date is January 1, 1999. The benefits are to be paid for the
joint lives of Bill and his wife, Kathy, age 65. Bill had contributed
$31,000 to a qualified plan and had received no distributions before
the annuity starting date. Bill is to receive a retirement benefit of
$1,200 a month, and Kathy is to receive a monthly survivor benefit of
$600 upon Bill's death.
Bill must use the Simplified Method to figure his taxable annuity
because his payments are from a qualified plan. Because his annuity is
payable over the lives of more than one annuitant, he uses his and
Kathy's combined ages and Table 2 at the bottom of the worksheet in
completing line 3 of the worksheet. His completed worksheet is shown
in Table 11-1.
Simplified Method Worksheet
Bill's tax-free monthly amount is $100 ($31,000 ÷ 310 as
shown on line 4 of the worksheet). Upon Bill's death, if Bill has not
recovered the full $31,000 investment, Kathy will also exclude $100
from her $600 monthly payment. The full amount of any annuity payments
received after 310 payments are paid must be included in gross income.
If Bill and Kathy die before 310 payments are made, a miscellaneous
itemized deduction will be allowed for the unrecovered cost on the
final income tax return of the last to die. This deduction is not
subject to the 2%-of-adjusted-gross-income limit.
Had
Bill's retirement annuity payments been from a nonqualified plan, he
would have used the General Rule. He uses the Simplified Method Worksheet
because his annuity payments are from a qualified plan.
Survivors
If you receive a survivor annuity because of the death of a retiree
who had reported the annuity under the Three-Year Rule,
include the total received in income. (The retiree's cost has
already been recovered tax free.)
If the retiree was reporting the annuity payments under the
General Rule, apply the same exclusion percentage the
retiree used to your initial payment called for in the contract. The
resulting tax-free amount will then remain fixed. Any increases in the
survivor annuity are fully taxable.
If the retiree was reporting the annuity payments under the
Simplified Method, the part of each payment that is tax
free is the same as the tax-free amount figured by the retiree at the
annuity starting date. See Simplified Method, earlier.
In both cases, if the annuity starting date is after 1986, the
total exclusion over the years cannot be more than the cost.
If you are the survivor of an employee, or former employee, who
died before becoming entitled to any annuity payments, you must figure
the taxable and tax-free parts of your annuity payments. You may
qualify for the $5,000 death benefit exclusion if the deceased
individual died before August 21, 1996.
Estate tax.
If your annuity was a joint and survivor annuity that was included
in the decedent's estate, an estate tax may have been paid on it. You
can deduct, as a miscellaneous itemized deduction, the part of the
total estate tax that was based on the annuity. This deduction is not
subject to the 2%-of-adjusted-gross-income limit. The deceased
annuitant must have died after the annuity starting date. (For
details, see section 1.691(d)-1 of the regulations.) This amount
cannot be deducted in one year. It must be deducted in equal amounts
over your remaining life expectancy.
How To Report
If you file Form 1040, report your total annuity on line 16a and
the taxable part on line 16b. If your pension or annuity is fully
taxable, enter it on line 16b; do not make an entry on line 16a.
If you file Form 1040A, report your total annuity on line 11a and
the taxable part on line 11b. If your pension or annuity is fully
taxable, enter it on line 11b; do not make an entry on line 11a.
More than one annuity.
If you receive more than one annuity and at least one of them is
not fully taxable, enter the total amount received from all
annuities on line 16a, Form 1040, or line 11a, Form 1040A, and
enter the taxable part on line 16b, Form 1040, or line 11b, Form
1040A. If all the annuities you receive are fully taxable, enter the
total of all of them on line 16b, Form 1040, or line 11b, Form 1040A.
Joint return.
If you file a joint return and you and your spouse each receive one
or more pensions or annuities, report the total of the pensions and
annuities on line 16a, Form 1040, or line 11a, Form 1040A, and report
the taxable part on line 16b, Form 1040, or line 11b, Form 1040A.
Lump-Sum Distributions
You may be able to elect optional methods of figuring the tax on
lump-sum distributions you receive from a qualified retirement plan
(an employer's qualified pension, stock bonus, or profit-sharing
plan). A qualified plan is a plan that meets certain requirements of
the Internal Revenue Code. For information on a distribution you
receive that includes employer securities, see Distributions of
employer securities under Taxation of Nonperiodic Payments
in Publication 575.
Distributions that qualify.
A lump-sum distribution is paid within a single tax year. It is the
distribution or payment of a plan participant's entire balance
from all of the employer's qualified plans of one kind (i.e.,
pension, profit-sharing, or stock bonus plans). The participant's
entire balance does not include deductible voluntary employee
contributions or certain forfeited amounts.
The distribution is 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.
Tax treatment.
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 tax free. Also, you may be entitled to
special tax treatment for the remaining part of the distribution.
Cost.
In general, your cost consists of:
- The plan participant's total nondeductible contributions to
the plan,
- The total of 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 loans that were taxable to the plan
participant.
You must reduce this cost by amounts previously distributed
tax free.
Capital gain treatment.
Only a plan participant who was born before 1936 can elect to treat
a portion of the taxable part of a lump-sum distribution as a capital
gain that is taxable at a 20% (.20) rate. This treatment applies to
the portion you receive for the participation in the plan before 1974.
You can elect this treatment only once for any plan participant. Use
Form 4972, Tax on Lump-Sum
Distributions, to make this choice.
5- or 10-year tax option.
If the plan participant was born before 1936, you can elect to use
the 5- or 10-year option to figure the tax on the ordinary income
portion of the distribution. (This also includes the capital gain
portion of the distribution if you do not elect the capital gain
treatment for it.) To qualify, you must elect to use the 5- or 10-year
tax option for all lump-sum distributions received in the tax year.
If
the plan participant was born after 1935 only the 5-year tax option
can be used, and only the distribution was made on or after the date
the participant reached age 59 1/2.
To qualify for the 5- or 10-year option for a distribution you
receive for your own participation in the retirement plan, you must
have been a participant in the plan for at least 5 full tax years. You
can only make one lifetime election to use this option for any plan
participant.
If you can elect to use the 5-year tax option, figure your tax
using Form 4972 as though the distribution were received over 5 years.
For
tax years beginning after 1999, the 5-year tax option for figuring the
tax on lump-sum distributions from a qualified retirement plan is repealed.
However, a plan participant can continue to choose the 10-year tax option
or the capital gain treatment for a lump-sum distribution that qualifies
for the special tax treatment.
If you choose the 10-year tax option, you can treat the
distribution as though it were received over 10 years using special
tax rates. Form 4972 shows how to make this computation. The Form 4972
instructions contain a special tax rate schedule that you must use in
making the 10-year tax option computation. Publication 575
illustrates
how to complete Form 4972 to figure the separate tax.
Form 1099-R.
If you receive a total distribution from a plan, you should receive
a Form 1099-R. If the distribution qualifies as a lump-sum
distribution, box 3 shows the capital gain, and box 2a minus box 3 is
the ordinary income. If you do not get a Form 1099-R, or if you
have questions about it, contact your plan administrator.
Rollovers
Generally, a rollover is a tax-free distribution to you of cash or
other assets from a qualified retirement plan that you transfer to an
eligible retirement plan. However, see Direct rollover
option, later.
An eligible retirement plan is an IRA, a qualified employee
retirement plan, or a qualified annuity plan. See chapter 18
for
information on rollovers from an IRA.
This
discussion applies only to traditional IRAs. Roth IRAs are discussed
in chapter 18.
In general, the most you can roll over is the part that would be
taxable if you did not roll it over. You cannot roll over your
contributions, other than your deductible employee contributions. You
do not pay tax on the amount that you roll over. This amount, however,
is generally taxable later when it is paid to you or your survivor.
You must complete the rollover by the 60th day following the day on
which you receive the distribution. (This 60-day period is
extended for the period during which the distribution is in a frozen
deposit in a financial institution.) For all rollovers to an IRA, you
must irrevocably elect rollover treatment by written notice to the
trustee or issuer of the IRA.
Eligible rollover distributions.
Generally, you can roll over any part of the taxable portion of
most nonperiodic distributions from a qualified retirement plan,
unless it is a required minimum distribution.
Hardship distributions.
Beginning in 1999, hardship distributions from 401(k) plans and
similar employer-sponsored retirement plans will no longer be treated
as eligible rollover distributions.
Direct rollover option.
You can choose to have the administrator of your old plan transfer
the distribution directly from your old plan to the new plan (if
permitted) or traditional IRA. If you decide on a rollover, it is
generally to your advantage to choose this direct rollover option.
Under this option, the plan administrator would not withhold tax from
your distribution.
Withholding tax.
If you choose to have the distribution paid to you, it is taxable
in the year distributed unless you roll it over to a new plan or IRA
within 60 days. The plan administrator must withhold income tax of 20%
from the taxable distribution paid to you. (See Pensions and
Annuities under Withholding in chapter 5.)
This means
that, if you decide to roll over an amount equal to the distribution
before withholding, your contribution to the new plan or IRA must
include other money (for example, from savings or amounts borrowed) to
replace the amount withheld. The administrator should give you a
written explanation of your distribution options within a reasonable
period of time before making an eligible rollover distribution.
Deductible voluntary employee contributions.
If you receive an eligible rollover distribution from your
employer's qualified plan of part of the balance of your accumulated
deductible voluntary employee contributions, you can roll over tax
free any part of this distribution. The rollover can be either to a
traditional IRA or to certain other qualified plans.
Rollover by surviving spouse or other beneficiary.
You may be entitled to roll over into a traditional IRA part or all
of a retirement plan distribution you receive as the surviving spouse
of a deceased employee. The rollover rules apply to you as if you were
the employee. However, you cannot roll it over to another qualified
retirement plan.
A beneficiary other than the employee's surviving spouse cannot
roll over a distribution.
Alternate payee under qualified domestic relations
order.
You may be able to roll over all or any part of a distribution from
a qualified employer plan that you receive under a qualified domestic
relations order (QDRO). If you receive the distribution as an
employee's spouse or former spouse under a QDRO, the rollover rules
apply to you (the alternate payee) as if you were the employee. You
can rollover the distribution from the plan into a traditional IRA or
to another eligible retirement plan. See Publication 575
for more
information on benefits received under a QDRO.
Retirement bonds.
If you redeem a retirement bond, you can defer the tax on the
amount received by rolling it over to an IRA or qualified employer
plan as discussed under Rollovers in chapter 18.
For more information
on the rules for rolling over distributions, see Publication 575.
Tax on Early Distributions
Distributions you receive from your qualified retirement plan
or deferred annuity contract before you reach age 59 1/2 (and amounts you receive when you cash in retirement bonds
before you reach age 59 1/2) are usually subject to an
additional tax of 10%. The tax applies to the taxable part of the
distribution.
For this purpose, a qualified retirement plan is:
- A qualified employee plan,
- A qualified employee annuity plan,
- A tax-sheltered annuity plan for employees of public schools
or tax-exempt organizations, or
- An IRA, (other than an education (Ed) IRA).
25% rate on certain early distributions from SIMPLE IRA plans.
An early withdrawal from a SIMPLE IRA is generally subject to an
additional tax of 10%. However, if the distribution is made within the
first two years of participation in the SIMPLE plan, the additional
tax is 25%. Your Form 1099-R should show distribution code S in box
7 if the 25% rate applies.
5% rate on certain early distributions from deferred annuity
contracts. If an early withdrawal from a deferred annuity is otherwise
subject to the 10% additional tax, a 5% rate may apply instead. A 5%
rate applies to distributions under a written election providing a specific
schedule for the distribution of your interest in the contract if, as
of March 1, 1986, you had begun receiving payments under the election.
On line 4 of Form 5329, multiply by 5% instead of 10%. Attach an explanation
to your return.
Exceptions to tax.
The early distribution tax does not apply to distributions:
- Made to you on or after the date on which you reach age 59 1/2,
- Made to a beneficiary or to the estate of the plan
participant or annuity holder on or after his or her death,
- Made because you are totally and permanently
disabled,
- Made as part of a series of substantially equal periodic (at
least annual) payments over your life expectancy or the joint life
expectancy of you and your beneficiary (if from a qualified employee
plan, payments must begin after separation from service),
- Made from an IRA only to pay for qualified higher
education expenses for yourself, your spouse, your children, or
grandchildren to the extent that the distribution does not exceed the
qualified higher education expenses for the taxable year,
- Made from an IRA only to pay for a first-time
home for yourself, your spouse, your children, your grandchildren, or
your ancestors to the extent that the distribution is used by you
within 120 days from the date of the distribution,
- Made to you after you separated from service if the
separation occurred during or after the calendar year in which you
reached age 55,
- Paid to you to the extent you have deductible medical
expenses (the medical expense that exceeds 7.5% of your adjusted gross
income) whether or not you itemize deductions for the tax year,
- Paid to alternate payees under qualified domestic relations
orders,
- Made to you if, as of March 1, 1986, you separated from
service and began receiving benefits from the qualified plan under a
written election that provides a specific schedule of benefit
payments,
- Made to correct excess deferrals, excess contributions, or
excess aggregate contributions,
- Allocable to investment in a deferred annuity contract
before August 14, 1982,
- From an annuity contract under a qualified personal injury
settlement,
- Made under an immediate annuity contract (a single premium
contract providing substantially equal annuity payments that start
within one year from the date of purchase and are paid at least
annually), or
- Made under a deferred annuity contract purchased by your
employer upon the termination of a qualified employee retirement plan
or qualified annuity that is held by your employer until you separate
from the service of the employer.
Exceptions
7, 9, 10, and 11 do not apply to IRAs. Exceptions 5 and 6 do not
apply to qualified employee plans; they apply only to IRAs.
However, Exceptions 1, 2, 3, 4, and 8 apply to both IRAs and
qualified employee plans.
Reporting tax or exception.
If distribution code 1 is shown in box 7 of Form 1099-R,
multiply the taxable part of the early distribution by 10% and enter
the result on line 53 of Form 1040 and write "No" on the dotted
line. You do not have to file Form 5329.
However, if you owe this tax and also owe any other additional tax
on a distribution, you must file Form 5329 to report the taxes.
You do not have to file Form 5329 if you qualify for an exception
to the 10% tax and distribution code 2, 3, or 4 is shown in box 7 of
Form 1099-R. However, you must file Form 5329 if the code is not
shown or the code shown is incorrect (e.g., code 1 is shown although
you meet an exception).
Tax on Excess Accumulation
To make sure that most of your retirement benefits are paid to you
during your lifetime, rather than to your beneficiaries after your
death, the payments that you receive from qualified retirement plans
must begin no later than on your required beginning date
(defined next).
Unless the rule for 5% owners and IRAs applies, you must begin to
receive distributions from your qualified retirement plan by April 1
of the year that follows the later of:
- The calendar year in which you reach age 70 1/2,
or
- The calendar year in which you retire.
The additional tax applies to qualified employee plans, qualified
employee annuity plans, deferred compensation plans under section 457,
tax-sheltered annuity programs (for benefits accruing after 1986), and
IRAs (other than education (Ed) IRAs and Roth IRAs.
Age 70 1/2.
You reach age 70 1/2 on the date that is 6 calendar
months after the date of your 70th birthday.
For example, if you are retired and your 70th birthday was on July
1, 1998, you were age 70 1/2 on January 1, 1999. Your
required beginning date is April 1, 2000. If your 70th birthday was on
June 30, 1998, you were age 70 1/2 on December 30, 1998,
and your required beginning date is April 1, 1999 unless you had not
yet retired.
Exception (5% owners).
If you are a 5% (or more) owner of the company maintaining the
plan, you must begin to receive distributions by April 1 of the
calendar year after the year in which you reach age 70 1/2, regardless of when you retire.
Minimum distributions.
These are regular periodic distributions that are large enough to
use up the entire interest over your life expectancy or over the joint
life expectancies of you and a designated surviving beneficiary (or
over a shorter period).
Additional information.
For more information on this rule and how to figure the required
amount to be distributed, see Tax on Excess Accumulation in
Publication 575.
Tax on failure to distribute.
If you do not receive these required minimum distributions, you, as
the payee, are subject to an additional excise tax. The tax equals 50%
of the difference between the amount that must be distributed and the
amount that was distributed during the tax year. You can get this
excise tax excused if you establish that the shortfall in
distributions was due to reasonable error and that you are taking
reasonable steps to remedy the shortfall.
State insurer delinquency proceedings.
You might not receive the minimum distribution because of state
insurer delinquency proceedings for an insurance company. If your
payments are reduced below the minimum due to these proceedings, you
should contact your plan administrator. Under certain conditions, you
will not have to pay the excise tax.
Form 5329.
You must file a Form 5329 if you owe a tax because you did not
receive a minimum required distribution from your qualified retirement
plan.
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