Payments that you receive from your IRA or qualified retirement plan
before you reach age 59˝ are normally called ‘early’ or ‘premature’
distributions. These funds are subject to an additional 10 percent tax
and must be reported to the IRS.
There are a number of exceptions to this additional tax. Some
exceptions apply only to IRAs, some only to qualified retirement plans,
and some to both.
If you don’t qualify for an exception, the 10 percent tax on early
distributions applies to the portion of the distribution that is
taxable. If you received a distribution from an IRA, other than a Roth
IRA, to which you made any nondeductible contributions, the portion of
the distribution attributable to those contributions is not taxed. If
you received an early distribution from a Roth IRA the distribution
attributable to contributions is not taxed. If you received a
distribution from any other qualified retirement plan, generally the
entire distribution is taxable unless you made after-tax employee
contributions to the plan.
A ‘rollover” is a way to avoid paying tax on early distributions.
Generally, a rollover is a tax-free transfer of cash or other assets
from an IRA or qualified retirement plan to another eligible retirement
plan. An eligible retirement plan is a traditional IRA, a qualified
retirement plan, or a qualified annuity plan. You must complete the
rollover within 60 days after the day you received the distribution.
The amount you roll over is generally taxed when the new plan pays you
or your beneficiary.
For more information see IRS Publication 560, Retirement Plans for
Small Business (SEP, SIMPLE, and Qualified Plans), Publication 575,
Pension and Annuity Income, or Publication 590, Individual Retirement
Arrangements (IRAs), available on IRS.gov
or by calling 800-TAX-FORM (800-829-3676).
Remember that for the genuine IRS Web site be sure to use
.gov. Don't be confused by internet sites that end in .com, .net,
.org or other designations instead of .gov. The address of the official
IRS governmental Web site is www.irs.gov.