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What does the term “basis” mean in the sentence, “Enter the basis in your traditional IRA,”?
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"IRA basis represents the funds in an IRA that have already been taxed, either because they were nondeductible IRA contributions, or they were after-tax funds rolled over from company retirement plans prior to the IRS rule change in September of 2014."
Details: Tracking Down IRA Basis: A Gold Mine for Beneficiaries
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Basis = money that was Post-tax. Amounts invested into that tax deferred account which those contributed funds were Not able to be deducted from taxes when originally contributed are your Basis. Typically, the tax deferral feature of a traditional IRA means anything you take out later is taxed as Ordinary Income. If you previously contributed funds post-tax, that means its your funds that you already paid taxes on. You don't want to pay taxes again on that amount when you finally withdraw funds from that tax deferred account. That would be Double Taxes. So, you track Basis, and then, each distribution is split and allocated into the nontaxable portion based on your Basis in all similar accounts of that nature.
I just did a thorough answer with examples, here:
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I lol'd