Hello Community,
A client who plans to make a Roth Conversion move late in the year asked me if the new amount in his 5+ year-old Roth would fall under the 5-year rule considering that he is older than 59 1/2? Also, is there a difference between the conversion amount and then the associated interest?
Or, since he is older than 59 1/2, the 5-year rule no longer applies, and the funds are simply available, regardless of contribution, conversion, or earnings?
I can't seem to find clarification on the IRS site.
If anyone knows where I can find that, I sure would appreciate it,
Dawn
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Thank you, both, for these links. It is helpful just to have a fresh perspective and these articles get into the details about conversion. Merci Beaucoup!!!
@SensibleandHourly wrote:
make a Roth Conversion
in his 5+ year-old Roth
Or, since he is older than 59 1/2, the 5-year rule no longer applies,
The five year rule for conversions does not apply because he is over 59.5.
The five year rule for having a Roth applies, but it seems like your client meets that rule.
https://www.irs.gov/publications/p590b#en_US_2023_publink100089543
Try this type of article:
https://smartasset.com/retirement/roth-ira-5-year-rule
There are multiple 5-year rules with Roth IRA.
Having any Roth IRA account, needs to have existed 5 years, even if the one being used is not that old.
Any conversion starts its own 5-year clock.
There are ordering rules with Roth IRA distributions.
https://dev-rlc-public-site.netlify.app/resources/roth-ira-distribution-ordering-rules/
Contributions are always taken first; conversions (if any) are second in order by year of contribution, with converted pre-tax assets taken first and converted after-tax assets taken second. Earnings are considered distributed last.
Thank you, both, for these links. It is helpful just to have a fresh perspective and these articles get into the details about conversion. Merci Beaucoup!!!
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