Individual Retirement Account
From Free net encyclopedia
An Individual Retirement Account (or IRA) is a retirement plan account that provides some tax advantages for retirement savings in the United States.
Contents |
Legal basis for IRAs
The individual retirement arrangement and related vehicles were created by amendments to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 (as amended) made by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA), which enacted (among other things) Internal Revenue Code sections 219 (Template:Usc) and 408 (Template:Usc) relating to IRAs.
Types of IRAs
There are a number of different types of IRAs which may be either employer provided plans and self-provided plans. The types include:
- Roth IRA - contributions are made with after-tax assets, all transactions within the IRA are tax-free, and withdrawals are usually tax-free. Named for Senator William Roth.
- Traditional IRA - contributions are often tax-deductible (often simplified as "money is deposited before tax" or "contributions are made with pre-tax assets"), all transactions and earnings within the IRA are tax-free, and withdrawals at retirement are taxed as income (except for contributions that were not deducted).
- SEP IRA - a provision that allows an employer (typically a small business or self-employed individual) to make retirement plan contributions into a Traditional IRA established in the employee's name, instead of to a pension fund account in the company's name.
- SIMPLE IRA - a simplified employee pension plan that allows both employer and employee contributions, similar to a 401(k) plan, but with lower contribution limits and simpler (and thus less costly) administration. Although it is termed an IRA, it is treated separately.
There are two other subtypes of IRA, named Rollover IRA and Conduit IRA, that are obsolete under current tax law (their functions have been subsumed by the Traditional IRA) but this tax law is set to expire unless extended.
Starting with the Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001 (EGTRRA), many of the restrictions of what type of funds could be rolled into an IRA and what type of plans IRA funds could be rolled into were significantly relaxed. Additional acts made some further relaxations of restrictions. Essentially most retirement plans can be rolled into an IRA after meeting certain criteria, and most retirement plans can accept funds from an IRA.
Funding an IRA
An IRA can only be funded with cash or cash equivalents. Attempting to transfer any other type of asset into the IRA is a prohibited transaction and disqualifies the IRA from its beneficial tax treatment. (Of course, rollovers, transfers, and conversions between IRAs and other retirement accounts can include any asset.)
Valid investments inside an IRA
Once money is inside an IRA, the IRA owner can direct the custodian to use the cash to purchase most types of securities, and some non security financial instruments. Some assets cannot be held in an IRA such as collectibles (e.g. art, baseball cards, and rare coins) and life insurance. The IRS does not approve any investment for an IRA. For example an IRA owner cannot use real estate if the owner uses that realty in any way, as in his personal residence.
Most IRA custodians limit available investments and do not permit real estate in an IRA unless it is held indirectly via a security such as a real estate investment trust (REIT). True self-directed IRA custodians/administrators permit real estate and other non-traditional assets. They may be found via a web search. They typically charge fees based on asset values. There are certain special restrictions on real estate held in an IRA (the IRA owner cannot benefit from the property in any way, i.e. they can not use it).
An IRA may borrow money but any loan must not be secured by the owner of the IRA. Also, the owner of the IRA may not pledge the IRA as security against a debt.
Status of IRAs in bankruptcy
In the case of Rousey v. Jacoway, the United States Supreme Court ruled unanimously on April 4, 2005 that under section 522(d)(10)(E) of the United States Bankruptcy Code (Template:Usc), a debtor in bankruptcy can exempt his or her IRA from the bankruptcy estate. [1] The Court indicated that because rights to withdrawals are based on age, IRAs should receive the same protection as other retirement plans.
Thirty-four states already had laws effectively allowing an individual to exempt an IRA in bankruptcy, but the Supreme Court decision allows federal protection for IRAs. [2] The recent 2005 Bankruptcy Reform Act gave further protection to IRAs and the FDIC increased limits for deposits used to fund IRAs.
IRAs and borrowing
It is a prohibited transaction for the IRA owner to borrow money from the IRA. Such a transaction disqualifies the IRA from special tax treatment. An IRA may incur debt or borrow money secured by its assets but the IRA owner may not guarantee or secure the loan personally. Income from debt financed property in an IRA may generate unrelated business taxable income in the IRA.
The rules regarding IRA rollovers and transfers allow the IRA owner to perform an "indirect rollover" to another IRA. This can be used to temporarily "borrow" money from the IRA, once per year. The money must be placed in another IRA account within 60 days, or the transaction will be deemed an early withdrawal (subject to the appropriate withdrawal taxes and penalties) and may not be replaced.
Definitions
Subsection (a) of Code section 408 defines the term individual retirement account and subsection (b) defines the term individual retirement annuity. Individual retirement accounts and individual retirement annuities are collectively referred to as individual retirement plans (see Internal Revenue Code section 7701(a)(37)). Individual retirement accounts and individual retirement annuities are also collectively referred to as individual retirement "arrangements" under certain Treasury regulations (e.g., 26 C.F.R. sec. 1.408-4 and sec. 1.408-6) and in Publication 590 (2004) from the Internal Revenue Service.
The term "arrangement" also has more limited meanings. Under subsection (k) of section 408, a simplified employee pension (or SEP) is a particular kind of individual retirement account or individual retirement annuity. A SEP may contain a section 408(k)(6) “arrangement.” Simple retirement accounts with qualified salary reduction “arrangements” are allowed by subsection (p) of section 408.
References
- (April 5, 2005). Court shields IRAs from bankruptcy seizure. The Seattle Times
- How to Borrow against your IRA for 60 days.
- IRS Publication 590 (2004), Individual Retirement Arrangements (IRAs)