Living Off Your 401K?

Recently unemployed? Considering dipping into your 401K to stay afloat?  Here are some options to consider. Fees are waived for withdrawals made from 401K accounts. Taxes must be paid but can be spread over three years. These are some of the most lenient restrictions ever imposed. Even if you decide not take money out of your account, you may want to consider moving your 401K into an IRA.  Mark Miller for the New York Times in his article, Lost Your Job but Still Have a 401(k)? Here’s What to Do With It, offers advice and tips on best managing your retirement funds and money for daily living during this turbulent time.

New Tax Changes Affect Gifting Money to Minors

As the end of school approaches, many parents and grandparents consider college expenses for their children.  What once was an easy and low-tax way to give money to younger children will soon cost a good deal more.  Ashley Ebeling for Forbes explores the changes in the so called “Kiddie Tax” in her article, The Kiddie Tax Grows Up: Beware The IRA Trap

Extension of ability to do tax-free Individual Retirement Account rollovers to charity

IRA

 

The American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012 (ATRA) extended the qualified charitable distribution (QCD) provisions for 2012 and 2013. Several special transition rules were included in ATRA to enable taxpayers to have a donation made before February 1, 2013, treated as a 2012 QCD.

A QCD is an otherwise taxable distribution from an IRA (other than an ongoing SEP or SIMPLE IRA) owned by an individual who is age 70½ or over that is paid directly from the IRA to a qualified charity. An IRA owner can exclude from gross income up to $100,000 of a QCD made for a year, and a QCD can be used to satisfy any IRA required minimum distributions (RMDs) for the year. Also, the amount of a QCD excluded from gross income is not taken into account in determining any deduction for charitable contributions.

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