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31 tagged with "Ira"

IRA contributions, tracking, and retirement planning

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Form 5329 and the Missed RMD: How SECURE 2.0's 25%/10% Penalty Rules Work
·mike

Form 5329 and the Missed RMD: How SECURE 2.0's 25%/10% Penalty Rules Work

SECURE 2.0 cut the missed-RMD excise tax from 50% to 25%, and to just 10% if the shortfall is corrected within a two-year window. Form 5329 is how taxpayers claim the reduced rate or request a full reasonable-cause waiver, and the form also starts the IRS's three-year limitations clock.

tax
tax-compliance
tax-planning
retirement-savings
+4
Saver's Credit 2026: The Last $1,000 Tax Credit Before SECURE 2.0's Saver's Match
·mike

Saver's Credit 2026: The Last $1,000 Tax Credit Before SECURE 2.0's Saver's Match

Tax year 2026 is the final year for the Saver's Credit, a nonrefundable credit worth up to $1,000 per person ($2,000 MFJ) for IRA and 401(k) contributions. This guide covers the 2026 AGI brackets, Form 8880 line by line, and what changes when the Saver's Match arrives in 2027.

tax
tax-credits
retirement-savings
ira
+3
The $6,000 Senior Bonus Deduction: How Taxpayers 65 and Older Can Cut Their 2026 Tax Bill (Through 2028)
·mike

The $6,000 Senior Bonus Deduction: How Taxpayers 65 and Older Can Cut Their 2026 Tax Bill (Through 2028)

The OBBBA's new $6,000 senior bonus deduction (up to $12,000 per couple) phases out at 6% per dollar of MAGI above $75,000 single / $150,000 joint and disappears entirely at $175,000 / $250,000. Available for tax years 2025 through 2028, stackable with the standard deduction and itemized deductions for taxpayers 65 and older.

tax
tax-planning
tax-deductions
personal-finance
+4
Trump Accounts 2026: The $1,000 Federal Seed and $5,000 Annual Cap, Explained
·mike

Trump Accounts 2026: The $1,000 Federal Seed and $5,000 Annual Cap, Explained

Trump Accounts are a new tax-deferred children's savings vehicle created by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. Children born 2025–2028 receive a one-time $1,000 federal seed, families can contribute up to $5,000 per year, and employers can add $2,500 tax-free per employee — but the deposit requires filing Form 4547.

tax
tax-planning
personal-finance
financial-planning
+4
529-to-Roth IRA Rollover Under SECURE 2.0: Turning $35,000 of Unused College Savings into Tax-Free Retirement Money
·mike

529-to-Roth IRA Rollover Under SECURE 2.0: Turning $35,000 of Unused College Savings into Tax-Free Retirement Money

A practitioner's guide to the SECURE 2.0 Act's 529-to-Roth IRA rollover — the five hard rules, the $35,000 lifetime cap, the state-tax traps in California, Indiana, and Massachusetts, and five strategic plays for converting unused college savings into tax-free retirement money.

ira
retirement-savings
tax-planning
personal-finance
+3
529-to-Roth IRA Rollover Under SECURE 2.0: Turning Unused College Savings into Tax-Free Retirement
·mike

529-to-Roth IRA Rollover Under SECURE 2.0: Turning Unused College Savings into Tax-Free Retirement

SECURE 2.0 lets families roll up to $35,000 of unused 529 funds into the beneficiary's Roth IRA tax-free. Here are the six rules every rollover must satisfy, the two mistakes that turn it taxable, the state-level traps, and the four strategies that make the rule genuinely useful.

tax-planning
retirement-savings
ira
education
+3
529-to-Roth IRA Rollover: Move $35,000 of Unused College Savings Into Tax-Free Retirement
·mike

529-to-Roth IRA Rollover: Move $35,000 of Unused College Savings Into Tax-Free Retirement

SECURE 2.0 lets the beneficiary of a 529 plan roll up to $35,000 of unused college savings into a Roth IRA tax-free and outside Roth income limits, provided the account is 15+ years old, contributions are 5+ years seasoned, and the beneficiary has earned income. This guide walks through the five federal tests, the state tax clawbacks that can erase the benefit, and a clean five-year execution plan.

personal-finance
tax-planning
retirement-savings
ira
+3
See-Through Trust as IRA Beneficiary: How Conduit and Accumulation Trusts Work Under the SECURE Act 10-Year Rule
·mike

See-Through Trust as IRA Beneficiary: How Conduit and Accumulation Trusts Work Under the SECURE Act 10-Year Rule

A see-through trust named on an IRA beneficiary form must navigate the SECURE Act 10-year rule. Conduit trusts pass every distribution through to the beneficiary by year ten, while accumulation trusts retain assets but face compressed trust brackets that reach the 37 percent federal rate at just $16,000 of retained income in 2026.

ira
estate-planning
trust
retirement-savings
+3
Form 8606 and the Backdoor Roth: How One Missing Tax Form Causes Double Taxation
·mike

Form 8606 and the Backdoor Roth: How One Missing Tax Form Causes Double Taxation

Form 8606 is the IRS's running ledger of after-tax basis inside traditional, SEP, and SIMPLE IRAs. Skip it and the IRS treats your basis as zero, taxing the same dollars a second time at distribution. This guide explains how the form works, why the pro-rata rule punishes most backdoor Roth conversions, and how to keep your basis documented for the next 30 years.

ira
retirement-savings
tax-planning
tax-compliance
+3
Inherited IRA 10-Year Rule: How Non-Spouse Beneficiaries Avoid the 25% Penalty
·mike

Inherited IRA 10-Year Rule: How Non-Spouse Beneficiaries Avoid the 25% Penalty

Non-spouse IRA beneficiaries must empty inherited accounts within 10 years, and annual RMDs become mandatory in 2025 if the original owner died on or after their required beginning date. A missed RMD triggers a 25% excise tax. Only surviving spouses, minor children, disabled or chronically ill individuals, and beneficiaries within 10 years of the deceased's age keep the old stretch treatment.

ira
retirement-savings
tax-planning
estate-planning
+3
Roth Conversion Ladder: How FIRE Investors Tap Retirement Accounts Penalty-Free Before Age 59½
·mike

Roth Conversion Ladder: How FIRE Investors Tap Retirement Accounts Penalty-Free Before Age 59½

A Roth conversion ladder converts traditional IRA dollars to Roth in annual tranches, each unlocking penalty-free five tax years later — the core mechanism FIRE retirees use to tap pre-tax accounts before age 59½ while filling low tax brackets.

retirement-savings
tax-planning
ira
personal-finance
+3
Rule 72(t) SEPP: How to Tap Your IRA Before 59½ Without the 10% Penalty
·mike

Rule 72(t) SEPP: How to Tap Your IRA Before 59½ Without the 10% Penalty

How Rule 72(t) Series of Substantially Equal Periodic Payments (SEPP) lets retirees tap an IRA or 401(k) before 59½ without the 10% early-withdrawal penalty — covering the three IRS calculation methods, the 5% interest-rate floor from Notice 2022-6, and the recapture-tax mistakes that bust early retirement plans.

retirement-plans
ira
retirement-savings
tax-planning
+3
Showing 13–24 of 31 posts