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Here’s what you need to know


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Flouting the ‘5-year rule’ can mean earnings are taxable

Avoid this investing mistake with your Roth IRA

In tax lingo, a Roth IRA withdrawal must be a “qualified distribution” to avoid taxes or penalties. Taxes on investment earnings are at “ordinary income” tax rates, not the preferential tax rates for capital gains.

There are two requirements for a withdrawal to count as a qualified distribution:

  • Age: You may be hit with a 10% tax penalty and income taxes on any investment earnings you withdraw before age 59½. (There are some exceptions to this “early withdrawal” penalty.)
  • Time: Here’s where the “5-year rule” comes into play. Roth IRA owners must have their account for at least five years to avoid paying income tax on any withdrawn investment earnings.

Here’s a simple example: Let’s say a 60-year-old contributed $6,000 to a Roth IRA in January 2020. It’s the saver’s only Roth IRA and the first time they’ve contributed money to such an account. The investment has earned about $1,500. In 2023, the saver, now 63 years old, decides to withdraw the full $7,500.

You might think this person is in the clear, since they’re over age 59½. However, this individual would owe income taxes on the $1,500 of earnings because the account hasn’t been open for five years. It wouldn’t be a qualified distribution.

An easy way to start the 5-year clock

Who will ‘never need to know the 5-year rule’

That’s what we call a ‘forever clock. Once it starts, it never stops.

Ed Slott

certified public accountant and IRA expert

Another important note: The five-year clock may still apply if you inherit a Roth IRA from a deceased accountholder.

Ultimately, though, retirement savers who use their accounts as envisioned by the tax code — as a pot of savings amassed over a long time and for use in old age — don’t need to fear tripping up any of these tax rules.

“If you use the Roth the way it’s intended, you’ll never need to know the five-year rule,” Slott said.

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