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Make the Most of Your IRA

An IRA can help you build retirement savings while minimizing your tax bill.

Before You Start

  • Review your preparations for retirement to date. (Unless you already have all the money you need, an IRA could be a valuable tool.)
  • Ask yourself what's more important: getting a tax break now for contributing to an IRA but paying taxes later or foregoing a deduction now in exchange for tax-free withdrawals later.
  • Pull out last year's federal income tax return to see how much your adjusted gross income was.
1

Make the Most of Your IRA

Investors have two options for their individual retirement accounts (IRAs). The first option is a traditional IRA, the second option is a Roth IRA (named for the account's congressional sponsor), which features -- among other benefits -- the ability to accumulate tax-free earnings under certain circumstances. In this report we'll discuss the features of the traditional IRA. You may want to review material outlining the Roth IRA -- or talk to your financial planner -- before you make a decision as to which IRA is right for you.
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2

What Is a Traditional IRA?

An individual retirement account allows your investment earnings to grow tax deferred until withdrawn, typically at retirement. Generally, if you have earned income or receive alimony, you can establish as many IRA accounts as you want prior to the tax year in which you reach age 70 1/2. You may also have an IRA even if you participate in a qualified pension, profit-sharing, or other retirement plan. Your entire contribution may not be deductible on your income tax return, depending on your income.

IRAs offer two distinct advantages in terms of taxes: potential deductibility of contributions and tax deferral on investment earnings.
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3

Rules on Contribution Limits

Currently, the annual contribution limit is $4,000 (in general, married couples filing jointly can contribute a total of $8,000, even if only one spouse has income). In 2008, it will increase to $5,000 per taxpayer. Thereafter, the contribution limit will be adjusted for inflation. Individuals aged 50 and older are now able to take advantage of new "catch-up" contributions to IRAs. The allowable catch-up contribution is $1,000 per year beginning in 2006.

In addition, you can open an IRA or make contributions to an existing IRA as late as the deadline for filing a tax return for that year. That means you would have until April 2007, to make your 2006 IRA contribution.
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4

Tax Treatment of IRAs

Contributions to an IRA may or may not be deductible from your earned income in a given tax year depending on your situation. As part of the Taxpayer Relief Act, income limits that currently restrict the deductibility of contributions will gradually increase. Also, IRA deductibility is no longer affected by whether an individual's spouse is eligible to participate in an employer-sponsored retirement plan.
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5

The Magic of Tax-Deferred Compounding

The ability to make tax-deductible contributions to your IRA can help your current tax situation. But you may want to invest in an IRA whether or not your contributions are deductible. Why? The real advantage of investing in an IRA is tax-deferred compounding of your investment earnings over the long term.

For example, if you had contributed $100 every month for 30 years to a tax-deferred IRA, then paid 25% tax on your withdrawals at retirement, you could have netted $112,522, assuming a 8% average annual rate of return. However, in an account that's taxed annually at a hypothetical rate of 25%, your total would have been only $100,954 -- almost $12,000 less just because you had to pay taxes up front!

CONSIDER THE ADVANTAGE OF A TAX DEFERRAL
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As you evaluate the potential benefits of an IRA, consider the advantage of tax deferral. This chart shows the result when a hypothetical $100 monthly investment is made for 30 years in a tax-deferred plan versus the same investment taxed annually at a hypothetical rate of 25%, assuming a 8% average rate of return compounded monthly. If the final tax deferred amount is withdrawn at retirement and taxed at a hypothetical rate of 25%, it exceeds the taxable final amount by nearly $12,000.

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6

Change Jobs, But Keep Your Retirement Money

IRAs can also come in handy when you're about to leave jobs and need to move your 401(k) money. If your former employer requires that you withdraw your retirement money, you can move your distribution safely from your former employer's qualified retirement plan into a rollover IRA and avoid owing current income tax on the distribution.

If you choose to physically receive part or all of your money and do not replace the entire amount within 60 days, you will be subject to penalty fees and taxes on the amount kept. Clearly, you can avoid many headaches and keep your retirement nest egg intact by making sure your hands never touch your retirement money until age 59 1/2.
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7

Consult Your Financial Advisor

An IRA can become the cornerstone of your personal retirement savings program, providing the foundation for your financial security. That's why it is so important to start planning today. Consult with your financial advisor to help you determine how an IRA could help make your financial future more secure.
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Summary

  • If you have earned income or alimony, you can establish as many IRA accounts as you want prior to the tax year in which you reach age 70 1/2.
  • Contribution limits are $4,000 or 100% of your earned income, whichever is less. Special "catch-up" contributions are also available to older Americans.
  • You can open an IRA or make contributions to an existing IRA as late as the tax-filing deadline for that year.
  • Income limits restricting the deductibility of contributions increase annually.
  • IRA deductibility is not affected by whether a spouse is eligible to participate in an employer-sponsored retirement plan.
  • A major advantage of investing in an IRA is tax-deferred compounding.
  • By April 1 following the year in which you reach age 70 1/2, you must begin withdrawals from your IRA.
  • Individuals under the age of 59 1/2 can make penalty-free withdrawals to pay college expenses for themselves, a spouse, children, or grandchildren.

Checklist

  • Make your choice: traditional IRA or Roth IRA?
  • Consider consolidating retirement assets by transferring (or "rolling") money from a former employer's retirement plan into your IRA.
  • If you're at least 50 years old, try to take advantage of "catch-up" contributions that allow you to set more aside for retirement.
  • Choose appropriate investments for your IRA and review your strategies once or twice a year.

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72 Comments

Showing comments 6-35 of 72<< PreviousNext >>
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  • Yahoo! Finance User - Monday, July 14, 2008, 1:44PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 3/5

    markjbennett - The comparison is IRA vs non-IRA, it is not Roth IRA vs Traditional IRA.

  • MW - Tuesday, September 25, 2007, 11:42PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    More information can be included instead of just talking to financial advisor. Also what about those who have both Roth and Traditional IRA's?

  • protectyourprofits - Tuesday, September 25, 2007, 8:29AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    The article does not discuss income limits on eligibility for IRA and Roth except through a small note in the summary. The tax treatment section is overly broad. It could have been improved by hyperlinks to sources of such information.

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Thursday, September 13, 2007, 12:44PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 2/5

    This article was a very general overview of IRAs which left out a lot of details. As with all government programs, there are complexities involving IRAs that should be discussed with a trained, competent financial professional. On a personal note, if your employer offers a 401K plan with a match then, by all means, fund this account up to the employers match percentage (usually 6-10% of salary) first and get the free money! Next, I would max out a Roth IRA if there is money left to invest if qualified to do so. We use a traditional IRA as a sink for 401K rollovers when ever we change jobs this way we have more control over how our money is invested and it remains tax defered. As a general rule we never transfer tax defered contributions to a Roth because we would instantly be taxed for the entire amount and we are personally not comfortable with footing that bill! Instead we just max out a Roth account with after tax income while contributing to our 401K plans up to our companies match.

  • Mark98103 - Wednesday, September 12, 2007, 2:01PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 3/5

    Sorry, I couldn't get your Roth IRA vs. Conventional IRA difference to work out. I did my own Excel spreadsheet and they are exactly the same. The Roth IRA was always 25% lower than the Conventional because I took at 25% in taxes. Then, at the end, I paid 25% tax on the Conventional IRA and they came out exactly the same. Now, if they'd have assumed a lower tax rate at retirement, I'd have expected to see a different result, but they assumed 25% for all years.

  • Bob - Wednesday, September 12, 2007, 12:13PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    The article is unclear that you have the right to move your 401K into a rollover IRA even if your previous employer does not require you to do so. It also forgets the mention that all the increase in basis (including capital gains) is taxed at the rate for earned income at the time withdrawals are made. Long term capital gains in a non-IRA account are taxed at a lower rate.

  • Jesse - Wednesday, September 12, 2007, 7:18AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 4/5

    complexity made simple. well done. did't detail witdrawal which might have helped. special rule for married couples with age differences reduces minimum distribution requirement. a great feature for those older who may not need or want their full required minimum distribution.

  • mangosun - Tuesday, August 14, 2007, 12:41PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 3/5

    I have money in an traditional IRA and a Roth IrA. should I transfer money to the ROTH IRA only.

  • Chuck - Saturday, July 28, 2007, 5:05PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 3/5

    If your employer matches a 401K, you should fund that first and to the max. The match is immediate "free" money. In a good growth stock mutual fund IRA, the growth will exceed deferred taxes when you retire. The Roth IRA is your second choice. With whatever budget you have left, fund that. Although the Roth is not tax deductiobel it grows tax free and is not taxed at retirement withdrawl. If you have any money left after that, fund an annuity or give away cash to charities and family.

  • SUSAN - Sunday, April 8, 2007, 12:03AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    Great basic information. One of the mistakes people make is that people don't do anything to their 401k after they change jobs which is addressed here. The thing I would add is to remember to at least take your minimum withdrawal when you are 70.

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Saturday, March 10, 2007, 5:51PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    excellent basic intro information ... not too much to be overwhelming; a good start ...

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Friday, March 2, 2007, 1:44PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 2/5

    What about the do's and don'ts of contributing to both a 401k and an IRA? If someone has both (a rollover IRA and a current 401k), can they contribute to both accounts?

  • David - Friday, March 2, 2007, 10:57AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 2/5

    The graph should have included a curve for a Roth IRA. The big question for is not whether or not to have an IRA but what type to use.

  • Third - Sunday, February 18, 2007, 7:45AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 3/5

    An IRA is an "Individual Retirement Arrangement." An "Individual Retirement Account", like an "Individual Retirement Annuity" and the "Simplified Employee Pension" is a type of IRA. See IRS publication 590, at irs.gov, for further detail. No comment on Trustee's fees and Broker's commissions come out of contribution and not paid separately. The Roth IRA is almost avoided by this article and especially should be shown for further comparison on the compounding chart in section 5 of the article since it is not subject to any taxes at retirement. After age 70-1/2, the Roth IRA allows contributions while the Traditional requires withdrawals.

  • RobertW - Monday, February 5, 2007, 5:16PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 3/5

    what about folks over 59-1/2 to 70-1/2 and not retired yet, traditional or roth?

Showing comments 6-35 of 72<< PreviousNext >>

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