TRADITIONAL IRA RMD/ROTH IRA CONTRIBUTION
I’m 66 years old and I’ve been retired for 10 years now. I have an old established ROTH IRA in a brokerage account that I have not contributed to since I retired. I also have a TRADITIONAL IRA in a brokerage account, and a regular brokerage account. I’m still a few years away from having to take a RMD from my TRADITIONAL IRA. When the time comes, can I just immediately transfer the RMD money to my ROTH IRA with the RMD for that year being satisfied to the IRS? If not, why not. The distribution has been taxed once, just like previous ROTH contributions and income. Or, do I have to transfer the TRADITIONAL IRA RMD first to a regular brokerage account, then contribute to the ROTH IRA. This does seem fair because the regular brokerage account money has already been taxed at lease once, and in most cases twice, if there are capital gains involved. Unsure of the rules and restrictions. Please help.
Thank You, David
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Mon, 2019-10-14 23:55