Rollover of Pension to Roth IRA
I previously worked for a company that has just offered a limited – time pension opportunity for me to receive a distribution of my entire vested pension benefit in the form of a single lump sum. I am 58 years old and not yet retired and I am interested in doing a direct roll over to a Roth IRA.
I have been doing research on my own, but I want to identify a very trusted and reliable organization with long proven track record and reputation to set the Roth IRA with.
Can you provide information and/or recommendations for what my next steps would be at this point to find the right organization and set this up before my deadline to accept this opportunity?
I’m happy about this development but fearful at the same time, because this money was hard earned and I do not want do this the wrong way.
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Tue, 2016-08-16 23:43
Permalink Submitted by Annette Evans on Wed, 2016-08-17 01:01
Thank you for your reply, it is very helpful. A point of clarification, I am not yet retired but I am not working as I am on permanent disability and am not receiving a salary income. How does this affect the potential tax rate?
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Wed, 2016-08-17 01:31
If your disability is taxable, it will affect your marginal tax rate. If it is SS disability income a Roth conversion can make a portion up to 85% of that income taxable, whereas none of it may be taxable otherwise. Of course, your disability income is probably considerably less than you would be making if you were working. The less total taxable income you have the lower your marginal rate will be, and lower rates result in a lower bar for conversions to be beneficial.