5 year clock for 401k Roth and Pretax dollars converted to Roth IRA
In 2024, I completed an inservice 401k rollover conversion directly to an existing Roth IRA. I am age 67. A portion of money that was converted was a Roth 401k that had been held in the Roth 401k for less than 1 year. The remaining portion of the the 401k money was Pretax money that the contributions/earnings had occurred over the last 10 years. All money was converted to the same Roth IRA that has been held for 4 years. Taxes were paid on the Pretax 401k converted amount as an estimated payment from savings account. I would like clarification about when the converted amounts can be distributed from the Roth IRA without additional taxation given I am age 67.
1. As it relates to the Pretax 401k earnings and contributions converted to the 4 year old Roth IRA:
a. When can the contributions and earnings be withdrawn from the Roth IRA without any tax implications? Is there a 5 year clock for either of the converted 401k contributions or earnings? If so, when does the 5 year clock begin?
2. As it related to the Roth 401k earnings and contributions converted to the 4 year old Roth IRA:
a. When can the contributions and earnings be withdrawn from the Roth IRA without any tax implications? Is there a 5 year clock for either of the converted 401k contributions or earnings? If so, when does the 5 year clock begin?
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Wed, 2024-09-25 17:07
If your first Roth IRA contribution was in 2020, your Roth IRA will be qualified on 1/1/2025 including all the money rolled into it from the pre tax and Roth 401k plans. The applicable clock is that 5 year Roth IRA clock which is completed on 1/1/2025. That’s only 3 months to wait for a distribution which not only will be tax free regardless of amount, but you will not have to complete Form 8606 which requires entering your Roth IRA basis amounts.
But let’s say you could not wait 3 months and needed to take a distribution before year end. All amounts would be non taxable except for earnings generated in your Roth IRA since 2020 and earnings generated on your Roth 401k contributions during the year you held the Roth 401k. That means most of the Roth IRA balance would be available tax free up to your contributions total to all plans. Only the gains would be subject to tax, but you would have to complete the 8606 to show the breakdown of your basis.
If 2020 was not the first year you made a Roth IRA contribution, please advise.