72t help
I wanted to first say thank you for everyone that contributes to the forum. I have learned so much and found just about everything I needed thus far.
Today I felt the need to ask a question that I am a bit unclear about.
I am 46 and was planning on starting a 72t account. I have decided to move to Portugal where the cost of living is enough that I can easily afford to live on $3,500/m. That was approximately my target amount.
My question has a few parts. About 4 weeks ago I had $810,000 in a Traditional IRA and $198,000 in a 401k account. The total of the accounts was $1,008,000. With the February 120% midterm rate at 2.1% that gave me an Amortization amount of $38,834 which is well above what my target amount was.
Well, things have changed a bit in the last few weeks and now my accounts are $625,000 for the IRA and $175,000 in the 401k for a total of $800,000.
The 120% midterm rate went from a rate of 2.1% in February to a March rate of 1.83%. With bond rates dropping the way they did this month, I’m assuming the rate will drop even lower in April.
Ok… so here is my question. I would like to be able to capture the 2.1% February rate and wanted to confirm how to do that. I believe that I would have until the end of April to begin the SEPP since I can go back up to 2 months prior.
Is that correct?
And then as far as the amount I’m using in case of an IRS inquiry…
Can I still go with the $1,008,000 which was my combined IRA and 401k amount?
I don’t believe that’s possible, but was looking to verify that I can not. Hoping I can, obviously.
If I can’t combine them to represent that amount, then what are my options?
Can I use the $810,000 that was the peak IRA amount on one account and then just set up the 401k as another IRA that I would set up as a 2nd SEPP?
If I can do that, then would that mean I can still calculate my Amortization rate as $810,000 for the original IRA? And then the 2nd IRA would be the amount that it is when i convert the 401k to an IRA? Let’s say about $175k.
If I can do that, I would be at $31,200 + $6,700 which I’m happy about,
Many thanks and I hope I have explained this well and not too confusing.
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Fri, 2020-03-13 22:44