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When Siblings Can’t Agree on What to Do With an Elderly Parent
My siblings and I are at odds over how to care for our mother, who is widowed and not in the best of health.She wants to continue living at home, but two of us think she needs to move to an assisted-living community
IRS Grants Broad And Surprising Rollover Relief To All Who Took 2020 RMDs From IRAs & 401(k)s
Anybody who took a required minimum distribution from a retirement account in 2020 should take a look at new IRS guidance that says those who took a 2020 RMD can roll the money back into a retirement plan by August 31.
IRS Notice 2020-51 provides rollover relief with respect to waived RMDs, permits repayments to inherited IRAs, and includes Q&As for employers and employees navigating the 2020 RMD waivers and rollovers.
IRS Provides Relief for Retirees on Required Distributions
The Internal Revenue Service issued a notice Tuesday that people who took required distributions from retirement accounts this year can put the money back.
On March 27, President Trump signed into law a measure that suspends for 2020 the required minimum distributions, or RMDs, many retirees must take from tax-deferred 401(k) and individual retirement accounts.
IRS provides expanded tax breaks for coronavirus-related distributions
The IRS released new guidance Friday on taking coronavirus-related distributions from retirement plans in IRS Notice 2020-50.
Coronavirus-related distributions were created under the CARES Act to help those in need withdraw funds penalty-free from their retirement savings.The CARES Act also allows CRD income to be spread over three years and CRDs to be repaid within three years.
Deciphering new rules for taking money out of IRAs, and putting it back in
The Cares Act made it easier to take money out of retirement accounts, and put it back in, but the rules are tricky.Today I’ll answer some questions about those provisions, including how to return a required minimum distribution.
Ed Slott On Why 2020 Offers Unique Retirement Income Opportunities
Even though the CARES Act, Congress’s $2.5 trillion coronavirus relief provision, does not require retirees to take minimum distributions from their qualified accounts, they may want to anyway, said IRA and tax expert Ed Slott.
In "Answers To Advisors' Questions On The 2020 Retirement Tax Rules," a Tuesday afternoon webinar, Slott said that the provisions of the CARES Act, combined with changes to taxation and retirement rules in 2019’s SECURE Act, make 2020 a unique year for retirement income.
Retirees Get a Break on IRA Distributions
The coronavirus stimulus package, known as the CARES Act, allows retirees who are 72 or older to skip required minimum distributions from IRAs and other tax-deferred accounts for 2020.Here are answers to questions about the waiver.
401(k) retirement savers gain access to private equity investments
The Trump administration on Wednesday announced new guidance pertaining to defined contribution plans – like 401(k) accounts – and what investments the funds are able to access.
Retirement savers will now have access to private equity investments through defined contribution plans, the Department of Labor said in an information letter.
Here Are 4 Things Retirement Savers Should Know After the Cares Act and Secure Act
Between the Secure Act and the Cares Act, retirement savers and retirees are grappling with a number of changes designed to enhance the durability of savings as well as emergency provisions meant to ease coronavirus-related hardships.