Most of my 401(k) contributions were pre-tax contributions.
However, I also made some after-tax Roth 401(k) contributions.
I'm considering taking a distribution for the total Roth 401(k) amount as a direct rollover.
I have an existing Roth IRA account that I'd like to utilize for this transaction.
Is using the existing Roth IRA account advisable or should a separate account
be opened/designated for the rollover?
Thank you.
Comments
Hope others will comment, but that's my understanding. In my Fidelity Roth 401(k), I like how Fidelity showed "First Roth Contribution Year" and "First year of withdrawal without penalty *" ------ "*" is for 59 1/2 penalty free withdrawal, so if you are over 59 1/2, then it doesn't really matter.
There are no similar protections for Roth IRAs, so you can put after-tax and Roth 401k/403b money into existing Roth IRA.
As Secure 2.0 changed rules for RMDs from Roth 401k/403b (so, RMDs are no longer required), this isn't as urgent an issue as it was before (when Roth IRA didn't require RMDs, but Roth 401k/403b did).
Unless a debtor files for bankruptcy, rollovers receive no protection under the Bankruptcy Abuse Protection and Consumer Protection Act (BAPCPA). Seems self-evident.
Outside of bankruptcy, federal protections don't carry over to IRAs, including rollover IRAs: https://www.irahelp.com/slottreport/creditor-protection-iras
Rollover monies may still receive better protection than contributory funds in IRAs under state law, but that's not "carrying over" the 401k protection. For example: https://www.nolo.com/legal-encyclopedia/are-my-retirement-accounts-protected-from-judgment-creditors-california.html
There are no similar protections for [rollover] Roth IRAs
My guess as to where this comes from is the fact that many states afford Roth IRAs less protection than T-IRAs. But this difference in the treatment between traditionals and Roths doesn't care where the money comes from - rollover or contribution.
As far as the BAPCPA is concerned, a rollover is a rollover, whether traditional or Roth: https://www.journalofaccountancy.com/issues/2006/jan/protectretirementassets.html
See also: https://mgoprivatewealth.com/ideas-insights/now-you-know-the-only-difference-between-a-rollover-ira-and-a-contributory-ira-bankruptcy-limits/
If you want a less wonky source, though I'm not fond of citing it, Investopedia says: https://www.investopedia.com/ask/answers/081915/my-ira-protected-bankruptcy.asp
I reside in Washington state which has strong creditor protections for "employee benefit plans."
Here's a snippet from the corresponding state law:
"The right of a person to a pension, annuity, or retirement allowance or disability allowance, or death benefits, or any optional benefit, or any other right accrued or accruing to any citizen of the state of Washington under any employee benefit plan, and any fund created by such a plan or arrangement, shall be exempt from execution, attachment, garnishment, or seizure by or under any legal process whatever."
This law specifically states that employee benefit plans include: IRAs, Roth IRAs, HSAs, 403(b) accounts, etc.
Link
https://www.thetaxadviser.com/content/dam/tta/issues/2014/jan/stateirachart.pdf
Thanks for the suggestion!
This reminds me that I should review my umbrella insurance coverage to ensure that it is still adequate.
- Buy as much as you have assets to protect; and
- Buy as much as you can afford.
Neither makes much sense.
The first because a plaintiff can go after your assets plus your insurance. This is unlike insuring for a property loss. With property you know that the most you can lose, say because of a fire, is the total value of the property.
The second doesn't make sense because it's no answer at all.
https://www.chron.com/business/enron/article/Enron-executives-may-lose-lawsuits-but-not-all-2070656.php
As far as OJ is concerned, https://whhlaw.com/oj-simpson-really-moving-florida-debt-collection/
IOW, you'd better have your ducks in a row before there's a judgment against you.
With respect to plaintiffs being constrained by contingency lawyers, submitted for your amusement: https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/geico-must-pay-52-million-woman-got-hpv-sex-mans-insured-car-court-rul-rcna32831
Of course this is being appealed. Still this is the type of claim (liability for negligence) that umbrella insurance is designed for, and it illustrates that the amounts and types of claims possible are limited only by a plaintiff's imagination.