Archive for the ‘General Individual’ Category

Health Care Benefits On W2 Will Not Be Taxed

Friday, June 18th, 2010

Many peo­ple have heard of one of the pro­vi­sions of the Patient Pro­tec­tion and Afford­able Care Act is that their employ­ers will be report­ing the value of their employer-provided health care cov­er­age on their W-2; that state­ment is true.  Con­gress appar­ently wanted employ­ees to bet­ter appre­ci­ate what their employ­ers spend on them. 

Unfor­tu­nately there is a hoax email float­ing around report­ing that those ben­e­fits will be tax­able ben­e­fits; the email states Kiplinger has writ­ten an arti­cle sup­port­ing this con­clu­sion.  The email con­tin­ues on hys­ter­i­cally about how much their taxes will go up. Folks, I get the Kiplinger let­ter, and they have stated that those health care ben­e­fits reported on W-2s will not be taxed; law­mak­ers def­i­nitely did NOT vote to tax work­ers on their health care coverage. 

The W-2s will report the value of your health care ben­e­fits to you and noth­ing more.  You will not be taxed on those employer-provided health care ben­e­fits (unless you are already being taxed on that income because your plan is not paid pre-tax).  The only thing that will change is you will now know how much your employer chipped in for your health care benefits. 

Thats it; the email is a hoax. 

As always Art and Busi­ness Con­sult­ing is here to help.  If you need help with a small busi­ness and or tax issue, please give us a call.

The usual dis­claimers: Although ABC has made every effort to insure the accu­racy of Taxes, Tips and Tools, mis­in­for­ma­tion, dis­in­for­ma­tion, changes, mis­takes, typos and hack­ers hap­pen, there­fore Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing LLC takes no respon­si­bil­ity for any action taken or results based on the infor­ma­tion sup­plied here in. The con­tent of this blog gen­er­ally applies to busi­ness and indi­vid­ual tax­a­tion in the United States of Amer­ica.  Inter­nal Rev­enue Ser­vice Cir­cu­lar 230 Dis­clo­sure:  As pro­vided for in Trea­sury reg­u­la­tions, advice (if any) relat­ing to fed­eral taxes that is con­tained in this com­mu­ni­ca­tion (includ­ing attach­ments) is not intended or writ­ten to be used, and can­not be used for the pur­pose of (1) avoid­ing penal­ties under the Inter­nal Rev­enue Code or (2) pro­mot­ing, mar­ket­ing or rec­om­mend­ing to another party any plan or arrange­ment address herein.  Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing LLC cur­rently does not have a cer­ti­fied pub­lic accoun­tant, human resource spe­cial­ist, finan­cial plan advi­sor or an attor­ney on staff; this infor­ma­tion is purely for edu­ca­tional pur­poses and not to be con­strued as legal or finan­cial advice. Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing LLC and its employ­ees, mem­bers and asso­ciates are not engage to prac­tice law; you always should dis­cuss legal mat­ters with your attor­ney before talk­ing to any­one else.

Individuals — Start Thinking About 2010 Taxes Now

Friday, May 7th, 2010

Did you get a huge tax refund this year?  Most peo­ple feel pretty good about that until they real­ize they gave the gov­ern­ment an inter­est free loan of all that money they just got back. 

If you received sev­eral thou­sand dol­lars back from the IRS this year, you may want to con­sider com­plet­ing a new W-4 (includ­ing the work­sheet), and increase your allowances. Take that “extra money,” stuff it in an inter­est bear­ing sav­ings account and maybe you can earn some inter­est and build that nest egg at the same time. 

Con­versely if you owed the gov­ern­ment money you may want to make adjust­ments as well, espe­cially if you paid a penalty for under­pay­ment of taxes over the year. 

So far the tax brack­ets are very sim­i­lar to last year.  Also the stan­dard deduc­tion is the same except for a mod­est $50 increase for Head of House­hold fil­ers.  The amount for each exemp­tion is also unchanged. 

As in the past the brack­ets for the Earned Income Credit have been adjusted for infla­tion and increased slightly.  The max­i­mum credit is the same for tax­pay­ers with no chil­dren and increased a few dol­lars for peo­ple with children. 

There are some tax breaks that have expired in 2010.

  • The exclu­sion of the first $2400 in unem­ploy­ment income has expired at the end of 2009.  Be sure to include it in your esti­mated tax cal­cu­la­tions for 2010.
  • The sales tax/excise tax dedu­tion for the pur­chase of a new auto­mo­bile pur­chase expired too.
  • So did the increase in the stan­dard deduc­tion for real-estate taxes and losses in a fed­er­ally declared dis­as­ter area. 
  • Time has run out for those wish­ing to obtain the First Time home-buyer credit.  Only tax­pay­ers that entered into a bind­ing con­tract by April 30, 2010 can take the credit IF they close by June 30, 2010.  If a tax­payer takes the credit for a 2010 pur­chase on your 2009 taxes, they may not take it again in 2010. 

Those who got in on the First Time Home­Buyer Credit when it was a $7500 interest-free loan from the gov­ern­ment instead of the tax credit it is today, will have to start pay­ing it back this year (the orig­i­nal “credit” is paid back $500/year for 15 years).  Be sure to include this extra $500 tax into your cal­cu­la­tions for with­hold­ing or esti­mated tax pay­ments for 2010. 

Tax credit that are still around for 2010?

  • The Amer­i­can Oppor­tu­nity Credit for education. The credit (up to $2,500 on the first $4000 of edu­ca­tional expenses in the first 4 years of school),  is not just for tuition any­more, but has been expanded to include books and sup­plies too. 
  • Energy credit for effi­cient doors and win­dows. The tax credit 30% of the cost of the new qual­i­fied doors and win­dows to a max­i­mum $1,500 over the 2-year 2009–2010 tax year period.  If you took the full credit in 2009, you can’t take it in 2010. 
  • Energy credit for alter­na­tive energy such as wind and solar is still 30% of the expen­di­ture, but there is no cap.  You will need to check with the man­u­fac­turer to be sure their equip­ment qualifies. 
  • There is the plug in elec­tric drive vehi­cle credit for qual­i­fied elec­tric vehi­cles pur­chased after Decem­ber 31, 2009 run­ning through 2104.  The credit dis­ap­pears after the first 200,000 vehi­cles per man­u­fac­turer have been sold. 
  • Hybrid Vehi­cle Tax Cred­its are still avail­able through the end of this year. Sev­eral man­u­fac­tures have not yet sold 60,000 cars so they are still avail­able for this tax credit.  Toy­ota, Ford and Honda already have sold 60,000 hybrids and are NOT eli­gi­ble for the credit anymore.

The max­i­mum pre-tax con­tri­bu­tions to var­i­ous retire­ment plans is unchanged, but there is a big change with respect to Roth IRAs.  Peo­ple can con­vert from a tra­di­tional IRA to a Roth IRA regard­less of income in 2010.  Fur­ther­more they can spread the tax result­ing from the con­ver­sion  over 2 years if they chose to do so.   For more infor­ma­tion about pros and cons of a Roth Con­ver­sion, please read the blog, Tra­di­tional IRA to Roth Con­ver­sion in 2010.

There are cer­tain items that have changed in 2010 over the 2009 tax year.  Remem­ber Con­gress has the rest of the year to act on these items and prob­a­bly will. 

  • The estate tax has been repealed.  But you can’t really plan on dying this year anyway… 
  • The AMT patch has not been passed yet; be aware if con­gress doesn’t act then AMT will drop back down to pre-2001 lev­els 33,750 (45,000 Mar­ried Fil­ing Joint). 
  • The phase out  item­ized deduc­tions and exemp­tions for higher income earn­ers has vanished. 

As always, small busi­ness ser­vices and tax­a­tion are our busi­ness.  If you need help Please give Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing a call.  We would love to engage you as a client.

The usual dis­claimers: Although ABC has made every effort to insure the accu­racy of Taxes, Tips and Tools, mis­in­for­ma­tion, dis­in­for­ma­tion, changes, mis­takes, typos and hack­ers hap­pen, there­fore Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing LLC takes no respon­si­bil­ity for any action taken or results based on the infor­ma­tion sup­plied here in. The con­tent of this blog gen­er­ally applies to busi­ness and indi­vid­ual tax­a­tion in the United States of Amer­ica.  Inter­nal Rev­enue Ser­vice Cir­cu­lar 230 Dis­clo­sure:  As pro­vided for in Trea­sury reg­u­la­tions, advice (if any) relat­ing to fed­eral taxes that is con­tained in this com­mu­ni­ca­tion (includ­ing attach­ments) is not intended or writ­ten to be used, and can­not be used for the pur­pose of (1) avoid­ing penal­ties under the Inter­nal Rev­enue Code or (2) pro­mot­ing, mar­ket­ing or rec­om­mend­ing to another party any plan or arrange­ment address herein.  Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing LLC cur­rently does not have a cer­ti­fied pub­lic accoun­tant, human resource spe­cial­ist, or an attor­ney on staff; this infor­ma­tion is purely for edu­ca­tional pur­poses and not to be con­strued as legal or finan­cial advice. Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing LLC and its employ­ees, mem­bers and asso­ciates are not engage to prac­tice law; you always should dis­cuss legal mat­ters with your attor­ney before talk­ing to any­one else.

Business Owners: How To Avoid Getting Audited

Sunday, April 18th, 2010

Tax Audit.  Those two words strike fear in the hearts of many tax­pay­ers. but as with many things an ounce of pre­ven­tion is worth a pound of cure.  Here are 7 tips to avoid get­ting audited.

1. Keep good records — include details for income, expenses, debts and deduc­tions and keep them for 7 years.

2. Omis­sions may make the IRS double-check a tax return there­fore make sure it is com­pletely filled out AND signed before sub­mit­ting it.

3. Be sure the income on your tax return matches the income indi­cated on every 1099, W-2 and K-1 . The IRS gets a copy of every 1099, W-2 and K-1 you receive and their com­put­ers will pick up on reports that do not match exactly.

4. Don’t change or mesh cash and accrual account­ing meth­ods.  A com­bi­na­tion of cash and accrual meth­ods, or chang­ing account­ing meth­ods is sure to attract attention.

  • Remem­ber you need IRS per­mis­sion to change account­ing methods.
  • Remem­ber if you sell inven­tory you are almost always required to use an accrual method to account for it.

5. Clas­sify employ­ees and inde­pen­dent con­trac­tors care­fully. An inde­pen­dent con­tractor can ask for a review to be treated as an employee and many do so to reduce their self-employment tax by half.  If you do not have a con­tract with an inde­pen­dent con­trac­tor, the IRS may claim they are an employee and assess back pay­roll taxes.

6. Co-mingled books make audi­tors drool.  Although there is no spe­cific rule for Sole Pro­pri­etors regard­ing co-mingling expenses and income — DO NOT co-mingle busi­ness and per­sonal accounts — it makes it very easy for the audi­tor to sug­gest a given expense is a per­sonal rather than busi­ness expense OR to con­cluded that a given deposit is busi­ness income as opposed to some­thing else.

  • Have sep­a­rate accounts bank accounts,  credit cards,  etc. and keep your per­sonal and busi­ness receipts and other records separate.
  • Keep a con­tem­po­ra­ne­ous log of vehi­cle mileage & expenses.
  • If you have a home office keep the work area sep­a­rate, use it exclu­sively for busi­ness and doc­u­ment it.
  • If you piggy back vaca­tion and busi­ness deduct only expenses related to the busi­ness por­tion of the trip.
  • If you plan on tak­ing 100% deduc­tion for any listed prop­erty expense: auto­mo­bile, cell phone, com­puter equip­ment and enter­tain­ment devices, you had bet­ter be pre­pared to back that claim up; com­bin­ing a busi­ness trip with a trip to a gro­cery store even once is enough to vio­late 100%.
  • Remem­ber there is no deduc­tion for Meals & Enter­tain­ment expenses that are not documented-keep your receipts and anno­tate them if required.
  • Treat your com­pany as you would treat any other sep­a­rate busi­ness rela­tion­ship — keep all trans­ac­tions at arm’s length.

7. If your taxes are com­plex hire a rep­utable tax pre­parer or learn to use tax soft­ware.  Although you are ulti­mately respon­si­ble for any tax return you sign, you may avoid mis­takes if you obtain pro­fes­sional assis­tance; in the event a mis­take does occur relay­ing on an expert’s advice may help you avoid penalties.

As always, small busi­ness ser­vices and tax­a­tion are our busi­ness.  If you need help Please give Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing a call.  We would love to engage you as a client.

The usual dis­claimers: Although ABC has made every effort to insure the accu­racy of Taxes, Tips and Tools, mis­in­for­ma­tion, dis­in­for­ma­tion, changes, mis­takes, typos and hack­ers hap­pen, there­fore Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing LLC takes no respon­si­bil­ity for any action taken or results based on the infor­ma­tion sup­plied here in. The con­tent of this blog gen­er­ally applies to busi­ness and indi­vid­ual tax­a­tion in the United States of Amer­ica.  Inter­nal Rev­enue Ser­vice Cir­cu­lar 230 Dis­clo­sure:  As pro­vided for in Trea­sury reg­u­la­tions, advice (if any) relat­ing to fed­eral taxes that is con­tained in this com­mu­ni­ca­tion (includ­ing attach­ments) is not intended or writ­ten to be used, and can­not be used for the pur­pose of (1) avoid­ing penal­ties under the Inter­nal Rev­enue Code or (2) pro­mot­ing, mar­ket­ing or rec­om­mend­ing to another party any plan or arrange­ment address herein.  Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing LLC cur­rently does not have a cer­ti­fied pub­lic accoun­tant, human resource spe­cial­ist, or an attor­ney on staff; this infor­ma­tion is purely for edu­ca­tional pur­poses and not to be con­strued as legal or finan­cial advice. Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing LLC and its employ­ees, mem­bers and asso­ciates are not engage to prac­tice law; you always should dis­cuss legal mat­ters with your attor­ney before talk­ing to any­one else.

Health Care Reform, What Does It Mean To You?

Wednesday, March 24th, 2010

As I look over the infor­ma­tion flood­ing in I real­ize, it doesn’t affect me much for the next  four years, except per­haps my insur­ance rates may go up and the thresh­old for item­ized med­ical expenses is going to increase. I am cur­rently shop­ping for health insur­ance and the prospects are grim. For the first time I am actu­ally con­sid­er­ing going with­out cov­er­age.  Why?  Because the poli­cies I can afford right now will not pre­vent me from going bank­rupt in a med­ical emer­gency and do not pay for any­thing until an out­ra­geous fam­ily deductible is sat­is­fied.  I under­stand hav­ing insur­ance may make the dif­fer­ence between a doc­tor see­ing me and not see­ing me, but as a basi­cally healthy per­son I am seri­ously con­sid­er­ing rolling the dice, mostly because I just can’t afford it any­more. I know I am not alone. Update: I did finally get some fam­ily coverage-a plan with a high deductible that doesn’t qual­ify as an HDHP-go fig­ure, but the price is less than half of the ghastly and expen­sive plan offered by my mate’s new employer.

Does health care reform help with my cur­rent dilemma? No.  I have to wait until 2014 then maybe it helps… or not. My crys­tal ball doesn’t see that far into the future.

In my opin­ion Health Care Reform does noth­ing to address the rea­sons why health care costs have sky­rock­eted. Accord­ing to some ana­lysts insur­ance costs will con­tinue to rise.  As look what hap­pened with credit cards in advance of that reform being enacted, I expect health insur­ance providers are going to keep rais­ing rates and mess­ing around with Joe-average con­sumer until 2014 as well.

Get­ting down off my soap box and mov­ing along… Since the House Rec­on­cil­i­a­tion Act strikes out or mod­i­fies a num­ber of pro­vi­sions in the Senate’s Patient Pro­tec­tion Act to which House mem­bers had objected, the Sen­ate now must pass the “side­car” House Rec­on­cil­i­a­tion Act before it becomes law. Who knows how long that will take and what the final result will be.

Update: The Sen­ate passed a side­car that the House signed off on; Pres­i­dent Obama is signed off on it March 30, 2010.  In the “new” ver­sion — banks are being stripped of the power to do stu­dent loans-in the past the loans were guar­an­teed by the gov­ern­ment any­way, so the tax­pay­ers were tak­ing all the risk and the banks were mak­ing all the inter­est.  This bill will not change the sta­tus of exist­ing stu­dent loans. What does this have to do with health care? Not much. Why did the banks get such a sweet­heart deal in the first place? Dunno.  Weird how con­gress works.

The entire health care reform law rests on the idea that if every­body is pay­ing into the pool, costs for sicker peo­ple will come down, there­fore the law requires all indi­vid­u­als to have health insur­ance cov­er­age by 2014; those who choose not to have insur­ance would pay a tax. Indi­vid­u­als who cur­rently have cov­er­age and wish to retain that cov­er­age can do so under a “grand­fa­ther” pro­vi­sion in the heath care pack­age and the cov­er­age will be deemed to meet the individual’s respon­si­bil­ity to have health cov­er­age. A sim­i­lar grand­fa­ther pro­vi­sion applies to employ­ers that cur­rently offer cov­er­age. Indi­vid­u­als cov­ered by Medicare, Med­ic­aid, Veteran’s affairs and other gov­ern­ment pro­grams would be regarded as hav­ing essen­tial cov­er­age.  The IRS will over­see much of the imple­men­ta­tion of health care reform.

The health care reform bill means new oblig­a­tions for insur­ance com­pa­nies, new respon­si­bil­i­ties for employ­ers and even­tu­ally every indi­vid­ual will be required to have cov­er­age or pay a tax. Some of the new law’s pro­vi­sions take effect in a mat­ter of weeks. Many other fea­tures of the health care over­haul won’t take effect until 2014 or even later.

  • The law doesn’t require employ­ers to pro­vide health insur­ance ben­e­fits; how­ever, large employ­ers (orga­ni­za­tions with 50 or more employ­ees) that don’t offer insur­ance will have to pay an annual tax of $2,000 per full-time worker. Busi­nesses with more than 200 employ­ees must auto­mat­i­cally enroll work­ers into their health insur­ance plans.  Employ­ees would then be able to opt out if they choose.
  • Small-business tax cred­its of up to 35% will take effect this year to help orga­ni­za­tions with 25 or fewer employ­ees pay for afford­able employer-provided insur­ance. Update: Qual­i­fied Small Busi­ness: those with 25 or fewer employ­ees and aver­age annual wages of $50,000 or less. Start­ing in 2014 the small busi­ness will have to pay 50% to be eli­gi­ble for the credit.
  • Qual­i­fied small busi­nesses will be able to pur­chase insur­ance for employ­ees through state-based exchanges known as Small Busi­ness Health Options Pro­grams (SHOPs).  They will be designed to allow small employ­ers to pool risk together, ide­ally low­er­ing cov­er­age costs.  SHOPs must be in place by 2014. If you’re a small busi­ness and even one of your employ­ees opts out of employer-provided cov­er­age in favor of insur­ance avail­able through the state-based exchanges, you could be required to pro­vide a voucher worth the value of the per-employee pre­mi­ums you pay under your plan.
  • 2011: Employ­ees will no longer be able to use FSA funds to pay for over-the-counter med­ica­tions. The penalty for using HSA for non health care related expenses goes from 10% to 20%. 2103: The law also caps employee con­tri­bu­tions to health-related flex­i­ble spend­ing accounts (FSAs) at $2,500 per year & indexed to infla­tion thereafter.
  • All health plans must main­tain depen­dent cov­er­age for insured employ­ees’ chil­dren until they turn age 26.  This rule takes effect in Sep­tem­ber. If your busi­ness pro­vides health insur­ance cov­er­age, get ready to re-enroll many young peo­ple who left their par­ents’ fam­ily cov­er­age some­time within the last few years.
  • A high-risk insur­ance pool will be set up this spring and sum­mer to pro­vide afford­able cov­er­age for unin­sured peo­ple with pre-existing con­di­tions. Even if your com­pany does not offer insur­ance, you may get ques­tions from work­ers seek­ing cov­er­age; refer them to your state’s insur­ance commission.
  • 2011: Large employ­ers that pay for retiree drug cov­er­age (Medicare part D) must declare for account­ing pur­poses whether they intend to keep doing so; your accoun­tants will have to wait for the IRS to set the final rules first.  Also employ­ers must begin report­ing the value of health care ben­e­fits on employee W2s
  • There are new rules limit how and for whom insur­ance com­pa­nies can deny cov­er­age.  The health care reform law pro­hibits insur­ers from deny­ing cov­er­age to chil­dren based on pre-existing con­di­tions, putting life­time dol­lar lim­its on cov­er­age and can­cel­ing cov­er­age retroac­tively except in cases of fraud. Sim­i­lar rules for adults won’t kick in until 2014.
  • For some low income indi­vid­u­als and fam­i­lies, their pre­mi­ums will be capped at a per­cent­age (2–9.5%) of their income.

How do they pay for it?

  • There will be a 40 per­cent excise tax on high-dollar health insur­ance plans, to begin in 2018 payable by the insurer, which they can pass along to their customers
  • 2013: an increase in Medicare pay­roll taxes start­ing in 2013 on tax­pay­ers in the $200,000– plus income cat­e­gory ($250,000 for joint filers)
  • There will be an 10% indoor tan­ning tax begin­ning July 1, 2010.
  • New fees on cer­tain health-related indus­tries &  a dozen other “rev­enue rais­ers” are also included in the final bill.
  • 2013: While not exactly a rev­enue raiser, taxes for some will increase as the item­ized med­ical expense deduc­tion thresh­old is raised from 7.5% of AGI to 10% of AGI in 2013. For indi­vid­u­als 65 and older the change doesn’t occur until 2016.

Other Items in the act:

  • Denies Bio­fuel Credit for “Black Liquor,” pre­sum­ably because of abuses of this tax credit.
  • Cod­i­fies the Eco­nomic Sub­stance Doc­trine, the taxpayer’s eco­nomic posi­tion other than their tax posi­tion must change in a mean­ing­ful way in engag­ing in a transaction-mostly affects tax-shelter part­ner­ships & S-Corporations. Vio­la­tions are sub­ject to stiff, automatically-applied penal­ties of 20 or 40 per­cent, depend­ing on the under­ly­ing trans­ac­tion and level of disclosure.
  • Increased cor­po­rate esti­mated tax pay­ments on cor­po­ra­tions with $1 Bil­lion dol­lars in assets.
  • 2012: Adds cor­po­ra­tions to infor­ma­tion report­ing; busi­nesses will be need to get tax­payer iden­ti­fi­ca­tion info from cor­po­ra­tions they pay more than $600 a year to for ser­vices and prop­erty (that’s a lot more 1099-MISCs folks) and report those payments.

Advice to busi­nesses: Stay in con­tact with your health insur­ance bro­ker or car­rier.  They’ll have infor­ma­tion as soon as it’s avail­able. Talk to your FSA provider about imple­ment­ing changes the FSAs as soon as pos­si­ble as employ­ees are going to start want to know what they need to do now.  It’s up to you to pro­vide your employ­ees about how the new man­dates affect them, ask your ben­e­fits car­rier for mate­ri­als you can pass along to your employees.

Indi­vid­u­als should also stay in touch with their insur­ance bro­ker or carrier.

And hang on. It’s going to be a bumpy ride.

What do you think about health care reform? What does health care reform mean to you?  Do you expect to receive any ben­e­fit or expe­ri­ence any harm in the near-term, or long-run?

As always, small busi­ness ser­vices and tax­a­tion are our busi­ness.  If you need help Please give Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing a call.  We would love to engage you as a client.

The usual dis­claimers: Although ABC has made every effort to insure the accu­racy of Taxes, Tips and Tools, mis­in­for­ma­tion, dis­in­for­ma­tion, changes, mis­takes, typos and hack­ers hap­pen, there­fore Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing LLC takes no respon­si­bil­ity for any action taken or results based on the infor­ma­tion sup­plied here in. The con­tent of this blog gen­er­ally applies to busi­ness and indi­vid­ual tax­a­tion in the United States of Amer­ica.  Inter­nal Rev­enue Ser­vice Cir­cu­lar 230 Dis­clo­sure:  As pro­vided for in Trea­sury reg­u­la­tions, advice (if any) relat­ing to fed­eral taxes that is con­tained in this com­mu­ni­ca­tion (includ­ing attach­ments) is not intended or writ­ten to be used, and can­not be used for the pur­pose of (1) avoid­ing penal­ties under the Inter­nal Rev­enue Code or (2) pro­mot­ing, mar­ket­ing or rec­om­mend­ing to another party any plan or arrange­ment address herein.  Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing LLC cur­rently does not have a cer­ti­fied pub­lic accoun­tant, human resource spe­cial­ist, or an attor­ney on staff; this infor­ma­tion is purely for edu­ca­tional pur­poses and not to be con­strued as legal or finan­cial advice. Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing LLC and its employ­ees, mem­bers and asso­ciates are not engage to prac­tice law; you always should dis­cuss legal mat­ters with your attor­ney before talk­ing to any­one else.

Traditional IRA to Roth Conversion in 2010

Thursday, February 18th, 2010

It is a spe­cial time for peo­ple con­sid­er­ing con­vert­ing their IRA into a Roth IRA. Why?

  • Because the fed­eral gov­ern­ment is allow­ing tax­pay­ers to split their tra­di­tion IRA into 2 parts and pay the tax on a Roth Con­ver­sion over 2 years
  • And because the restric­tions against high income tax­pay­ers has been removed
  • And because the econ­omy is still in the tank so IRA val­u­a­tions are lower than they have been, and tax­pay­ers may be earn­ing less in this year than years preceding.

What is the dif­fer­ence between a Tra­di­tional and Roth IRA?

  • Income con­tributed to a Tra­di­tional IRA is usu­ally pre-tax income, but Roth IRA con­tri­bu­tions are after-tax income;  there­fore all ordi­nary dis­tri­b­u­tions from a Tra­di­tional IRA are tax­able, but the ordi­nary dis­tri­b­u­tions from a Roth IRA includ­ing inter­est and div­i­dends earned are not taxable.
  • Tra­di­tional IRAs can only be accessed with­out penalty upon reach­ing age 59 ½ or retir­ing or under a hand­ful of other very spe­cific sit­u­a­tions.  The amounts the tax­payer con­tributes to a Roth IRA can be accessed with­out penalty after 5 years; only the inter­est can’t be accessed until retire­ment age.
  • Tax­pay­ers are not required to take min­i­mum dis­tri­b­u­tions from a Roth IRA upon reach­ing age 70 ½.

Why would a tax­payer con­sider doing the con­ver­sion now? If they think it will save them taxes in the long run.  Many fac­tors come into play.  Will tax rates go up for the tax­payer or down? Are they going to need the money in short order or will it be sit­ting in an account gath­er­ing inter­est and div­i­dends tax-free.  Can they pay the tax now?

Whether or not a Roth con­ver­sion makes sense must be han­dled on a case by case basis.  Rea­sons why it might not make sense are:

  • If the taxpayer’s time-line to retire­ment date is too short to make pay­ing the taxes now worthwhile-this time­line should be at least 10 years as the longer the Roth grows tax-free the more advan­ta­geous the conversion,
  • If the tax­payer expects their retire­ment income to be sub­stan­tially less than it is right now-making the con­ver­sion now could cost the tax­payer a lot more in income tax.
  • If the tax­payer can’t pay the tax now from non IRA sources, Remem­ber if the tax­payer uses part of the money from the Tra­di­tional IRA to pay the taxes on the con­ver­sion, that amount is sub­ject to the 10 Per­cent Penalty for Early Withdrawal.
  • Many items of adjust­ment and credit are tied to the taxpayer’s AGI.  Adding IRA income to the tax­pay­ers cur­rent income base, may cause them to lose these cred­its and adjust­ments to income.  This year there are a cou­ple of big ones: the First-time Home­buy­ers Credit and the Amer­i­can Oppor­tu­nity Credit.
  • Fur­ther­more for a retired tax­payer, the con­ver­sion can make part of their Social Secu­rity tax­able and increase their medicare Part B pre­mi­ums by increas­ing income for the tax years of the con­ver­sion.  But remem­ber — once the con­ver­sion is made these seniors will not have to take min­i­mum dis­tri­b­u­tions from their Roth IRAs.

If the tax­payer decides it is advan­ta­geous to make the Roth Con­ver­sion now, they will only have to pay the tax on the con­verted amounts; there is no early with­drawal penalty. Con­vert­ing a Tra­di­tional IRA is an all or noth­ing sce­nario though. In most years the tax­payer had to come up with all the tax due for a Tra­di­tional IRA to Roth Con­ver­sion in one year.  How­ever for tax years 2010 and 2011 the tax­payer will be allowed to split their Tra­di­tional IRA and pay the tax on the con­ver­sion over two years.  As with all Roth con­ver­sions the tax­payer will have the option to reverse the 2010 con­ver­sion by Octo­ber 15, 2011 (assum­ing they timely file or file for an exten­sion and timely pay their taxes).  The tax for the por­tion of the 2010 con­ver­sion will be due in 2011 and the tax due on the 2011 por­tion will be due in 2012.

Because a per­son can re-characterize the con­ver­sion as late as Octo­ber next year, it makes sense that any­one who is con­sid­er­ing the con­ver­sion do so now rather than later, espe­cially if the account is still beaten down from hits the econ­omy has taken over the last sev­eral years.  If the IRAs value goes up over the next year, then the rise will be attrib­ut­able to gains in a Roth IRA instead of a tra­di­tional IRA. If it goes down the tax­payer can re-characterize the con­ver­sion if they want.  The tax­payer gets a do-over.  How­ever tax­pay­ers should be aware they can’t flip back and forth many times in one year, the con­ver­sion and do-over is a one-shot deal in a given tax year.

NOTE: This con­ver­sion is also avail­able for amounts in employer retire­ment plans but par­tic­i­pants in a SIMPLE plan must make sure they don’t fall afoul the 2-year hold­ing period for those plans.

If you decide a Roth Con­ver­sion is right for you, hire an advi­sor who has spe­cial­ized knowl­edge in this area.

As always, small busi­ness ser­vices and tax­a­tion are our busi­ness.  If you need help Please give Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing a call.  We would love to engage you as a client.

The usual dis­claimers: Although ABC has made every effort to insure the accu­racy of Taxes, Tips and Tools, mis­in­for­ma­tion, dis­in­for­ma­tion, changes, mis­takes, typos and hack­ers hap­pen, there­fore Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing LLC takes no respon­si­bil­ity for any action taken or results based on the infor­ma­tion sup­plied here in.  Inter­nal Rev­enue Ser­vice Cir­cu­lar 230 Dis­clo­sure:  As pro­vided for in Trea­sury reg­u­la­tions, advice (if any) relat­ing to fed­eral taxes that is con­tained in this com­mu­ni­ca­tion (includ­ing attach­ments) is not intended or writ­ten to be used, and can­not be used for the pur­pose of (1) avoid­ing penal­ties under the Inter­nal Rev­enue Code or (2) pro­mot­ing, mar­ket­ing or rec­om­mend­ing to another party any plan or arrange­ment address herein.  Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing LLC cur­rently does not have a cer­ti­fied pub­lic accoun­tant or an attor­ney on staff; this infor­ma­tion is purely for edu­ca­tional pur­poses and not to be con­strued as legal or finan­cial advice.  Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing LLC and its employ­ees, mem­bers and asso­ciates are not engage to prac­tice law; you always should dis­cuss legal mat­ters with your attor­ney before talk­ing to any­one else.