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234

Life and Death Planning for Retirement Benefits

5.2.07

The Ordering Rules

Any distribution from a Roth IRA is deemed to come from the following sources, in the

order indicated.

§ 408A(d)(4)(B) ;

Reg.

§ 1.408A-6 ,

A-9. These rules are referred to in this book

as the Ordering Rules. These rules apply to all Roth IRA distributions except corrective

distributions

( ¶ 2.1.08 )

(Reg.

§ 1.408A-6 ,

A-9(e)) and recharacterizations

(¶ 5.6) .

1.

Any distribution is deemed to come, first, from the participant’s contributions to his Roth

IRA(s), to the extent that all previous distributions from his Roth IRA(s) have not yet

exceeded the contributions; and

2.

If the participant has made both “regular”

( ¶ 5.3.02 )

and “rollover” (conversion)

(¶ 5.4)

contributions, the distributions are deemed to come, first, from the regular contributions,

then from rollover contributions on a first-in, first-out, basis; and

3.

Once it is determined that the distribution is deemed to come from a particular rollover

contribution (conversion), the dollars that were includible in gross income by virtue of that

conversion

( ¶ 5.4.03 )

are deemed distributed first. (All of the rollover would have been

included in income except the participant’s own after-tax money that was part of the

conversion; see ¶ 2.2.) This particular ordering rule matters only to someone who is under

age 59½ at the time of the Roth IRA distribution (see

¶ 5.5.02 )

; and

4.

Finally, once all contributions have been distributed, the balance of the distribution comes

out of earnings. Whew!

Fortunately, practitioners will rarely if ever need to consult the Ordering Rules:

For most people, the Ordering Rules matter only for purposes of determining whether a

nonqualified distribution is subject to income tax; the Ordering Rules essentially mean that

the participant’s already-taxed contributions to the Roth IRA come out first and

accordingly distributions from the Roth IRA are NOT taxable until the total distributed

exceeds those contributions.

You Can Never Stop Tracking “Basis” Vs. “Earnings!”

It might appear that once the client has met the requirements for a qualified distribution

(

e.g.

, he is over age 59½ and has completed the Five-Year Period), he could breathe a

sigh of relief and stop keeping track of how many dollars in the Roth account constituted

“basis” versus “earnings.” Not so! There is always the possibility that a nonqualified

distribution may occur even after that point—for example, if there is a prohibited

transaction

( ¶ 5.2.04 )

. The example in the regulations is a disabled individual who

receives a qualified distribution from a DRAC, then later ceases to be disabled and takes

another distribution from the DRAC before reaching age 59½. Reg.

§ 1.402A-1

, A-7.

See the last sentence of

¶ 5.7.06 f

or how to eliminate the need for such tracking with

respect to a DRAC.