IRS eases rules on reversing required retirement savings withdrawals

Personal finance

If you took a required minimum distribution from your retirement account this year and want to reverse it, you now may be able to.

The IRS said Tuesday that anyone who already has taken an RMD in 2020 from certain retirement accounts has until Aug. 31 to put the money back. The announcement comes several months after the CARES Act eliminated those mandated distributions for the year — yet some people already had taken them before the law’s passage.

“This is a really good piece of news for someone who wants to roll back their distributions,” said certified financial planner and CPA Jeffrey Levine, director of advanced planning at Buckingham Wealth Partners in Long Island, New York.

More from Smart Tax Planning:
Work-from-home costs may get tax break in these states
Here’s where to get your tax return done for free
Tax Day is getting close. Are you ready?

RMDs are mandated withdrawals that the government forces you to take from certain retirement accounts once you reach a certain age or inherit one of the affected accounts. Legislation passed late in 2019 raised the RMD age to 72 from 70½, effective this year. 

The CARES Act, signed into law in late March, enables any taxpayer facing an RMD in 2020 from their defined-contribution retirement plan — including a 401(k) or 403(b) plan — or their individual retirement account, to skip those withdrawals this year. This includes anyone who turned age 70½ in 2019 and would have had to take the first RMD by April 1, 2020. The waiver does not apply to defined-benefit plans (i.e., pensions.)

The IRS’s new relief applies to individuals who face RMDs either due to their age or because they inherited an account that comes with those mandated withdrawals, Levine said.

Although Levine questions the agency’s legal authority to make the change, he said he doubts there will be an uproar over it.

“I think this is something no one will argue with,” Levine said. “The IRS is saying a lot of people are complaining about this, so we’re going to do what everyone wants.”

Articles You May Like

U.S. companies could be caught in the crosshairs if China retaliates to fight Trump
We’re changing our price target on TJX despite the retailer’s light guidance
Nvidia to report third-quarter earnings after the bell
Budget travel icon Spirit Airlines files for bankruptcy protection after mounting losses
Social Security beneficiaries to soon receive notices revealing the size of their 2025 benefit checks

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *