Browsing: Roth IRA

Q. I am a FERS employee who has 12 years before I can retire. I have already invested $4,000 in a Roth IRA for 2012 and switched all of my Thrift Savings Plan contributions to the Roth option in May. My financial adviser said I could not invest more than a total of $5,000 in both Roth accounts for 2012 and told me to switch my contributions back to the traditional TSP. Is he correct, or can I invest the $4,000 in the Roth IRA and $17,000 in the Roth TSP? In other words, can I still invest the annual…

Q. I am CSRS and will be retiring next year. I will be making a contribution (after-tax) to the Voluntary Contributions Program before retiring. I have an existing Roth IRA (after-tax), reflecting contributions I have made over the years. I do not have a traditional IRA (pretax). I do, however, have money in the Thrift Savings Plan (pretax). I plan on converting the VCP contributions (after-tax) to my Roth IRA (after-tax) at retirement. Any interest earned (pretax) in the VCP will be transferred to the TSP at retirement. After doing some research on this and reading IRS Pub 590, it…

Q. I have received several inquiries about establishing Voluntary Contribution Plan accounts with the Office of Personnel Management, funding the account and then rolling those voluntary contributions into a conventional Roth plan administered in the private sector once the employee has retired. I am a little skeptical about the prudence of this. It appears to me on the outside that this is simply a way of talking people into using the federal government to change the “color of money; read: launder” and then roll it into a Roth where a plan administrator will now make a fee on your hard-earned…

Q. I will be retiring June 30. I contributed $100,000 to my Voluntary Contribution Plan account between September 2010 and the present. I plan to roll over the $100,000 to my Roth IRA upon retirement; have the Office of Personnel Management withhold 20 percent for tax on the interest that it earned; then roll over the remainder to the Roth IRA also. Is that doable? A. The accrued interest will be considered a conversion. I believe that is doable, but you should check with your tax preparer to be sure.

Q. I’m 27 and contribute 5 percent of my income to the Thrift Savings Plan, which I have in the C and I funds. I’m considering opening a Roth IRA, as well as investing in an aggressive growth mutual fund. Would I be better off just increasing my TSP contributions? A. If you insist on long-shot betting — making bets that are more likely to lose than to win — you’ll have to go outside TSP. If you want an aggressive investment that maximizes your risk-adjusted expected returns, try the TSP’s S Fund.

Q. I am a FERS employee. I am interested in rolling over my outside Roth IRAs into the Thrift Savings Plan’s new Roth IRA. Can I do this? If so, how do I go about it? I am paying too much in fees for small amounts. A. Unfortunately, this is not permitted by the TSP.

Q. I am a federal employee, age 52. I established a Roth IRA several years ago and contributed to it until my income became too high. If I start contributing to the Roth TSP, can I roll over the discrete amount of my Roth TSP contributions at retirement to my existing Roth IRA, or do the rollover amounts follow the prorate distribution rule? A. You will be allowed to rollover the Roth money to your Roth IRA.

Q. I am a Postal Service employee, age 57, and I currently contribute $6,000 a year to a Roth Individual Retirement Account. Am I also allowed to contribute to the Thrift Savings Plan, or would that be considered an excess contribution? A. You are permitted to contribute the maximum to the TSP, but, depending upon your circumstances, this may limit your ability to contribute to a Roth IRA. See Internal Revenue Service Publication 590 for the rules.

Q. I am in the military and have a Thrift Savings Plan account set up. I put 10 percent of my paycheck a month into that account. Can I also put $5,000 into a Roth IRA if I am already doing the TSP, or is it a max contribution of $5,000 between them? A. Your eligibility to contribute to a Roth IRA will depend upon a number of factors, including your age, marital status, income and eligibility to participate in an employer-sponsored retirement plan, like TSP. See IRS Publication 590 for details, or ask your tax preparer for help in…

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