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IRAs (Individual Retirement Accounts)

   A Tax-Free Way to Save: the Roth IRA
   The Traditional IRA
   Catch-Up Contributions
   Will My Contribution Be Deductible?
   The Traditional IRA vs. the Roth IRA
   What Type of Assets Can You Contribute to Your IRA?
   Setting up an IRA
   Investment Considerations for Your IRA
   When Is the Best Time to Contribute?
   Spousal IRAs
   Advantages and Disadvantages of IRA Accounts
   Rollovers to Your IRA
   Converting a Traditional IRA to a Roth IRA
   Roth IRA and 401(k)
   Choosing between the Roth IRA and Other Vehicles
   Roth IRA Conversions in 2010

Rollovers to Your IRA

If you leave a company and you are vested in a qualified employer retirement plan, such as a 401(k) plan, you generally have several distribution options on how to take this money. Before you take a distribution, look at all your options and make an informed decision. You may have the following options available:

  • Leave the money in the former employer's qualified plan.
  • Directly roll over your qualified plan money into a new employer's qualified plan, assuming the new plan will allow you to do so right away.
  • Directly roll over your distribution into a conduit IRA until a new employer's plan will accept the money (necessary for certain plan participants to preserve capital gain and averaging treatment).
  • Directly roll over your distribution into a traditional IRA.

SUGGESTION: If you take your retirement money from your former employer's plan, and you do not have access to a qualified plan in your new job, it is a good idea to roll over your plan funds into a traditional IRA. This way you retain the deferral of taxes.

IMPORTANT NOTE: One disadvantage of rolling over qualified plan funds to a traditional IRA is that you lose the benefit of a special tax provision called "forward averaging." However, by rolling over the distribution to a conduit IRA in which qualified plan assets have been segregated, and then back into another qualified plan, you can preserve forward-averaging treatment. This special tax treatment is available to plan participants born before 1936.

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Securities offered by Affinity Investment Services, LLC, 73 Mountain View Boulevard, Basking Ridge, NJ 07920, member FINRA/SIPC. Investments offered by Affinity Investment Services are not deposits or obligations of Affinity Federal Credit Union. They are NOT NCUA INSURED and NOT GUARANTEED by Affinity Federal Credit Union or any governmental agency and are subject to INVESTMENT RISK, including LOSS of PRINCIPAL. Investments may lose value. Affinity Investment Services, LLC is a wholly owned subsidiary of Affinity Federal Credit Union. Business Continuity Disclosure Statement.


* Tax preparers are independent contractors, experienced in income tax preparation. Tax services are not provided by nor supervised by Affinity Federal Credit Union or Affinity Investment Services, LLC.

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