What to know about buying a house using retirement funds
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What to know about buying a house using retirement funds
Advice, Resources & Guides
Liz WestonDear Liz: My husband and I are thinking of purchasing a house near us. Can we use any funds from our retirement accounts
in orderto make the purchase? We would like to use this money along with some savings so that we do not have to carry a mortgage.
Answer: You dont mention how old you are, whether youre currently homeowners or what type of retirement accounts you have, which are all important factors.
If youre under 59, withdrawals from IRAs and workplace plans such as 401(k)s are typically taxed and penalized. You can avoid the penalty, but not the taxes, if youre considered a first-time home buyer and you withdraw up to $10,000 from your IRA to buy a home. (First-time home buyer just means you and your spouse havent owned a home within the last two years.)
This exception doesnt apply to workplace plans such as 401(k)s. However, if youre still working for the employer who provides the plan, you could consider taking a loan from your account.
Loans typically must be repaid within five years, but your employer may offer a longer payback period for the purchase of a primary residence. If the employer permits plan loans, the loan limit is typically the lesser of $50,000 or half the vested account balance, said Mark Luscombe, principal analyst for Wolters Kluwer Tax & Accounting.
Here's why you should stop using paper checksAn exception to the 50% cap is if 50% of your vested account balance is less than $10,000, Luscombe said. In that case, you can borrow up to the lesser of $10,000 or the balance in your account.
If you have a Roth IRA or Roth 401(k), the amount you contributed can be withdrawn for any purpose without taxes or penalties, Luscombe said.
Tax issues and trustsDear Liz: You recently responded to a readers question about protecting an intended bequest. In the answer you wrote, Assets in the trust get a step-up in tax basis when the first spouse dies, but not when the surviving spouse dies. My understanding is that, in California and other states with community property laws, the basis of eligible inherited community property gets stepped up twice: once for the surviving spouse and then again for the person who becomes the final beneficiary of the asset. I thought that using a revocable trust does not affect this double step-up. A married couple whose principal estate asset at death is their jointly owned (and substantially appreciated) home may never explore the benefits of a trust if they believe that one-half of the anticipated step-up in basis will be lost. Might you clarify what the sentence in your column means?
Answer: The double step-up works somewhat differently
fromthanwhat youre describing, and the trust in question is quite different.
A step-up in basis happens when someone dies and an inherited asset gets a new value for tax purposes. The asset is stepped up to the current market value, which means any appreciation that happened during the deceased owners lifetime is never taxed. (Basis also can be stepped down for assets that have declined in value.)
How to get out from under a crushing reverse-mortgage debtIn most states, when one spouse dies, only half of a couples jointly owned assets gets a favorable step-up in tax basis to the current market value. The surviving spouses half doesnt get a step up in value until he or she dies.
In community property states, however, both halves of the couple's community property get the step up with the first death, said Los Angeles estate planning attorney Burton Mitchell. Thats what is known as the double step-up in basis. If the survivor dies owning the property, it gets yet another step-up in tax basis.
Now lets move on to trusts. The double step-up in basis is not affected if you own property in a kind of revocable trust known as a living trust. Living trusts are designed to avoid the court process known as probate, and they can be changed during the creators lifetime (hence the term revocable).
The trust in question, however, was a bypass trust. The original letter writer asked how to make sure her son from her first marriage would receive an inheritance if she died before her current husband.
One of the options would be to create a bypass trust that gave the spouse income from her assets during his lifetime, with the assets transferring to the son at the spouses death. Such trusts can help ensure the assets actually get to the son someday and arent spent by the surviving spouse, or the surviving spouses next spouse. Among the disadvantages is the fact that assets placed in the bypass trust dont get a step-up in tax basis when the surviving spouse dies.
Another type of trust to consider in this situation would be a qualified terminable interest property (QTIP) trust. Unlike the assets in a bypass trust, assets in a QTIP would be included in the deceased spouse's estate, which means they would get a step up in basis when the survivor dies.
Clearly, this is a complex topic, so youd be wise to get an experienced estate planning attorneys advice.
Liz Weston, Certified Financial Planner, is a personal finance columnist for Questions may be sent to her at 3940 Laurel Canyon, No. 238, Studio City, CA 91604, or by using the "Contact" form atCategories
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