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Recommendations: 0
I've heard something about being able to take the IRA contibutions you've made out of your IRA.
I'm in a pinch and don't have time to research this right now;
If I wanted the cash from my IRA for a short term (< 1 month) what does this entail??
Dozer
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Recommendations: 1
Dozer...
I've heard something about being able to take the IRA contibutions you've made out of your IRA.
I'm in a pinch and don't have time to research this right now;
If I wanted the cash from my IRA for a short term (< 1 month) what does this entail??
If this is a Roth IRA, as I am assuming, you may find your answer here:
http://www.fairmark.com/rothira/gendist.htm
If you want to cross-check with IRS Pub 590 (IRAs):
http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p590.pdf
Regards, Bill
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Recommendations: 2
If I wanted the cash from my IRA for a short term (< 1 month) what does this entail??
Read IRS Publication 590, specifically in regards to "rollovers". It's a little trick you can play in a pinch. Basically, the IRS allows you up to 60 days to fund a new IRA once you've taken the money out of the old one.
So, here's the list of things you'd need to do:
1. Take the money out of the IRA. Be sure to check the box "rollover" instead of the box "distribution". This is when the clock starts.
2. Use the money as you see fit for up to 59 days.
3. On the 60th CALENDAR day or before, open a new IRA somewhere and put the money into there.
4. You now have to wait 12 months before you can have this fun again.
Good luck! (and be sure to read Pub 590!)
-Agg97
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Recommendations: 0
Read IRS Publication 590, specifically in regards to "rollovers". It's a little trick you can play in a pinch. Basically, the IRS allows you up to 60 days to fund a new IRA once you've taken the money out of the old one.
So, here's the list of things you'd need to do:
1. Take the money out of the IRA. Be sure to check the box "rollover" instead of the box "distribution". This is when the clock starts.
2. Use the money as you see fit for up to 59 days.
3. On the 60th CALENDAR day or before, open a new IRA somewhere and put the money into there.
4. You now have to wait 12 months before you can have this fun again.
Good luck! (and be sure to read Pub 590!)
Yes, I just read that. So i have two Roth IRAS right now. One at Vanguard, one at Ameritrade. I can basically close the Ameritrade account, check the Rollover box, and within 60 days contribute it back to my Vanguard account, penalty free. Sounds like a plan!
Dozer
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