Deductibe Loss on IRA

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  • Barb
    Member
    • Jan 2008
    • 47

    #1

    Deductibe Loss on IRA

    Is there a way to take the loss on an IRA if all the money put in to it was Deductible or from a 401k that was Rolled over to an IRA?

    From what I have read you have to have basis, which in this case I believe the basis to be $.00.

    Just double checking with the experts before I give the wrong info to someone!

    Thanks
  • solomon
    Senior Member
    • Aug 2006
    • 1012

    #2
    Zero basis equals zero loss.

    Comment

    • Barb
      Member
      • Jan 2008
      • 47

      #3
      Re: IRA Loss

      Thanks, that what I thought, but was hoping I was wrong.

      A lot of people think they can deduct this because the Media hasn't told the whole story as usual!!!

      Comment

      • ON THE GO
        Junior Member
        • Dec 2008
        • 3

        #4
        Mind Went Blank

        Silly question... mind went blank. How do you calculate the basis.

        Comment

        • solomon
          Senior Member
          • Aug 2006
          • 1012

          #5
          Originally posted by ON THE GO
          Silly question... mind went blank. How do you calculate the basis.
          Basis should be on Form 8606.

          Comment

          • Beth
            Senior Member
            • Dec 2006
            • 118

            #6
            Deductibe Loss on IRA

            If the money orginated from a deductible IRA or a 401k- how can the basis be zero??

            Comment

            • solomon
              Senior Member
              • Aug 2006
              • 1012

              #7
              Originally posted by Beth
              If the money orginated from a deductible IRA or a 401k- how can the basis be zero??
              There would have been already a tax benefit - no double dipping.

              Comment

              • Bees Knees
                Senior Member
                • May 2005
                • 5456

                #8
                Originally posted by Beth
                If the money orginated from a deductible IRA or a 401k- how can the basis be zero??
                You have basis in something that you have already paid tax on.

                You have zero basis in something that you have not paid tax on yet.

                Example #1: You earn $100 on a W-2. You pay tax on the $100 and have $80 left in cash. You spend the $80 buying stock. You later sell the stock for $20. You get to deduct the $60 you lost on the sale because you paid tax on that $60 way back when you earned it on the W-2.

                Example #2: You earn $100 on a W-2 but defer $40 of it into a 401(k). The taxable portion of the W-2 earnings is $60, the portion that you did not put into the 401(k). You later cash in the 401(k) for $10 and pay tax on that $10. The $30 that you lost inside the 401(k) has zero basis and is not deductible, because you never paid tax on the $30 back when you earned it on the W-2.

                Comment

                • FEDUKE404
                  Senior Member
                  • May 2007
                  • 3646

                  #9
                  No loss on withdrawal

                  Originally posted by Beth
                  If the money orginated from a deductible IRA or a 401k- how can the basis be zero??
                  Solomon (of course!) is correct. Most withdrawals from traditional IRA and 401(k) plans are fully taxable. You can't have a "loss" to show on Form 1040, even though the value of the underlying account can plummet. Some use the analogy of a "black box" - you put money in (deductible) and you take money out (income). Everything in-between is of no tax consequence. OK - I will hedge a bit since RMDs are related to account value.

                  Form 8606 exists for the somewhat unusual (and unwise?) situations where someone puts non-deductible funds into an IRA account. From that point onward all future withdrawals from the IRA account will be partly taxable and partly non-taxable, so as to avoid double taxation.

                  The form must be completed the first year such a "non-deductible" (could be for several reasons!) amount is placed into the IRA account. After that, it is mere number-crunching and book-keeping.

                  FE

                  Comment

                  • Beth
                    Senior Member
                    • Dec 2006
                    • 118

                    #10
                    Deductibe Loss on IRA

                    Thanks folk- I definately learned someting here! I do appreciate your sharing...

                    Beth

                    Comment

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