Client received refund of some fees due to class action settlement. No form produced, the letter than came with check states:
"Because this refund relates to a qualified account, you may deposit all of the funds into an IRA account as a restorative payment and not incur tax liability. If you do not rollover the funds and instead either cash or deposit the check, you may be subject to taxation. In this instance, the fee reimbursement should generally not be taxable, however the prejudgment interest may be."
I agree that if the refund was put into IRA, it would not be taxable as when the amount is eventually disbursed, it would be taxable then.
I'm not following why the return of fees (not interest) would be tax free. The fees were originally paid from within the IRA, reducing the fund balance, and therefore less to be taxed eventually. The refund of fees being non-taxable seems like double dipping to me.
Thoughts?
"Because this refund relates to a qualified account, you may deposit all of the funds into an IRA account as a restorative payment and not incur tax liability. If you do not rollover the funds and instead either cash or deposit the check, you may be subject to taxation. In this instance, the fee reimbursement should generally not be taxable, however the prejudgment interest may be."
I agree that if the refund was put into IRA, it would not be taxable as when the amount is eventually disbursed, it would be taxable then.
I'm not following why the return of fees (not interest) would be tax free. The fees were originally paid from within the IRA, reducing the fund balance, and therefore less to be taxed eventually. The refund of fees being non-taxable seems like double dipping to me.
Thoughts?
Comment