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    Ira Distribution

    client pulls $80,000 from IRA and pays it back to the same IRA before 60 days. If he draws from that same IRA again before a year from the first distribution is the second taxable even if he pays it back before 60 days???

    #2
    Yes it is taxable. When you take money out of an IRA and put it back before the 60 day deadline, it is considered a tax free rollover, even though it goes back into the same IRA. Since you can only do one rollover per year, the second time you pull the stunt makes it not a rollover.

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      #3
      Clarification

      Originally posted by Bees Knees View Post
      Yes it is taxable. When you take money out of an IRA and put it back before the 60 day deadline, it is considered a tax free rollover, even though it goes back into the same IRA. Since you can only do one rollover per year, the second time you pull the stunt makes it not a rollover.
      I hope you mean to the same account, for one may, like I do, have several different IRA
      accounts with different mutual funds.
      ChEAr$,
      Harlan Lunsford, EA n LA

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        #4
        Only one "IRA"

        Each taxpayer has only one IRA. He can (and most people do) have it divided between two or more trustees.

        When funds are taken from any of the trustees then rolled over in full or part within 60-days, it counts as the one allowable rollover for that year.
        Roland Slugg
        "I do what I can."

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          #5
          Multiple IRA's

          Originally posted by Roland Slugg View Post
          Each taxpayer has only one IRA. He can (and most people do) have it divided between two or more trustees.

          When funds are taken from any of the trustees then rolled over in full or part within 60-days, it counts as the one allowable rollover for that year.

          From Pub 590, p. 25:

          Waiting period between rollovers. Generally, if you
          make a tax-free rollover of any part of a distribution from a
          traditional IRA, you cannot, within a 1-year period, make a
          tax-free rollover of any later distribution from that same IRA.
          You also cannot make a tax-free rollover of any
          amount distributed, within the same 1-year period, from the
          IRA into which you made the tax-free rollover.

          Example. You have two traditional IRAs, IRA-1 and
          IRA-2. You make a tax-free rollover of a distribution from
          IRA-1 into a new traditional IRA (IRA-3). You cannot, within
          1 year of the distribution from IRA-1, make a tax-free
          rollover of any distribution from either IRA-1 or IRA-3 into
          another traditional IRA.

          However, the rollover from IRA-1 into IRA-3 does not
          prevent you from making a tax-free rollover from IRA-2 into
          any other traditional IRA. This is because you have not,
          be within the last year, rolled over, tax-free, any distribution
          from IRA-2 or made a tax-free rollover into IRA-2.

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            #6
            Thanks ...

            ... for that correction, BP.
            Last edited by Roland Slugg; 01-20-2008, 01:41 PM.
            Roland Slugg
            "I do what I can."

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              #7
              The one IRA pertains to ROTH IRA's not traditional IRA's.

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