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August 31, 2019
Question

withdrawing from a roth ira for a downpayment of 3%-i'm a 1st time buyer

  • August 31, 2019
  • 1 reply
  • 0 views

I have put $25,000 in a ROTH IRA  2 years ago, I'm a 1st time buyer, my intent is take 5%

of the balance for a home purchase, my admin person at USAA says i should be charged

a tax penalty but recommended that i get an opinion from a tax expert,

what if any tax penalty would there be?

thank you for the help.

Debra Noss

[email address removed]

    1 reply

    macuser_22
    Employee
    August 31, 2019

    How did you "put" $25,000 into a Roth 2 years ago since the maximum Roth contribution per year was $5,500 ($6,500 of over age 50)?     Was it a rollover or conversion?

     

    Assuming that the $25,000 was your own after-tax contributions:

     

    There is a 5 year Roth rule that says that any earnings withdrew are subject to a 10% early distribution penalty unless you have owned ANY Roth IRA account for at least 5 years - the first home exception does not overreact the 5 year rule.

     

    However, you can ALWAYS withdraw any of your own prior contributions at any time without any tax or penalty since Roth contributions are after-tax money to start with.   If the $25,000 are your previous contributions and not earnings, then that that can be withdrawn at any time, for any purpose, with no tax consequences at all.

    **Disclaimer: This post is for discussion purposes only and is NOT tax advice. The author takes no responsibility for the accuracy of any information in this post.**
    dnoss123Author
    September 1, 2019

    the money was from a divorce settlement, I haven't made any contributions to it,

    does that effect my withdraw options,making it a taxable withdrawal, or does the 1st time

    buyer rule come into play?

    macuser_22
    Employee
    September 1, 2019

    I will ask someone else to offer an opinion.

     

    @dmertz - can you help here?

     

    Money from a divorce settlement ending up in a Roth IRA sounds like an excess contribution to me...   Perhaps an employer plan and QDRO would allow it....   Any ideas?

    **Disclaimer: This post is for discussion purposes only and is NOT tax advice. The author takes no responsibility for the accuracy of any information in this post.**