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#1
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posted to rec.boats
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....calculation is very simple. Get the total value of your IRA's (not Roth) as of the end of the
previous year, divide by a number provided in the IRS table, and that's your minimum distribution. Then give it to your kids as a Christmas present, minus the taxes you'll owe on it. Simple, huh? Or you could get involved in another hobby. Or buy some more guns, or maybe a motorcycle. So, all you youngsters have nothing to fear. Don't pay some CPA guy to do your taxes for you. |
#2
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posted to rec.boats
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On 2/13/2014 8:01 AM, Poco Loco wrote:
...calculation is very simple. Get the total value of your IRA's (not Roth) as of the end of the previous year, divide by a number provided in the IRS table, and that's your minimum distribution. Then give it to your kids as a Christmas present, minus the taxes you'll owe on it. Simple, huh? Or you could get involved in another hobby. Or buy some more guns, or maybe a motorcycle. So, all you youngsters have nothing to fear. Don't pay some CPA guy to do your taxes for you. tell me all about it. We'll be needing to do that soon. |
#3
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posted to rec.boats
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Poco Loco wrote:
...calculation is very simple. Get the total value of your IRA's (not Roth) as of the end of the previous year, divide by a number provided in the IRS table, and that's your minimum distribution. Then give it to your kids as a Christmas present, minus the taxes you'll owe on it. Simple, huh? Or you could get involved in another hobby. Or buy some more guns, or maybe a motorcycle. So, all you youngsters have nothing to fear. Don't pay some CPA guy to do your taxes for you. My brokerage sends me a notice with what I have to withdraw. Even simpler than IRS. The scary part is what is the tax rate going to be in 5 years with the gross overspending by the government. |
#4
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posted to rec.boats
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On Thu, 13 Feb 2014 13:37:23 -0500, HanK wrote:
On 2/13/2014 8:01 AM, Poco Loco wrote: ...calculation is very simple. Get the total value of your IRA's (not Roth) as of the end of the previous year, divide by a number provided in the IRS table, and that's your minimum distribution. Then give it to your kids as a Christmas present, minus the taxes you'll owe on it. Simple, huh? Or you could get involved in another hobby. Or buy some more guns, or maybe a motorcycle. So, all you youngsters have nothing to fear. Don't pay some CPA guy to do your taxes for you. tell me all about it. We'll be needing to do that soon. That's it. Nothing to it. Calculating the required minimum distribution The required minimum distribution for any year is the account balance as of the end of the immediately preceding calendar year divided by a distribution period from the IRS’s Uniform Lifetime Table. A separate table is used if the sole beneficiary is the owner’s spouse who is ten or more years younger than the owner. Here's the worksheet. http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-tege/uniform_rmd_wksht.pdf In my case, add 'em all up, divide by 27.4. Tell the bank to transfer the amount from your IRA to wherever - in my case a money market savings account for the time being. |
#6
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posted to rec.boats
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On Thu, 13 Feb 2014 12:46:21 -0600, Califbill wrote:
Poco Loco wrote: ...calculation is very simple. Get the total value of your IRA's (not Roth) as of the end of the previous year, divide by a number provided in the IRS table, and that's your minimum distribution. Then give it to your kids as a Christmas present, minus the taxes you'll owe on it. Simple, huh? Or you could get involved in another hobby. Or buy some more guns, or maybe a motorcycle. So, all you youngsters have nothing to fear. Don't pay some CPA guy to do your taxes for you. My brokerage sends me a notice with what I have to withdraw. Even simpler than IRS. The scary part is what is the tax rate going to be in 5 years with the gross overspending by the government. That works well if all your IRA funds are in one account. |
#7
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posted to rec.boats
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On 2/13/2014 2:01 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Thu, 13 Feb 2014 13:43:27 -0500, wrote: On Thu, 13 Feb 2014 13:37:23 -0500, HanK wrote: On 2/13/2014 8:01 AM, Poco Loco wrote: ...calculation is very simple. Get the total value of your IRA's (not Roth) as of the end of the previous year, divide by a number provided in the IRS table, and that's your minimum distribution. Then give it to your kids as a Christmas present, minus the taxes you'll owe on it. Simple, huh? Or you could get involved in another hobby. Or buy some more guns, or maybe a motorcycle. So, all you youngsters have nothing to fear. Don't pay some CPA guy to do your taxes for you. tell me all about it. We'll be needing to do that soon. This appears top start around 3.7% at 70 and keeps increasing every year to over 50% when you are 115 Table makes it easy. No percents to mess with. http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-tege/uniform_rmd_wksht.pdf Muchus gracius |
#8
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posted to rec.boats
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On Thu, 13 Feb 2014 15:11:00 -0500, wrote:
On Thu, 13 Feb 2014 14:01:25 -0500, Poco Loco wrote: On Thu, 13 Feb 2014 13:43:27 -0500, wrote: On Thu, 13 Feb 2014 13:37:23 -0500, HanK wrote: On 2/13/2014 8:01 AM, Poco Loco wrote: ...calculation is very simple. Get the total value of your IRA's (not Roth) as of the end of the previous year, divide by a number provided in the IRS table, and that's your minimum distribution. Then give it to your kids as a Christmas present, minus the taxes you'll owe on it. Simple, huh? Or you could get involved in another hobby. Or buy some more guns, or maybe a motorcycle. So, all you youngsters have nothing to fear. Don't pay some CPA guy to do your taxes for you. tell me all about it. We'll be needing to do that soon. This appears top start around 3.7% at 70 and keeps increasing every year to over 50% when you are 115 Table makes it easy. No percents to mess with. http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-tege/uniform_rmd_wksht.pdf I just took the reciprocal of that number in the table to get the percent so it made more sense. When I get to 115, I'm gonna be really ****ed at that 53% bull****. |
#9
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posted to rec.boats
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On Thu, 13 Feb 2014 14:19:09 -0500, HanK wrote:
On 2/13/2014 2:01 PM, Poco Loco wrote: On Thu, 13 Feb 2014 13:43:27 -0500, wrote: On Thu, 13 Feb 2014 13:37:23 -0500, HanK wrote: On 2/13/2014 8:01 AM, Poco Loco wrote: ...calculation is very simple. Get the total value of your IRA's (not Roth) as of the end of the previous year, divide by a number provided in the IRS table, and that's your minimum distribution. Then give it to your kids as a Christmas present, minus the taxes you'll owe on it. Simple, huh? Or you could get involved in another hobby. Or buy some more guns, or maybe a motorcycle. So, all you youngsters have nothing to fear. Don't pay some CPA guy to do your taxes for you. tell me all about it. We'll be needing to do that soon. This appears top start around 3.7% at 70 and keeps increasing every year to over 50% when you are 115 Table makes it easy. No percents to mess with. http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-tege/uniform_rmd_wksht.pdf Muchus gracius Cheonmaneyo chingu. |
#10
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posted to rec.boats
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Poco Loco wrote:
On Thu, 13 Feb 2014 13:37:23 -0500, HanK wrote: On 2/13/2014 8:01 AM, Poco Loco wrote: ...calculation is very simple. Get the total value of your IRA's (not Roth) as of the end of the previous year, divide by a number provided in the IRS table, and that's your minimum distribution. Then give it to your kids as a Christmas present, minus the taxes you'll owe on it. Simple, huh? Or you could get involved in another hobby. Or buy some more guns, or maybe a motorcycle. So, all you youngsters have nothing to fear. Don't pay some CPA guy to do your taxes for you. tell me all about it. We'll be needing to do that soon. That's it. Nothing to it. Calculating the required minimum distribution The required minimum distribution for any year is the account balance as of the end of the immediately preceding calendar year divided by a distribution period from the IRS’s Uniform Lifetime Table. A separate table is used if the sole beneficiary is the owner’s spouse who is ten or more years younger than the owner. Here's the worksheet. http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-tege/uniform_rmd_wksht.pdf In my case, add 'em all up, divide by 27.4. Tell the bank to transfer the amount from your IRA to wherever - in my case a money market savings account for the time being. Forget the money market. This is where I keep my extra cash: http://www.gecapitalinvestdirect.com...rest-plus.html 1.1% is the best I have found right now. |
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