Difference Between Traditional & Contributory IRA

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Individual retirement accounts are classified in different ways for tax-recording purposes. The best investment for retirement will depend upon your own circumstances and needs. Understand that the IRA is a tax-sheltered structure. It can hold funds already contributed into other retirement plans or it can accept contributions. As a structure, it has many investments you can buy within the account. The designation of Roth and traditional define the tax structure while contributory and rollover define how funds get into the account.

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Traditional or Roth IRA Accounts

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There are two fundamental tax structures for IRA accounts, whether you focus on Roth IRA mutual funds, stocks or other investments.

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A traditional IRA structure deducts contributions from annual income and grows tax-deferred until it is distributed. Upon distribution, the amount withdrawn is added to annual income and taxed at the existing tax bracket of the IRA owner. A Roth IRA does not deduct contributions from the owner's annual income. Money does grow tax-deferred but as long as the account owner has the Roth IRA for at least five years and is at least ​59 1/2​ years of age, the money comes out tax-free.

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Both structures have a 10 percent tax penalty on distributions before age ​59 1/2​.

Contributory IRA Basics

Both of the IRA structures can be contributory IRAs. Essentially every IRA or retirement plan must start with contributions. A contribution is the money you put into the account based on your annual allotment.

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According to the IRS, the 2021 maximum contribution into either a Roth or traditional IRA is ​$6,000​ for those under age 50; those over the threshold can contribute ​$7,000​. If you are able to make annual contributions into your IRA, it is a contributory IRA regardless of whether it is a traditional or Roth.

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Rollover IRA Basics

When a person has a 401(k), 403b, IRA or other similar contributory retirement plan account that has accumulated funds over years of contributions, a rollover may become an option. A rollover moves funds from one retirement plan to another, often from an employer's plan to an IRA after the job terminates. The IRS defines rollover IRAs simply for tax recording.

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When the rollover happens, a ​1099-R​ says how much goes out of the IRA and Form ​5498​ says how much went into the new rollover IRA as checks and balances that no distribution was made. A rollover IRA is generally not commingled with contributions.

IRAs: Commingling Assets

The differentiation between a contributory IRA and a rollover IRA is generally maintained at the custodial level. The IRS states that it maintains the accounting via Form ​1099-R​ and Form ​5498​ for all rollovers and uses your deduction from Form ​1040​ to account for all tax-deducted contributions.

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It is up to your IRA custodian to allow or deny the commingling of assets contingent on their own administrative abilities to maintain proper accounting. While it may be convenient to roll a former employer plan into a commingled account, you lose the ability to roll the rollover assets into a new employer's plan if you commingle assets. For those who may want to keep this option, keeping contributory and rollover assets separated is the way to go.

Consider Also:How to Open a Roth IRA and How to Withdraw Money from My Traditional IRA

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