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by lyrrad
2288 days ago
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This is incorrect. Withdrawals from Roth IRAs follow particular ordering rules and one can withdraw direct contributions without a 10% penalty or tax. In general, direct contributions are taken out first, followed by conversions, followed by earnings. (For the exact rules, including more details on withdrawal ordering of conversions I'd recommend researching Roth IRA withdrawal ordering. Note that the rules for accounts like Roth 401k are different.) Direct contributions are not subject to tax or penalty when withdrawn, so if one can always withdraw their total direct contributions without tax or penalty from a Roth IRA, while leaving earnings in the account. Withdrawing taxable portions of conversions or earnings may result in tax and/or a 10% penalty, depending on ones circumstances. |
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The original post is saying that some people may discover they've contributed too much to their IRA after doing the tax calculations (say, if they just contribute the max $6k now).
If this happens, you're subject to a 6% penalty unless you withdraw the excess along with "net attributable" earnings. These earnings are subject to the 10% early withdrawal penalty in addition to the normal income tax, and are calculated as a prorated portion of the entire IRA growth.