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4 ways to avoid a 50 percent hit to your retirement savings

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NewsHubThe tax breaks you receive in your retirement accounts don’t come for free. When you hit age 70 ½, you generally have to start withdrawing money from those accounts, even if you don’t want to.
These required minimum distributions, outlined by the IRS , can be a drag for the unprepared and can cost you as much as a 50 percent penalty if you fail to take them.
Fortunately, you have plenty of options that can provide you with some tax advantages, offer you a lifetime stream of income or help you leave a legacy to future generations.
You may not need your retirement money now, but you can use it later with a qualified longevity annuity contract, or QLAC.
In July 2014, the IRS and Treasury Department ruled that QLACs, a type of deferred income annuity, could be included in IRAs or other retirement accounts. Under current rules, investors are allowed to put up to $125,000 from a traditional IRA or employer-sponsored retirement plan, such as a 401(k), into a longevity annuity that pays out at a much later date, anywhere from age 70 ½ to age 85, with payments increasing the longer you wait.
The 30-year-plus bull market in bonds may be over. However, municipal bonds are attractive today, said Andrew Altfest, a certified financial planner and managing director at Altfest Personal Wealth Management in New York City.
“Following the election, [bond] investors got spooked when rates went up and by President Trump ‘s promise to reduce taxes, and municipal bonds sold off,” Altfest said. “Municipal bonds now stand as a relative value and are attractive even for individuals not in the highest tax brackets. ”
A retirement account distribution can go straight into your grandkid’s college fund.
You can also bundle up to five years of gifts into a one-time 529 plan contribution of up to $70,000 for single filers and $140,000 for married couples.
Use your RMD to make what is called a qualified charitable distribution, which allows you to donate all or part of your withdrawal without adding to your income.
You will need to have the trustee of your IRA directly transfer the money to a charity. You can give up to $100,000 per taxpayer, per year.
“For people who give to charity, qualified charitable distributions can satisfy their RMDs and in some cases better reduce their taxes than can direct cash donations,” Altfest said.

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