I will have to pay income tax on the capital gains when I convert after-tax to Roth 401-k. Is there a reason that I should or should not convert a portion this tax year and the rest next tax year to spread out the tax burden?
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[Revised]
The taxable amount of an In-plan Roth Rollover adds to your ordinary taxable income for the year in which you do the In-plan Roth Rollover. If the taxable amount is enough to push you into a higher tax bracket, it may be advantageous to spread the income out over a couple of years to reduce the overall tax burden, provided your plan allows periodic In-plan Roth Rollovers. Of course, to be able to estimate your overall tax burden, you'll need to be able to make a reasonable guess at your taxable income for the years involved.
If the taxable portion will be taxed at the same rate either way, it would generally make sense to do the In-plan Roth Rollover all in the earlier year. Any amount deferred to the next year will grow tax deferred instead of tax free until it is rolled to the Roth account, so on the assumption that investments will grow in value over the period, the sooner the better. If you are considering doing this in 2016 and 2017, the time between the two separate rollovers could be as little as a few weeks since that's all we have left of 2016, so the intervening time shouldn't be much of an issue.
Don't forget to consider your state taxes in determining your overall tax burden.
Also note that an In-plan Roth Rollover is irrevocable. If the value of your investments goes down, you will have paid tax on an amount greater than the future, lower value for the Roth account. There is no possibility of recharacterizing as there would be with a rollover to a Roth IRA (which is likely not an option since you are presumably working for this employer).
One final thought. Unless the after-tax contributions and their associated earnings are held in a separate sub-account from any pre-tax contributions and associated earnings, the after-tax portion and associated earnings cannot be distributed (rolled over) in isolation from the pre-tax contributions and associated earnings. The taxable proportion would instead be calculated in proportion to the total balance rather than just that of the after-tax sub-account.
The following IRS web page may provide some additional useful information:
[Revised]
The taxable amount of an In-plan Roth Rollover adds to your ordinary taxable income for the year in which you do the In-plan Roth Rollover. If the taxable amount is enough to push you into a higher tax bracket, it may be advantageous to spread the income out over a couple of years to reduce the overall tax burden, provided your plan allows periodic In-plan Roth Rollovers. Of course, to be able to estimate your overall tax burden, you'll need to be able to make a reasonable guess at your taxable income for the years involved.
If the taxable portion will be taxed at the same rate either way, it would generally make sense to do the In-plan Roth Rollover all in the earlier year. Any amount deferred to the next year will grow tax deferred instead of tax free until it is rolled to the Roth account, so on the assumption that investments will grow in value over the period, the sooner the better. If you are considering doing this in 2016 and 2017, the time between the two separate rollovers could be as little as a few weeks since that's all we have left of 2016, so the intervening time shouldn't be much of an issue.
Don't forget to consider your state taxes in determining your overall tax burden.
Also note that an In-plan Roth Rollover is irrevocable. If the value of your investments goes down, you will have paid tax on an amount greater than the future, lower value for the Roth account. There is no possibility of recharacterizing as there would be with a rollover to a Roth IRA (which is likely not an option since you are presumably working for this employer).
One final thought. Unless the after-tax contributions and their associated earnings are held in a separate sub-account from any pre-tax contributions and associated earnings, the after-tax portion and associated earnings cannot be distributed (rolled over) in isolation from the pre-tax contributions and associated earnings. The taxable proportion would instead be calculated in proportion to the total balance rather than just that of the after-tax sub-account.
The following IRS web page may provide some additional useful information:
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