Ask Experts Questions for FREE Help !
Ask

401k early withdraw penalties

Asked Feb 17, 2007, 06:51 PM — 16 Answers
I am considering quiting my present job and using my 401k money to open a business and was wondering what percentage of the balance that I would be subject to loose?

16 Answers
2pets's Avatar
2pets Posts: 4, Reputation: 1
New Member
 
#2

Feb 17, 2007, 08:11 PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by plumdog
I am considering quiting my present job and using my 401k money to open a business and was wondering what percentage of the balance that I would be subject to loose?
Hi,
I too am considering closing out my 401K. On my Merrill Lynch web site it says there is a 28 percent tax liablity and 10 percent early withdrawal penalty, which makes it a whopping 38 percent! If you have a web site for your carrier I would check it or call your carrier.
Helpful
AtlantaTaxExpert's Avatar
AtlantaTaxExpert Posts: 19,866, Reputation: 3723
Senior Tax Expert
 
#3

Feb 18, 2007, 03:55 PM


Actually, the 38% tax liability sounds about right. It IS a hefty price to pay to get the 401K money.

PlumDog:

Consider a SBA loan. The interest you pay is much better than the tax bite you will pay for the 401K money. Heck, I would make the argument that launching your business using credit cards is a beter option than using 401K money, because the interest is tax deductible.
Helpful
gogosean's Avatar
gogosean Posts: 47, Reputation: 37
Junior Member
 
#4

May 4, 2007, 08:35 PM
The answer depends on your state + federal tax bracket. Plus % penalty. Yes, you have to pay taxes on it, but you didn't in the first place. Also, when you are old and decrepid, you will be in a lower tax bracket, and that is THE MAIN tax savings.
Helpful
AtlantaTaxExpert's Avatar
AtlantaTaxExpert Posts: 19,866, Reputation: 3723
Senior Tax Expert
 
#5

May 5, 2007, 09:02 PM


Good answer.
Helpful
greencar's Avatar
greencar Posts: 2, Reputation: 1
New Member
 
#6

May 6, 2007, 08:48 PM
Is the 401K early withdrawal treated as ordinary income? Separately, at what income level does a student have to pay taxes?

To give you complete context, I am thinking about returning to school next year (and thus will not have an income), and want to use some of the money I have saved in my 401k to pay some of the tuition costs, but hope to recoup some of the tax on the 401k through mortgage interest deductions and education credits.

Am I trying to be too cute here?
Helpful
krystal1973's Avatar
krystal1973 Posts: 100, Reputation: 121
Junior Member
 
#7

May 6, 2007, 08:51 PM
When my husband Completely withdrew from his 401K they sent us a 1099 for it at the end of the year. In other words yes we had to count it as income.
Helpful
greencar's Avatar
greencar Posts: 2, Reputation: 1
New Member
 
#8

May 7, 2007, 05:35 AM
Quote:
Originally Posted by greencar
Is the 401K early withdrawal treated as ordinary income? Separately, at what income level does a student have to pay taxes?

To give you complete context, I am thinking about returning to school next year (and thus will not have an income), and want to use some of the money I have saved in my 401k to pay some of the tuition costs, but hope to recoup some of the tax on the 401k through mortgage interest deductions and education credits.

Am I trying to be too cute here?
One more thing...is there a limit to the amount that I can withdrawal from my Roth IRA for tuition without incurring the 10% early withdrawal penalty?
Helpful
AtlantaTaxExpert's Avatar
AtlantaTaxExpert Posts: 19,866, Reputation: 3723
Senior Tax Expert
 
#9

May 8, 2007, 09:37 AM


You CAN withdraw IRA funds for higher education costs without paying the 10% Early Withdrawal Penalty.
Helpful
shammer's Avatar
shammer Posts: 2, Reputation: 1
New Member
 
#10

Aug 3, 2007, 12:15 PM
If I close my 401k and then put say 25% into a CESA(college education savings account) for my son, then even if I am taxed on it, I still get a tax break for the contribution?
Helpful

Not your question? Ask your question View similar questions

 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Add your answer here.

Remove Text Formatting

Undo
Redo
 
Decrease Size
Increase Size
Bold
Italic
Underline
Align Left
Align Center
Align Right
Ordered List
Unordered List
Decrease Indent
Increase Indent
Insert Email Link
Wrap [QUOTE] tags around selected text
Wrap [CODE] tags around selected text
Wrap [HTML] tags around selected text
Wrap [PHP] tags around selected text
Wrap [YOUTUBE] tags around selected text
Notification Type:



Check out some similar questions!

401k Early withdraw hardship [ 1 Answers ]

I had to take 17k for a hardship withdraw on my 401k. Will I have to pay federal taxes on this?

Withdrawing my 401k--how do I go about paing penalties? [ 1 Answers ]

Hello, I am in the process of pulling my 401k. I need the money to pay off medical bills from before I had medical insurance. I have to pay 10% penalty plus Federal and state taxes which add up to like 42%.. Anyway, I have no choice at this time... My question is: what is the best way to go...

401k penalties [ 2 Answers ]

I just lost my job after 32 years.... What is the best way to handle my 401k without losing everything to taxes/penalties..... I will need to withdraw some money to pay off some debt.... Answer needed asap thanks

Procedure to withdraw 401k money [ 3 Answers ]

Hi, I was employed with an american firm till the end of September 2006. I am no longer living in the US. I want to withdraw my entire 401 K amount early next year. What is the procedure to withdraw the money ? There is a tax penalty of 10% ..... When I receive the amount, will it be...

401K Early Withdrawal Penalties? [ 11 Answers ]

Hello. I have a question about early withdrawal of my 401k due to changing employers. I am fully vested at my current company. I took a loan out from my 401k probably 6-8 months ago for personal reasons (not mortgage, etc.). Here are the details for that: I took out a loan of $2,868.01 and...


View more Taxes questions Search