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    Tammieh1's Avatar
    Tammieh1 Posts: 2, Reputation: 1
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    #1

    Oct 4, 2007, 07:01 AM
    Withdrawing Funds from 401-K for college tuition
    Are there any penalties for early withdrawal on 401-k for college tuition?
    CaptainRich's Avatar
    CaptainRich Posts: 4,492, Reputation: 537
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    #2

    Oct 4, 2007, 07:17 AM
    Quote Originally Posted by Tammieh1
    Are there any penalties for early withdrawal on 401-k for college tuition?
    Online info:
    Withdrawal of funds

    Virtually all employers impose severe restrictions on withdrawals while a person remains in service with the company and is under age 59½. Any withdrawal that is permitted before age 59½ is subject to an excise tax equal to ten percent of the amount distributed, including withdrawals to pay expenses due to a hardship, except to the extent the distribution does not exceed the amount allowable as a deduction under Internal Revenue Code section 213 to the employee for amounts paid during the taxable year for medical care (determined without regard to whether the employee itemizes deductions for such taxable year). The tax code legally defines hardship as:

    1. Purchase of a primary residence (specifically excludes mortgage payments)
    2. To avoid foreclosure of, or eviction from, primary residence
    3. Payment of post-secondary education expenses for the next 12 months for the employee, his/her spouse, or dependent(s) or beneficiaries
    4. Medical expenses not covered by insurance for employee, their spouse, or dependent(s), or beneficiaries which would be deductible on a federal tax return (e.g. non-essential cosmetic surgery would not be acceptable)
    5. Funeral expenses for the employee's deceased parent(s), spouse, child(ren), or dependent(s) or beneficiaries (as of December 31, 2005)
    6. Home repairs due to a deductible casualty loss (as of December 31, 2005)

    In any event any amounts are subject to normal taxation as ordinary income. Some employers may disallow one, several, or all of the previous hardship causes. Someone wishing to withdraw from such a 401(k) plan would have to resign from their employer. To maintain the tax advantage for income deferred into a 401(k), the law stipulates the restriction that unless an exception applies, money must be kept in the plan or an equivalent tax deferred plan until the employee reaches 59 ½ years of age. Money that is withdrawn prior to 59 ½ typically incurs a 10% penalty tax unless a further exception applies. [1] This penalty is of course on top of the "ordinary income" tax that has to be paid on such a withdrawal. The exceptions to the 10% penalty include: the employee's death, the employee's total and permanent disability, separation from service in or after the year the employee reached age 55, substantially equal periodic payments under section 72(t), a qualified domestic relations order, and for deductible medical expenses (exceeding the 7.5% floor). This does not apply to the similar 457 plan.

    Many plans also allow employees to take loans from their 401(k) to be repaid with after-tax funds at pre-defined interest rates. The interest proceeds then become part of the 401(k) balance. The loan itself is not taxable income nor subject to the 10% penalty as long as it is paid back in accordance with section 72(p) of the Internal Revenue Code. This section requires, among other things, that the loan be for a term no longer than 5 years (except for the purchase of a primary residence), that a "reasonable" rate of interest be charged, and that substantially equal payments (with payments made at least every calendar quarter) be made over the life of the loan. Employers, of course, have the option to make their plan's loan provisions more restrictive. When an employee does not make payments in accordance with the plan or IRS regulations, the outstanding loan balance will be declared in "default". A defaulted loan, and possibly accrued interest on the loan balance, becomes a taxable distribution to the employee in the year of default with all the same tax penalties and implications of a withdrawal.

    Loans are paid back by post-tax monies, so there are substantial tax implications in taking a loan from pre-tax monies.

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