WASHINGTON — The Internal Revenue Service today provided a
self-certification procedure designed to help recipients of
retirement plan distributions who inadvertently miss the 60-day time limit for
properly rolling these amounts into another retirement plan or individual
retirement arrangement (IRA).
In Revenue
Procedure 2016-47, posted today on IRS.gov, the IRS explained how eligible
taxpayers, encountering a variety of mitigating circumstances, can qualify for
a waiver of the 60-day time limit and avoid possible early distribution taxes.
In addition, the revenue procedure includes a sample self-certification letter
that a taxpayer can use to notify the administrator or trustee of the
retirement plan or IRA receiving the rollover that they qualify for the waiver.
Normally, an eligible distribution from an IRA or workplace retirement plan
can only qualify for tax-free rollover treatment if it is contributed to
another IRA or workplace plan by the 60th day after it was received. In most
cases, taxpayers who fail to meet the time limit could only obtain a waiver by
requesting a private letter ruling from the IRS.
A taxpayer who missed the time limit will now ordinarily qualify for a
waiver if one or more of 11 circumstances, listed in the revenue procedure,
apply to them. They include a distribution check that was misplaced and never
cashed, the taxpayer’s home was severely damaged, a family member died, the
taxpayer or a family member was seriously ill, the taxpayer was incarcerated or
restrictions were imposed by a foreign country.
Ordinarily, the IRS and plan administrators and trustees will honor a
taxpayer’s truthful self-certification that they qualify for a waiver under
these circumstances. Moreover, even if a taxpayer does not self-certify, the
IRS now has the authority to grant a waiver during a subsequent examination.
Other requirements, along with a copy of a sample self-certification letter,
can be found in the revenue procedure.
The IRS encourages eligible taxpayers wishing to transfer retirement plan or
IRA distributions to another retirement plan or IRA to consider requesting that
the administrator or trustee make a direct trustee-to-trustee transfer, rather
than doing a rollover. Doing so can avoid some of the delays and restrictions
that often arise during the rollover process. For more information about rollovers
and transfers, check out the Can
You Move Retirement Plan Assets? section in Publication 590-A or the Rollovers
of Retirement Plan and IRA Distributions page on IRS.gov.
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