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New--H.R. 1 Act - The One Big Beautiful Bill Mini Course
Tax Treatment of Retirement Plans, Pensions and AnnuitiesCode: 26-RETPLANS
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Course Details
62 pages
Course description and objectives:
Employer-sponsored retirement plans, generally referred to
in the aggregate as qualified employee plans, constitute one of the important
“legs” of the retirement stool that individuals look to for their income in
retirement. The other two legs of that stool are personal savings—through
investment in securities, deferred annuities, savings accounts, etc.—and Social
Security retirement benefits. This course will examine qualified employee
plans, their limits and their tax treatment along with a discussion of annuities
and their taxation.
Annuities offer their owners the
opportunity to systematically liquidate a principal sum or save
money for a long-term objective. For
many annuity buyers, that objective is to provide
income during retirement. As we will see in our examination of
annuities, they provide owners with a number of advantages; principal among
them is their tax treatment. By
purchasing and investing in an annuity, a contract owner can avoid current income taxation of earnings.
By avoiding current income taxation, earnings that might have been used
to pay current income taxes can be invested to produce additional income.
Annuities’ tax advantages aren’t
limited to tax deferral, however; annuities offer
additional tax advantages. For example,
an investor purchasing a variable annuity can change his or her investment
allocation in the contract’s variable subaccounts whenever desired. Typically, such changes are made in order to
implement new objectives or to modify the level of risk assumed. From a tax point of view, the important issue
is that the contract owner can make these changes without being required
to recognize income as would be required if, for example, the investor
liquidated his or her stock portfolio in order to purchase bonds. In addition to these tax benefits, a contract
owner that elects to annuitize his annuity contract, i.e. to take a periodic
income from it, will find that part of each periodic income payment may be tax
free as a return of his or her investment in the annuity contract.
Learning Objectives
Upon completion of this course, you should be able to:
·
Distinguish
between the types of qualified employee plans;
·
Recognize
the limits imposed on qualified employee plan contributions and benefits;
·
List the
requirements applicable to qualified employee plan loans;
·
Apply
the federal tax laws to qualified employee plan contributions and distributions;
·
Recognize
the changes made to retirement plans and pensions by the SECURE Act and the
CARES Act;
·
Recognize
the tax treatment of nonqualified annuity distributions; and
·
Identify
the tax treatment of annuity contributions and distributions.
Category: Taxation
CPE credit: 3 Hours
Program Level: Update
Prerequisites: None
Advance Preparation: None
Exam expiration date: Participants must submit exams for grading within one year from the date of purchase

