The penalty applies to distributions from qualified plans, tax-sheltered annuities (TSAs), eligible state or local government plans, IRAs, Roth IRAs, designated Roth accounts, nonqualified plans funded by trusts or annuities and personally purchased annuities. The penalty does not apply to distributions from eligible tax-exempt organization plans or nonqualified plans not funded by a trust or annuity. Note that the term “taxpayer” as used in this article means any participant in an employer retirement plan (other than a beneficiary) or the owner of an IRA, Roth IRA or annuity.
The early distribution penalty applies only to amounts that are includible in gross income. Thus, for example, it does not apply to the nontaxable portion of any distribution, nor does it apply to the portion of a distribution rolled over tax free from one plan or IRA to another plan or IRA or from one Roth IRA to another Roth IRA. Furthermore, the penalty does not apply to qualified rollover contributions from a plan or arrangement to a Roth IRA or designated Roth account, even if the rollover is taxable.
Congress has provided many other exceptions to the penalty, exceptions that may vary somewhat with the type of plan or entity making a distribution. This article first addresses those exceptions that are common to all plans and annuities and then discusses exceptions peculiar to specific types of plans or annuities. (Note that the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has not issued any final or proposed regulations dealing with the penalty and its exceptions and the IRS abandoned a previous regulation project.)
Common Exceptions
The Age and Death Exceptions
Under the most significant generally applicable exception, the 10-percent penalty tax will not apply to any distributions on or after the date the taxpayer reaches age 59½. It does not matter whether the taxpayer is then retired. The penalty tax also does not apply to distributions to beneficiaries or to a taxpayer’s estate after the death of the taxpayer.
The Disability Exception
The penalty does not apply to distributions to a taxpayer after he or she is disabled. However, the disability of a spouse will not qualify a taxpayer for the exception, even in a community property state. A taxpayer is disabled if he or she cannot do substantial work because of a physical or mental medical condition that will last for a long and indefinite period or from which the taxpayer will probably die.
For this purpose, a taxpayer can do substantial work if the taxpayer is capable of working at his or her pre-disability or pre-retirement occupation or a comparable occupation, with appropriate remediable treatment. Determination of the taxpayer’s capability must take into account the taxpayer’s education, training and work experience but most importantly the nature and severity of the impairment. Thus, the regulations provide that a taxpayer “ordinarily” cannot perform substantial work if the taxpayer suffers from one of the following specific impairments:
- Loss of use of two limbs or physical loss or atrophy of a limb due to certain progressive diseases.
- Heart, lung or blood disease causing breathlessness, pain or fatigue on slight exertion.
- Inoperable and progressive cancer or other terminal illness.
- Severe loss of judgment, intellect orientation or memory due to brain damage or abnormality.
- Mental disease requiring continued institutionalization or constant supervision.
- Severe loss or diminution of vision, permanent and total loss of speech or total uncorrectable deafness.
In another case, the Tax Court held that a taxpayer did not qualify for the disability exception because he did not show that his clinical depression was irremediable. The court stated that an impairment is remediable if reasonable treatment would allow gainful activity. In this case, the taxpayer actually continued to engage in gainful activity. By contrast, a taxpayer did qualify for the disability exception after contracting AIDS and then suffering a nervous breakdown, as did a taxpayer suffering from multiple sclerosis.
Unfortunately, the courts frequently find that taxpayers have offered inadequate evidence of disability. For example, the receipt of private disability insurance payments and the taxpayer’s uncorroborated testimony were insufficient to support the disability exception. The Tax Court also denied the exception to a Christian Scientist whose religious beliefs prevented him from obtaining and offering a medical diagnosis of his condition. Similarly, the court held that evidence of disability was insufficient even though the taxpayer:
- Had lost custody of a child he was unable to nurture and
- Actually qualified for Social Security disability in a subsequent tax year.
The 10-percent penalty tax will generally not apply to a series of substantially equal periodic payments received annually or more frequently. The periodic payments must start after retirement for qualified plans, TSAs and eligible state or local plans. However, they may start either before or after retirement for IRAs, Roth IRAs, some funded nonqualified plans and personally purchased annuities.
A taxpayer or beneficiary must receive the substantially equal payments over the taxpayer’s lifetime, the joint lifetimes of the taxpayer and beneficiary, a period equal to the taxpayer’s life expectancy or a period equal to the joint and survivor life expectancy of the taxpayer and beneficiary.
Of course, annuity payments of equal amount over the specified periods will generally qualify as substantially equal.
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