Common use of Early Distribution Penalty Clause in Contracts

Early Distribution Penalty. If you are under age 59½ and receive a nonqualified Xxxx XXX distribution, an additional tax of 10 percent will generally apply to the amount includible in income in the year of the distribution. If you are under age 59½ and receive a distribution of conversion amounts within the five- year period beginning with the year in which the conversion occurred, an additional tax of 10 percent will generally apply to the amount of the distribution. The additional tax of 10 percent will generally not apply if a distribution is made on account of 1) death, 2) disability, 3) a qualifying rollover, 4) the timely withdrawal of an excess contribution, 5) a series of substantially equal periodic payments (at least annual payments) made over your life expectancy or the joint life expectancy of you and your beneficiary, 6) medical expenses which exceed 7.5 percent of your adjusted gross income, 7) health insurance payments if you are separated from employment and have received unemployment compensation under a federal or state program for at least 12 weeks, 8) certain qualified education expenses, 9) first-home purchases (up to a life-time maximum of $10,000), 10) a levy issued by the IRS, or 11) active military duty (see Qualified Reservist Distributions, below).

Appears in 3 contracts

Samples: Roth Ira Account Agreement, Roth Ira, Roth Ira

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Early Distribution Penalty. If you are under age 59½ 591⁄2 and receive a nonqualified Xxxx XXX distribution, an additional tax of 10 percent will generally apply to the amount includible in income in the year of the distribution. If you are under age 59½ 591⁄2 and receive a distribution of conversion amounts within the five- five-year period beginning with the year in which the conversion occurred, an additional tax of 10 percent will generally apply to the amount of the distribution. The additional tax of 10 percent will generally not apply if a distribution is made on account of 1) death, 2) disability, 3) a qualifying rollover, 4) the timely withdrawal of an excess contribution, 5) a series of substantially equal periodic payments (at least annual payments) made over your life expectancy or the joint life expectancy of you and your beneficiary, 6) medical expenses which exceed 7.5 percent of your adjusted gross income, 7) health insurance payments if you are separated from employment and have received unemployment compensation under a federal or state program for at least 12 weeks, 8) certain qualified education expenses, 9) first-home purchases (up to a life-time maximum of $10,000), 10) a levy issued by the IRS, or 11) active military duty (see Qualified Reservist Distributions, below).

Appears in 1 contract

Samples: Custodial Agreement

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