Depends... You can take the regular Roth IRA contributions (but not earnings) at any time for any use free of income taxes and penalty.
It should be held in the registry of the court. If it remains there for a certain period of time (could be seven years), it escheats to the state.
Yes, you can withdraw Roth 401(k) contributions without incurring a penalty, as long as the account has been open for at least five years and you are at least 59 and a half years old.
Yes, you can rollover your Roth 401k to a Roth IRA and then withdraw your contributions without penalty, as long as the account has been open for at least five years.
GE Money bank has been lending money for over 50 long reliable dependable years. Thats along time so the source has to be reliable at the GE money bank.
To pay off your home loan in 5 years, you can consider making larger monthly payments, making extra payments whenever possible, refinancing to a shorter loan term, and cutting down on expenses to allocate more money towards your loan. It's important to create a budget and stick to it to achieve this goal.
There is no period between years, the year you receive the money is the year you claim the money.
The Catholic Church is not in the business of making money, nor has it ever been in the business of making money. The Catholic Church exists on the contributions of faithful Catholics, she uses that money to build and keep up facilities as needed, and to pay the salaries of people whom she employs. Anything over that is used for charity. The Catholic Church has been the biggest distributor of charity and education consistently for the past 2,000 years.
There are many ways of making money. If you have internet, you can get the best money making ideas from http://make-moneymoney.blogspot.com/
People have been trying to find the answer ever since money was invented, thousands of years ago.
i need to know about my 401k
try to get on a bigger case or staytheir for years to come
To encourage temperance on board vessels, in 1831 the Navy allowed Sailors to receive money in lieu of the spirit, or "grog" ration.
Every person is different-but most likely you will be out a lot of money
No one in particular because trigonometry has evolved over thousands of years with many ancient and modern mathematicians making their own discoveries and contributions to the subject.
Distributions from a traditional ("regular") IRA are taxable unless part of the distribution comes from a non-deductible contribution or a rollover of after-tax money. So you will pay tax when you take money out of the IRA, unless you can establish that the deceased person had after-tax money in the IRA. You may want to approach the executor of the estate to see if the tax records of the deceased reflect any after-tax (non-deductible) contributions. If you are concerned with what happens to your own IRA after you die, consider making your tax records available so that your beneficiary can easily find them. Distributions from an inherited Roth IRA are not taxable if the Roth IRA has been in existence for at least 5 years at the time the distribution is taken. If the IRA has not been in existence for 5 years, only distributions of the earnings are taxable. Distributions of contributions are not taxable. And the regular ordering rules apply: Any distributions are considered to have come from contributions before earnings, so even if you inherit a relatively new Roth IRA, you can try to stretch out the distributions so that you take out the earnings after 5 years. Again, you would need tax records of the deceased to determine whether the IRA is at least 5 years old and if it is less than five years old to determine how much is contributions and how much is earnings.
Space colonization or interstellar travel. Making money.
Use and don't worry. They cost money you know.