How to catch the costliest retirement account mistakes

Listen and subscribe to Decoding Retirement on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you find your favorite podcasts.

When it comes to individual retirement accounts (IRAs), the opportunities for errors are seemingly endless — and costly. With roughly 58 million US households owning IRAs, even one misstep with rollovers, account types, or required distributions could result in unexpected taxes or penalties.

To help prevent that, retirement expert Denise Appleby, CEO of Appleby Retirement Consulting, shared common pitfalls and real-life examples on a recent episode of Decoding Retirement.

Among the most frequent and overlooked mistakes? Ignoring IRS Form 5498, officially titled “IRA Contribution Information.”

This form reports IRA activity such as contributions, rollovers, conversions, fair market value (FMV), and required minimum distributions (RMDs). The form is so often overlooked because, in 2024, for instance, custodians weren’t required to issue it until May 31 — well after most people file their returns.

“So you have already done your tax return, you get this form and you’re thinking, ‘I’ll just file it away because my accountant doesn’t need it,'” Appleby said. “But you need it — and maybe you should share it with your accountant.”

Read more: What is a financial adviser, and what do they do?

In one case Appleby highlighted, a woman opened what she believed was a traditional IRA. Years later, after a name change and a custodian update, the word “Roth” was removed from the account title, even though the account remained a Roth IRA.

Assuming it was a traditional IRA, she made deductible contributions and even rolled over a 401(k) into it, thinking the rollover was tax-free.

“Turned out that it was taxable because she processed a Roth conversion without knowing it,” Appleby said. The resulting tax liability? Possibly up to $1 million.

US tax form focused on the Amount You Owe line. (Getty Images)
US tax form focused on the Amount You Owe line. (Getty Images) · SilverV via Getty Images

The mistake could have been caught earlier had she reviewed Box 7 of Form 5498, which identifies the account type (Traditional, SEP, SIMPLE, Roth).

To avoid similar issues, Appleby suggested that every IRA owner conduct a yearly self-audit.

With Form 5498, confirm your account type (Traditional, SEP, SIMPLE, Roth) in Box 7 and check your rollover contributions (Box 2) for accuracy. Form 1099-R lists distributions, which you’ll also want to review.

“If you took a distribution,” Appleby said, “is it coming from the correct type of account? Is it reported as a direct rollover when it should be?”

Source link