MyCPAPro, P.C.  ·  Internal Technical Reference

The Roth IRA
Five-Year Rules

A complete authority guide to the two distinct five-year clocks, ordering rules under §408A(d)(4)(B), age-based tax outcomes for contributions, conversions, and earnings — with parity notes for self-directed accounts and the separate §402A regime governing designated Roth 401(k) accounts.

IRC §408A · §402A · §72(t) Treas. Reg. §1.408A-6 & §1.402A-1 Current through TY 2026

Section IThe Core Distinction

The Roth IRA "5-year rule" is not one rule but two. Conflating them is the single most common source of error in practitioner advice and client guidance.

The Code imposes two independent five-year holding periods on Roth IRAs, governing two different questions:

Clock 1

Qualified-Distribution Clock (Earnings)

IRC §408A(d)(2)(B); Reg. §1.408A-6, Q&A-2
Question Answered
Are earnings withdrawn income-tax-free?
Trigger Start
January 1 of the tax year of the taxpayer's first contribution or conversion to any Roth IRA.
Lifetime?
Yes. Once satisfied for one Roth IRA, the clock is satisfied forever for all of the taxpayer's Roth IRAs.
Also Requires
A qualifying event: age 59½, death, disability, or first-time-home purchase (≤ $10,000 lifetime).
Clock 2

Conversion-Penalty Clock

IRC §408A(d)(3)(F); Reg. §1.408A-6, Q&A-5
Question Answered
Is the 10% early-distribution penalty imposed on a withdrawal of converted principal?
Trigger Start
January 1 of the year of that specific conversion.
Lifetime?
No. Each conversion has its own clock. A 2023 conversion and a 2025 conversion have two distinct five-year periods running concurrently.
Becomes Moot If
Owner is 59½, dies, becomes disabled, or otherwise meets a §72(t) exception. The penalty cannot apply where §72(t) does not apply.
Practitioner Frame: Clock 1 governs taxability of earnings. Clock 2 governs penalty on converted principal. The two never substitute for one another. A taxpayer who is 70 years old but funded a Roth IRA only last year has satisfied neither clock for earnings, but is exempt from Clock 2 entirely because §72(t) does not apply at 59½+.

Section IIThe Two Clocks in Operation

Detailed mechanics of when each clock starts, what it does, and how the start-date is determined in edge cases.

Clock 1 — The Qualified-Distribution 5-Year Period

Under §408A(d)(2)(A), a distribution from a Roth IRA is a qualified distribution — meaning both principal and earnings come out free of federal income tax and free of the 10% additional tax — only if it satisfies two conjunctive requirements:

  1. The 5-year aging test of §408A(d)(2)(B): the distribution must be made after the five-taxable-year period beginning with the first taxable year for which the individual made a contribution to a Roth IRA established for the individual's benefit (or a qualified rollover contribution, including a conversion).
  2. A qualifying event under §408A(d)(2)(A)(i)–(iv): (i) the owner is age 59½; (ii) the distribution is made to a beneficiary on or after the owner's death; (iii) the owner is disabled within the meaning of §72(m)(7); or (iv) the distribution is a qualified first-time homebuyer distribution under §72(t)(2)(F), capped at $10,000 lifetime.
Start-Date Mechanics: Regulation §1.408A-6, Q&A-2 confirms the clock begins on January 1 of the taxable year for which the first contribution is made, not the date the contribution is deposited. Because Roth IRA contributions for a prior tax year can be made up to the return due date (without extensions), a contribution made on April 14, 2027 designated for tax year 2026 starts the clock retroactively on January 1, 2026.

Client M, age 52, has never owned a Roth IRA. On April 10, 2026, she funds a Roth IRA with a $7,500 contribution designated for tax year 2025. On January 5, 2030, at age 56, she takes a $25,000 distribution from the account, which has grown to $40,000.

CLOCK 1 START: 01-01-2025 (year of designated contribution)
CLOCK 1 SATISFIED: 01-01-2030 ✓
QUALIFYING EVENT: None (age < 59½, no death, disability, or FTH)
RESULT: Not a qualified distribution. Earnings portion taxable; 10% applies absent §72(t) exception. Contribution portion withdrawn first under ordering rules — tax-free.

Clock 2 — The Conversion 5-Year Period

Under §408A(d)(3)(F), where converted amounts are distributed within five tax years of the conversion, the 10% additional tax of §72(t) applies to the converted amount as though the distribution were includible in gross income for §72(t) purposes — even though, as a matter of income tax, the converted principal has already been taxed in the conversion year and comes out without further income tax.

Critically, the regulation at §1.408A-6, Q&A-5(b) confirms each conversion gets its own clock. Conversions are not aggregated.

Trap: Clock 2 does not attach to earnings, and it does not apply once the taxpayer reaches age 59½ or otherwise qualifies for a §72(t) exception. A 60-year-old who converts $200,000 today and pulls it out next week pays no penalty — because §72(t) cannot apply at 59½+. The 10% recapture only bites pre-59½ converters.

Client J, age 48, converts $80,000 in 2025 and another $60,000 in 2027. In 2029, at age 52, he withdraws $100,000.

2025 CONVERSION CLOCK: starts 01-01-2025, runs until 12-31-2029
2027 CONVERSION CLOCK: starts 01-01-2027, runs until 12-31-2031
WITHDRAWAL IN 2029: ordering rules pull conversions FIFO →
  $80,000 of 2025 conversion: clock satisfied, no penalty
  $20,000 of 2027 conversion: clock NOT satisfied, 10% × $20,000 = $2,000 penalty
INCOME TAX: $0 (already taxed at conversion; no earnings reached)
Treasury Regulation Anchor
  • §1.408A-6, Q&A-1 through Q&A-3 — qualified distributions and the aging test
  • §1.408A-6, Q&A-5 — per-conversion 5-year period for the §72(t) recapture
  • §1.408A-6, Q&A-8 — ordering of distributions across categories

Section IIIThe Ordering Rules

Any non-qualified distribution from a Roth IRA is deemed to come out in a fixed, statutorily-mandated order — and the order is taxpayer-favorable.

Under §408A(d)(4)(B) and Regulation §1.408A-6, Q&A-8, all of an individual's Roth IRAs are aggregated and a distribution is deemed to consist of the following categories in this order:

I
Regular Contributions
Annual direct contributions you made (post-tax). Aggregated across all Roth IRAs.
Tax-Free · Penalty-Free · Always
II
Conversion Contributions
Taken FIFO by conversion year. Within each year, the taxable portion is deemed distributed before any non-taxable portion (basis).
No income tax · 10% if <5yr & <59½
III
Earnings
All growth — interest, dividends, capital gains — comes out last.
Taxable unless Clock 1 + qualifying event
Why This Matters: Because basis (regular contributions) always comes out first, a Roth IRA owner can withdraw an amount up to total cumulative regular contributions at any age, at any time, for any reason, with zero tax and zero penalty. The 5-year rule has nothing to do with withdrawals up to that amount. This is the most under-appreciated planning feature of the Roth IRA.

Aggregation Rule

All Roth IRAs of one individual are aggregated for ordering purposes under §1.408A-6, Q&A-9. The taxpayer cannot "earmark" a withdrawal as coming from a particular account. But Roth IRAs and designated Roth 401(k) accounts are never aggregated — see Section X.

Section IVAge & Source Matrix

The bottom-line tax and penalty result for every combination of withdrawal source, owner age, and 5-year clock status.

Federal tax treatment of Roth IRA distributions by source × age × clock
Source of Funds Under 59½, < 5 yrs Under 59½, ≥ 5 yrs 59½+, < 5 yrs 59½+, ≥ 5 yrs (qualified)
Regular contributions (annual direct) Tax-free, no penalty Tax-free, no penalty Tax-free, no penalty Tax-free, no penalty
Conversion principal — taxable portion at conversion No tax; 10% penalty on conversion amount No tax, no penalty No tax, no penalty (§72(t) inapplicable) Tax-free, no penalty
Conversion principal — non-taxable portion (basis) No tax, no penalty No tax, no penalty No tax, no penalty Tax-free, no penalty
Earnings / growth Tax + 10% penalty Tax (no penalty if §72(t) exception); else tax + 10% Taxable (no penalty) Tax-free, no penalty
Reading Note: The "Conversion principal — taxable portion" row shows the unique Clock-2 dynamic: the 10% bites the conversion amount itself (not just earnings) if pulled within 5 years and the owner is under 59½. This is the recapture rule of §408A(d)(3)(F) and §1.408A-6, Q&A-5. Once the owner hits 59½, §72(t) cannot apply at all — neither the conversion 5-year clock nor the contribution-related penalty can produce a 10% additional tax.

Section VRegular Contributions

Direct annual contributions — what most taxpayers think of when they say "I put money in my Roth."

Withdrawal Treatment

Regular contributions (a/k/a "annual contributions" or "direct contributions") are after-tax money. Because they sit at the front of the ordering stack and were never excluded from gross income, they may be withdrawn at any time, at any age, for any reason, with zero tax and zero penalty. Authority: §408A(d)(1); §408A(d)(4)(B)(ii)(I).

This is true for the principal of regular contributions only. It does not extend to the earnings those contributions generate — which sit in stack-position 3 and are subject to Clock 1.

2026 Contribution Limits

Per Notice 2025-67:

  • Regular limit: $7,500
  • Catch-up (age 50+): additional $1,100 → $8,600 total
  • MAGI phase-out (single): $153,000 – $168,000
  • MAGI phase-out (MFJ): $242,000 – $252,000
  • MAGI phase-out (MFS, lived w/ spouse): $0 – $10,000
Prior-Year Designation: Contributions for tax year N may be made up to the unextended due date of the year-N return (April 15 of year N+1). Designating a contribution as "for prior year" pulls the Clock 1 start date back to January 1 of that prior year — a free month of compounding the 5-year clock that costs nothing.

Section VIConversions, Rollovers & Transfers

A "conversion" is the taxable movement of pre-tax retirement money (Traditional IRA, SEP, SIMPLE, or qualified plan) into a Roth IRA. The income-tax cost is paid up front; the Clock-2 cost is the trade.

What Counts as a Conversion

Under §408A(e), a qualified rollover contribution includes:

  • A trustee-to-trustee transfer from a Traditional, SEP, or SIMPLE IRA to a Roth IRA
  • A 60-day rollover from a Traditional, SEP, or SIMPLE IRA to a Roth IRA
  • A direct rollover from a §401(a) qualified plan, §403(b) plan, or §457(b) governmental plan to a Roth IRA (excluding the designated Roth account portion — see §X)

Each is treated as a conversion and starts its own Clock 2.

Tax at Conversion vs. Clock 2 Recapture

The conversion is fully taxable in the conversion year to the extent of pre-tax money moved — taxed at ordinary rates under §408A(d)(3)(A). The pro-rata rule of §408(d)(2) requires aggregation of all Traditional/SEP/SIMPLE IRAs to compute basis recovery — this is the cream-in-coffee problem that defeats most "backdoor Roth" attempts where the taxpayer has unrelated pre-tax IRA balances.

Recharacterization of a conversion has been prohibited since 2018 under TCJA §13611; conversions are now permanent on the date executed.

Transfers Between Roth IRAs

A Roth-to-Roth direct transfer or 60-day rollover does not start a new Clock 1 or Clock 2. Holding-period tacking applies: the receiving Roth IRA inherits the source Roth IRA's history. This is confirmed by §1.408A-10, Q&A-5.

Direction-Sensitive: A distribution from a Roth IRA can be rolled to another Roth IRA only. It cannot be rolled back into a designated Roth 401(k) — even where the Roth IRA balance is entirely attributable to an earlier 401(k) rollover (§1.408A-10, Q&A-5).

Section VIIEarnings & Growth

Everything that is not a regular contribution or a conversion contribution — interest, dividends, capital gains, K-1 income flowing through a self-directed IRA, etc.

Earnings sit at the bottom of the ordering stack. To extract them tax-free, the distribution must satisfy both:

  1. The 5-year aging test of Clock 1 (any Roth IRA opened for ≥ 5 tax years), and
  2. A qualifying event under §408A(d)(2)(A) — 59½, death, disability, or first-time homebuyer (≤ $10,000 lifetime).

If either condition fails, earnings are includible in gross income under §408A(d)(1). The 10% additional tax under §72(t) then applies separately unless a §72(t) exception is met (see §XII).

Earnings withdrawal — four scenarios
ScenarioIncome Tax10% Penalty
Clock 1 satisfied + qualifying event No No
Clock 1 satisfied, no qualifying event (e.g. 55-year-old who's owned Roth for 10 yrs) Yes Yes (unless §72(t) exception)
Qualifying event but Clock 1 NOT satisfied (e.g. 65-year-old whose first Roth was funded last year) Yes No (age, death, disability, FTH excepted)
Neither Yes Yes (unless §72(t) exception)

Section VIIIMinors & Custodial Roth IRAs

A child may own a Roth IRA. The 5-year rules apply identically. The Code provides no juvenile exception to the §72(t) age-59½ threshold.

A minor with earned income (compensation includible in gross income within the meaning of §219(f)) may contribute to a Roth IRA up to the lesser of the §408A limit or earned income for the year. Where the minor lacks contractual capacity under state law, the account is established as a custodial Roth IRA under UTMA/UGMA, with the parent or guardian as custodian until the minor reaches the state-law age of majority.

Strategic Use

A child who earns $2,000 from W-2 wages at age 14 and contributes the full amount to a custodial Roth IRA starts Clock 1 running at age 14. By the time the child turns 19, Clock 1 is satisfied for life. Even with no further contributions, the child has a Roth IRA bucket whose earnings will come out tax-free at 59½ — a planning artifact with multi-decade compounding value.

The §72(t) Question

The 10% additional tax of §72(t) applies in full to minors. There is no age-of-majority carve-out. If a 17-year-old withdraws earnings from a Roth IRA he funded at 14, the 10% applies absent a §72(t) exception — even though Clock 1 has been satisfied. (Clock 1 governs income tax; §72(t) is a freestanding excise tax governed by the qualifying-event list and the statutory exceptions.)

Kiddie Tax Interaction: Earnings withdrawn from a Roth IRA by a minor that are includible in gross income (because Clock 1 / qualifying event not satisfied) are unearned income for §1(g) "kiddie tax" purposes and may be taxed at the parents' marginal rate. This is a rarely-flagged trap for early withdrawals from custodial Roth IRAs.

Section IXSelf-Directed Roth IRAs

The 5-year rules for a self-directed Roth IRA are identical to the rules for a custodial/brokerage Roth IRA. The Code makes no distinction.

A self-directed Roth IRA is simply a Roth IRA held with a custodian that permits investment in non-publicly-traded assets — private LLC interests, real estate, promissory notes, precious metals, crypto, etc. The label is a marketing convention, not a separate statutory category.

Parity Points

  • Clock 1: identical mechanics under §408A(d)(2)(B). The clock for an SDIRA aggregates with the clock for any other Roth IRA the taxpayer owns.
  • Clock 2: each conversion into the SDIRA starts its own clock identically.
  • Ordering rules: §408A(d)(4)(B) treats SDIRA distributions identically.

Where SDIRAs Are Different (not 5-year-related)

The genuine differences in the SDIRA universe are not about the 5-year rules; they are about:

  • Prohibited transactions under §4975 — self-dealing with disqualified persons, which can disqualify the entire account retroactively to January 1 of the year of the transaction under §408(e)(2)(A), triggering a deemed distribution of the full FMV. A retroactive disqualification can collapse Clock 1 because there is no longer a Roth IRA.
  • UBTI / UDFI under §511–§514 — unrelated business taxable income and unrelated debt-financed income generated inside the SDIRA. These taxes are paid by the IRA itself (Form 990-T), not by the owner, and they reduce the account's growth — but they do not affect the 5-year clocks.
Practitioner Watch: A §4975 prohibited transaction that disqualifies the Roth IRA retroactively does not merely "restart" Clock 1 — it eliminates the account as a Roth IRA from the start of the disqualification year, meaning any subsequent re-establishment is treated as a brand-new Roth IRA with a fresh Clock 1.

Section XDesignated Roth 401(k) Accounts

Roth 401(k) accounts — and Roth 403(b) and governmental Roth 457(b) accounts — are governed by §402A, a separate and distinct statutory regime from §408A. The 5-year rule looks similar but operates differently in three critical respects.

Roth IRA

IRC §408A · Reg. §1.408A-6
  • One lifetime Clock 1 across all Roth IRAs — aggregated for the taxpayer.
  • Ordering rules: contributions → conversions (FIFO) → earnings. Basis comes out first.
  • No required minimum distributions during owner's lifetime.
  • Contributions limited by MAGI phase-out.

Designated Roth 401(k)

IRC §402A · Reg. §1.402A-1
  • Each plan has its own 5-year clock. Holding periods do not aggregate with Roth IRAs.
  • No ordering favorability: distributions are pro-rata between contributions and earnings under §72.
  • SECURE 2.0 §325 eliminated lifetime RMDs from Roth 401(k)s for tax years beginning after Dec. 31, 2023.
  • No MAGI limit on contributions; deferral limit applies ($23,500 for 2026 + catch-up).

The Three Critical Differences

1. Separate, Non-Aggregating 5-Year Clock

Under §402A(d)(2)(B), the 5-taxable-year period of participation begins with the first taxable year for which the employee made a designated Roth contribution to that plan. Each Roth 401(k) plan tracks its own clock. The clocks do not aggregate across plans (with one exception below) and do not aggregate with the taxpayer's Roth IRA Clock 1. This is the express position of the IRS in the final regulations under §402A (T.D. 9324) and is confirmed at §1.402A-1, Q&A-2.

Direct rollover between Roth 401(k) plans: Where a direct rollover is made from one employer's Roth 401(k) to a new employer's Roth 401(k), the receiving plan tacks the earlier of the two start dates under §1.402A-1, Q&A-4(a). A 60-day indirect rollover does not get this tacking treatment.

2. Pro-Rata Distribution Treatment (Not Roth-IRA Ordering)

Where a distribution from a designated Roth 401(k) is not a qualified distribution, §402A(d)(4) applies §72(e) treatment: each dollar withdrawn is treated as part contribution, part earnings, in proportion to the account's basis-to-balance ratio. You cannot withdraw just contributions, the way you can from a Roth IRA.

S, age 61, contributed $20,000 to a Roth 401(k) starting in 2024. By 2027, the account holds $23,000 ($20,000 basis + $3,000 earnings). He withdraws $10,000. Clock 1 (the §402A clock) is not yet satisfied — only 4 tax years of participation.

PRO-RATA RATIO: $20,000 / $23,000 = 86.96% basis
$10,000 × 86.96% = $8,696 tax-free basis
$10,000 × 13.04% = $1,304 taxable earnings (income tax, no §72(t) because S is 59½+)

Same facts in a ROTH IRA → entire $10,000 would be basis, tax-free, no penalty.

3. Rollover to a Roth IRA: Clock Resets to the IRA's Clock

When a designated Roth 401(k) is rolled over (in whole or in part) to a Roth IRA, the receiving Roth IRA's Clock 1 controls, not the 401(k)'s clock. The years of participation in the Roth 401(k) do not carry over to the Roth IRA — express IRS position at §1.408A-10, Q&A-4(a) and reaffirmed in the §402A preamble.

High-Stakes Planning Trap: A 60-year-old client with a 15-year-old Roth 401(k) (well past Clock 1) who rolls the balance into a brand-new Roth IRA has not satisfied the Roth IRA's Clock 1. Earnings withdrawn from the new Roth IRA within 5 years would be taxable. Defensive move: have the client open a Roth IRA — even with $1 — well before the rollover, so the Roth IRA's clock has aged independently.

In-Plan Roth Rollover Recapture

In-plan Roth rollovers (converting pre-tax 401(k) money to a designated Roth account within the same plan) trigger their own 5-year recapture rule analogous to §408A(d)(3)(F), at §402A(c)(4). Distributions from the rolled-over amount within 5 years are subject to §72(t) on the conversion amount unless an exception applies.

Section XIInherited Roth IRAs

Death tolls all the 10% penalty considerations but does not stop Clock 1. The beneficiary inherits the decedent's holding period.

Clock 1 Carryover

The 5-year aging period for qualified-distribution purposes continues to run after the owner's death, measured from the original owner's first contribution year. The beneficiary does not start a new clock. Authority: §1.408A-6, Q&A-7(a).

Death is itself a qualifying event under §408A(d)(2)(A)(ii), so once Clock 1 is satisfied, a beneficiary's distribution is qualified regardless of the beneficiary's age.

SECURE Act 10-Year Rule

For deaths in 2020 or later, beneficiaries who are not eligible designated beneficiaries (EDBs) are subject to the SECURE Act 10-year distribution rule under §401(a)(9)(H), which now applies to Roth IRAs via §408A(c)(5). The full balance must be distributed by December 31 of the tenth calendar year following the year of death. Final regulations issued in July 2024 confirmed that annual RMDs are required during the 10-year period where the decedent had reached the required beginning date — though Roth IRA owners have no RBD, so no annual RMDs are required during years 1–9, with the full balance due at year 10 for Roth IRAs.

EDBs

An eligible designated beneficiary — surviving spouse, minor child of the decedent, disabled or chronically ill individual, or a beneficiary not more than 10 years younger than the decedent — may use life-expectancy distributions. Surviving spouses may also elect to treat the Roth IRA as the spouse's own under §408A(a), in which case the spouse takes over the account entirely and the inherited-account rules cease to apply.

Section XII§72(t) Exceptions — Penalty Relief

Where Clock 2 would otherwise impose a 10% penalty on a pre-59½ distribution of converted principal or earnings, §72(t)(2) provides an escape list.

None of these exceptions affect the income-tax characterization — they merely defuse the 10% additional tax of §72(t).

Selected §72(t) exceptions applicable to Roth IRAs
ExceptionCitationNotes
Age 59½§72(t)(2)(A)(i)The universal threshold.
Death of the owner§72(t)(2)(A)(ii)Distributions to beneficiaries.
Disability (§72(m)(7) standard)§72(t)(2)(A)(iii)Permanent and total disability standard.
Substantially equal periodic payments (SEPP / "72(t) payments")§72(t)(2)(A)(iv)Three permitted methods; modification before later of 5 yrs or 59½ triggers retroactive penalty.
Medical expenses > 7.5% AGI§72(t)(2)(B)Unreimbursed only.
Health insurance premiums after unemployment§72(t)(2)(D)IRA only; 12+ consecutive weeks of UI required.
Qualified higher-education expenses§72(t)(2)(E)For self, spouse, child, or grandchild.
First-time homebuyer (≤ $10,000 lifetime)§72(t)(2)(F)Also a qualifying event for Clock 1 (Roth IRA only).
Birth or adoption expenses (≤ $5,000 per child)§72(t)(2)(H)SECURE Act addition.
Federally declared disaster relief (≤ $22,000)§72(t)(2)(M)SECURE 2.0 §331.
Domestic abuse (≤ $10,000 / 50% account, indexed)§72(t)(2)(K)SECURE 2.0 §314 (effective 2024).
Terminal illness§72(t)(2)(L)SECURE 2.0 §326.
Emergency personal expenses (≤ $1,000/yr)§72(t)(2)(I)SECURE 2.0 §115 (effective 2024).
Long-term care insurance (≤ lesser of $2,500 or 10% of vested benefit)§72(t)(2)(N)SECURE 2.0 §334 (effective 2026).

Section XIIIAuthority Index

Pinpoint citations for every rule discussed above, organized by primary source.

Internal Revenue Code

CitationSubject
§408A(a)General rule — Roth IRA treated as IRA under §408
§408A(c)(2)Annual contribution limit
§408A(c)(3)MAGI-based phase-out of contribution limit
§408A(c)(5)Distribution rules from Roth IRA — application of §401(a)(9)
§408A(d)(1)General rule — exclusion from gross income for qualified distributions
§408A(d)(2)(A)Definition of "qualified distribution" — the conjunctive test
§408A(d)(2)(B)5-year aging period (Clock 1) — qualified distribution holding period
§408A(d)(3)Rollovers from IRAs to Roth IRAs — conversion taxation
§408A(d)(3)(F)Per-conversion 5-year period (Clock 2) — §72(t) recapture
§408A(d)(4)(B)Ordering rules for distributions — contributions, conversions, earnings
§408A(e)Definition of qualified rollover contribution
§402ADesignated Roth contribution program — Roth 401(k)/403(b)/457(b)
§402A(d)(2)(B)5-year period of participation for designated Roth accounts
§402A(c)(4)In-plan Roth rollover recapture rule
§402A(d)(4)Pro-rata distribution treatment for non-qualified DRAC distributions
§72(t)10% additional tax on early distributions
§72(t)(2)Exceptions to §72(t)
§408(e)(2)Disqualification of IRA for §4975 prohibited transactions
§4975Prohibited transactions — disqualified persons and excise tax
§401(a)(9)(H)SECURE Act 10-year distribution rule for non-EDBs

Treasury Regulations

CitationSubject
§1.408A-1 through §1.408A-9Full Roth IRA regulatory framework
§1.408A-6, Q&A-1Qualified distribution definition
§1.408A-6, Q&A-2Clock 1 start date — January 1 of first contribution year
§1.408A-6, Q&A-5Per-conversion Clock 2 — §72(t) recapture
§1.408A-6, Q&A-7Death of owner and Clock 1 continuation
§1.408A-6, Q&A-8Ordering rules — contributions, conversions (FIFO), earnings
§1.408A-6, Q&A-9Aggregation of Roth IRAs
§1.408A-10Coordination between §408A and §402A
§1.408A-10, Q&A-4(a)Clocks do not aggregate across §408A and §402A
§1.408A-10, Q&A-5Roth IRA → DRAC rollover prohibited
§1.402A-1, Q&A-1 to Q&A-13Full DRAC regulatory framework
§1.402A-1, Q&A-2Each DRAC plan has its own 5-year clock
§1.402A-1, Q&A-4(a)DRAC direct-rollover tacking — earlier start date controls

IRS Guidance & Publications

CitationSubject
IRS Pub. 590-AContributions to IRAs
IRS Pub. 590-BDistributions from IRAs — includes practitioner-style flowcharts
Notice 2014-54Allocation rules for after-tax amounts in plan distributions
Notice 2025-672026 cost-of-living adjustments (contribution limits, MAGI phase-outs)
T.D. 9237 (2006)Final regulations under §401(k) for designated Roth contributions
T.D. 9324 (2007)Final regulations under §402A — DRAC operation
Form 8606Annual reporting of Roth IRA basis, conversions, distributions
Form 1099-R + Form 5329Distribution reporting and §72(t) reconciliation

SECURE Act & SECURE 2.0 Provisions Affecting Roth IRAs

CitationSubject
SECURE Act §40110-year distribution rule for non-EDB beneficiaries (Pub. L. 116-94)
SECURE 2.0 §107RMD age increased to 73 (2023) and 75 (2033) — not applicable to Roth IRA owners but affects rollover planning
SECURE 2.0 §325Eliminated lifetime RMDs from designated Roth accounts for TYs after 12/31/2023
SECURE 2.0 §314Domestic abuse §72(t) exception
SECURE 2.0 §115Emergency personal expense §72(t) exception
SECURE 2.0 §326Terminal illness §72(t) exception
SECURE 2.0 §331Federal disaster relief §72(t) exception (codified at §72(t)(11))
SECURE 2.0 §334Long-term care insurance §72(t) exception (effective 2026)
SECURE 2.0 §603Catch-up contributions for high earners must be Roth (effective 2026 after admin delay)
TCJA §13611Prohibition on recharacterization of Roth conversions (eff. 2018)