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403 retirement plans are tax deferred retirement plans available
to employees of educational institutions and certain non-profit
organizations as determined by section 501(c)(3) of the Internal
Revenue Code (IRC).
I've 10 facts here on 403b which you should know.
Fact 1: The Workings Of 403b Plans
You set aside money for retirement on a pre-tax basis through
a salary reduction agreement with your employer. You choose
from among the vendors offered by your employer where you
want to invest the money. The money grows tax free until you
withdraw it at retirement.
Fact 2: Who Can Contribute To A 403b
If you're an employee of tax-exempt organizations established
under section 501(c)(3) of the IRC, you're eligible to participate
and start contributing. Teachers, school administrators, school
personnel, nurses, doctors, professors, researchers, librarians
and ministers are contributors to the plan.
Fact 3: Why Contribute to a 403b
Your employer provides you with a pension upon your retirement.
However, the pension plan may not provide an amount equal
to your salary. A 403(b) plan can provide a healthy supplement
to your pension.
Fact 4: How Much You Can contribute Annually
You can contribute the smaller of:
The elective deferral limit of $15,500
or Up to 100% of including compensation
or If you've employer matches or other employer contributions,
limits are $46,000 or 100% of compensation (whichever is lower).
You're still limited to the employee elective deferral limit
($15,500). Hence, your employer can add another $30,500 to
your account
If you're 50 or older at any time during the year,
you can contribute an additional $5,000
Fact 5: Lower Taxes
You make 403b contributions on a pre-tax basis which can greatly
reduce your tax bill. The tax savings grow bigger as your
contributions increase.
Fact 6: More Tax Savings
All dividends, interests and capital gains earned in a 403b
account are on a tax-deferred basis. This means your earnings
will grow tax-free until time you withdraw them.
Fact 7: Part Time Employees Eligible To Contribute to 403b
Retirement Plans
Your employer must extend the 403b plan to all the employees.
However, certain employees may be excluded, such as:
Employees who contribute $200 or less annually
Employees who are participants in an eligible deferred
compensation plan (457 or 401k) or participants in another
TSA (tax sheltered annuity)
Non-resident aliens
Students and employees who work less than 20 hours
per week
Fact 8: 403b Plan Does Not Reduce Social Security Benefits
Your contributions to a 403b reduce taxable compensation for
federal (and in most instances, state) income tax purposes
only. These contributions don't reduce wages for the purpose
of determining Social Security benefits.
Fact 9: Special Tax Credit For Low-Income Savers
Eligible savers will receive a tax credit of up to
50% or up to $2,000 in contributions to an IRA, 403b, 457,
SIMPLE, 401k plan and other tax-favored plans. The full credit
is available to joint filers whose adjusted gross income (AGI)
is less than $53,000, and for singles whose AGI is under $26,500.
Fact 10: A 403b Can Be Rolled Into An IRA
This occurs when you change job; retire; become disabled
or die. OK, you might think 403b retirement plans are more
or less similar to 401k plans. But there's a big difference
there - your eligibility. If you're an employee in public
schools and certain tax-exempt organizations (as determined
by Section 501(c)(3) of the IRC), you're eligible for 403b.
The 401k, on the other hand, covers private-sector employees
Due to her strong yearning to retire early in life,
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