Roth IRA 5-Year Rule Calculator
Roth IRA 5-Year Rule Calculator
Understanding the 5-Year Rules:
- First contribution: 5 years for tax-free earnings
- Each conversion: 5-year clock for penalty avoidance
- Order: Contributions → Conversions → Earnings
Contribution History
About This Calculator
Calculate Roth IRA 5-year rule compliance for tax-free withdrawals. Determine eligibility for contributions, conversions, and inherited Roth accounts under 2025 IRS rules and age requirements.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Roth IRA 5-year rule?
The Roth IRA 5-year rule requires that your account be open for at least 5 tax years before you can withdraw earnings tax-free and penalty-free. The clock starts on January 1 of the tax year you make your first Roth IRA contribution. Example: First contribution made in March 2024 (for tax year 2024) — the 5-year clock started January 1, 2024, and ends December 31, 2028. After January 1, 2029, earnings withdrawals are qualified if you are also 59½ or older. Important: contributions (not earnings) can always be withdrawn tax-free and penalty-free at any time since they were made with after-tax dollars.
How does the 5-year rule apply to Roth conversions?
Each Roth conversion has its own separate 5-year clock for the 10% early withdrawal penalty (not income tax). If you convert traditional IRA funds to Roth before age 59½, you must wait 5 years to withdraw the converted amount without a 10% penalty. Example: You convert $50,000 in 2024. Before 2029, withdrawing that $50,000 triggers a 10% penalty ($5,000) if you are under 59½. After 59½, no penalty regardless of conversion date. This is critical for Roth conversion ladder strategies used by early retirees — you need to plan conversions at least 5 years before you need the funds. Each year's conversion has its own 5-year clock, following FIFO (first-in, first-out) ordering.
What is the 5-year rule for inherited Roth IRAs?
For inherited Roth IRAs, the 5-year clock is based on when the original owner first contributed, not when you inherited. If the deceased opened their Roth IRA in 2018 and passed away in 2025, the 5-year rule is already satisfied — beneficiaries can withdraw earnings tax-free immediately. If the owner opened the Roth in 2023 and passed away in 2025, beneficiaries must wait until 2028 for tax-free earnings withdrawals. Under SECURE Act 2.0 rules (2025), most non-spouse beneficiaries must empty the inherited Roth within 10 years of death. Spouse beneficiaries can treat the inherited Roth as their own, using their own 5-year start date if earlier.
Can I withdraw Roth IRA contributions before 5 years?
Yes — Roth IRA contributions can always be withdrawn tax-free and penalty-free at any time, regardless of the 5-year rule or your age. This is because contributions are made with after-tax money. The 5-year rule only applies to earnings and converted amounts. Withdrawal order (IRS rules): (1) Regular contributions first (always tax and penalty-free), (2) Converted amounts next (FIFO order, each with its own 5-year penalty clock if under 59½), (3) Earnings last (need both 5-year rule satisfied AND qualifying event like age 59½). Example: You contributed $30,000 total and your account is worth $45,000. You can withdraw up to $30,000 anytime without tax or penalty. The remaining $15,000 in earnings requires meeting both conditions for tax-free withdrawal.
What are the exceptions to the Roth IRA 5-year rule penalty?
Even if the 5-year rule is not met, certain exceptions waive the 10% early withdrawal penalty on earnings (though income tax may still apply). Exceptions: (1) Age 59½ or older — no penalty but earnings may be taxable if 5-year rule not met. (2) Disability — must meet IRS definition of unable to engage in substantial gainful activity. (3) Death — beneficiaries do not pay penalty. (4) First-time home purchase — up to $10,000 lifetime ($20,000 per couple) for down payment. (5) Qualified education expenses. (6) Unreimbursed medical expenses exceeding 7.5% of AGI. (7) Health insurance premiums while unemployed. (8) IRS levy. For Roth conversions specifically: the penalty-free exceptions apply to the converted amount during its 5-year window. Strategy tip: Open a Roth IRA as early as possible, even with a small contribution, to start the 5-year clock running.