Buy a Second Home with Your IRA
An individual retirement account is familiar to most when it is referred to by its abbreviation IRA. What most people are not familiar with, however, are the strategies you can use to crank up your return on investment.
If I have an individual retirement account, I have to invest in the stock market. Everyone know this is the way it works, right? Well, the literature and commercials spewed out by investment firms might suggest as much, but it is not true.
The average person will always invest in the stock market in some form or another with their IRA. The question is whether you want to be average when planning for your financial future. If not, you need to think outside the box.
Using your IRA to buy homes and such might sound like an aggressive idea that might raise the ire of the IRS. In truth, it is not and the IRS has said as much. The language allowing it is right in the tax code, to wit, this is not a loophole strategy.
Truth be told, you have the right to invest your retirement dollars in many more investment areas then you are led to believe. So, why haven't you been told this? Well, most stock investment brokers don't make money in real estate, so why would they promote it?
The nuts and bolts of the strategy are fairly simple, but the devil is in the details. In general, you open a self-directed IRA and use that vehicle to invest in property entities. Get it right and you can make a bundle. Get it wrong and it is a nightmare, so do this with professional help.
Regardless, a self-directed individual retirement account works a bit different than the ones most people use. The account has a custodian who acts much like a trustee for a trust. The custodian can be a bank or other advisor and the fees are low.
Whenever dealing with the IRS, it is important to understand there are always some limitations. They are usually so complex that you get a headache trying to read them. In this case, they are not.
With money on hand, it is time to invest in property. There are surprisingly few rules. The only limitation is on self-dealing. You cannot buy your current home or a property you already own. Most people buy second homes or rentals.
From a procedural point of view, you do no actually purchase anything. The IRA does. Technically, the custodian of the IRA will sign on behalf of the account and so on. You then relax and watch your balance grow as rental payments come in or appreciation occurs.
While buying property with an IRA is a good strategy, doing so with a Roth IRA is a much better one. It works the same way, but the tax benefits are tremendous. All distributions made from the Roth with be tax free. It is a nice way to build your retirement nest egg.
The above represents a very simplified look at maximizing your IRA investment with property. That being said, it is one of the outside of the box wealth building strategies that can produce tremendous returns.
Find out how using a self-directed Roth IRA can be used for wealth building at UFCAmerica.com.
This article is available as a unique content article with free reprint rights.
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