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Author: oddhack   😊 😞
Number: of 48447 
Subject: IRA profit-taking issues for expats
Date: 12/09/2024 7:44 AM
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I realize I'm getting to the point where I need to find professional legal / financial advice (a can of worms in itself - recs. on trustworthy and helpful people welcome), but thought I'd throw this out: if I sell stock in an IRA in the US, there are no consequences - just at distribution time. But how is this handled for expats? If I realize capital gain inside an IRA account, can I expect to be liable for taxes on that when a foreign tax resident?

This is particularly weird in that a couple of the institutions I hold IRAs with appear to have just done away completely with the lot information, so it's not even clear how I would determine what those notional capital gains *are*.

It strikes me that it might be on the safer side to sell everything in my IRAs before leaving the US, and repurchase to reset the cost basis later on.
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Author: Rubic   😊 😞
Number: of 48447 
Subject: Re: IRA profit-taking issues for expats
Date: 12/09/2024 3:25 PM
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My understanding, at least for my situation based on tax advice
I've paid for, is that I will only be taxed based on distributions
from my IRA accounts, not on any buying/selling within the IRA itself.

A slightly different topic detour ...

Many countries do not acknowledge tax-free nature of distributions from
Roth IRA accounts.

Interestingly in my situation, however, I can withdraw contributions to my
Roth IRA tax-free, so I have an added incentive to do Roth conversions over
the next several years. I may never need to touch these funds, but they
(the contributions) would be available to me without paying additional taxes.

-Rubic
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