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Rental Property Investing with IRAs - By: Barry Waxller, Posted on: 2007-04-26


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 you have an IRA, you need to invest the contributions in stocks, bonds or mutual funds, correct? Actually, this common perception is wrong. You can make far more money by actually investing in property such as homes, condos and so on.

Investing in the stock or bond market with your IRA is an in the box strategy. You can make a decent return, but is that really what you want? I doubt it. Leveraging your IRA account to buy homes and condos has much more potential.

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.

Section 408 of the tax code states clearly you can invest IRA contribution in a variety of property. The wealthy have used this approach for a long time and more than a few now own big portfolios of commercial property, rental properties and so on through their IRAs.

To buy a home with your IRA, we need to back up a few steps. You cannot open an IRA at your stock broker. Instead, you must open a self-directed IRA. IRAs held by investment firms restrict you to stock marketing investing since that is where they make their money.

As the name suggest, you are in control of the individual retirement account. This means you get to set the parameters of what can be invested in and what cannot so long as it is legal. Homes, condos and so on are legal investments under the tax code.

Once up and running, it is time to put money into the account. How you do this is entirely dependent upon your specific situation. You can roll money in from another account or perhaps just make contributions. Consult with your financial advisor for the best answer.

Most people use their IRA to purchase secondary properties. The classic example is using the strategy to buy rental properties. Millions of Americans now own second homes, and the IRA strategy is a perfect way to pursue ownership. Heck, you can even buy an RV.

When the actual property is obtained, it will be signed off on by the IRA custodian. Self-directed IRAs have an independent custodian who oversees the account do to IRA rules. After that, you just collect earnings from the property tax free in your account.

You might recall I mentioned the Roth option above. Yes, you can use this strategy with the Roth account. In fact, it is preferable. Why? When you retire, all distributions from the Roth will be income tax free. That makes for an excellent investment.

Using this strategy to purchase property is fairly straightforward. If you are looking to build wealth in your IRA, make sure to speak with a financial advisor familiar with this strategy.

Article Source: http://higradesearch.com

Find out how using a self-directed Roth IRA can be used for wealth building at UFCAmerica.com.
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