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#6
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| BreadWithSpam[at]fractious.net writes: - quote - > As far as I can tell, there's nothing the OP can do to
IRS Publication 550 says with respect to postponing reporting> avoid the tax hit other than sit on the bonds and just > stop earning interest. Rich suggested that one might owe > taxes on the bond in the year in which it matures whether > one cashes it in or not - I could not find any reference to > this on the Treasury site, so I couldn't confirm it. accrued interest on savings bonds: "Postpone reporting the interest until the *earlier* [my emphasis] of the year you cash or dispose of the bonds or the year in which they mature." -- Rich Carreiro rlcarr[at]animato.arlington.ma.us |
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#5
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| zxcvbob <zxcvbob[at]charter.net> writes: - quote - > bo peep wrote: http://www.savingsbonds.com/bond_basics/hhbond1.cfm> > It looks like you could convert them to HH savings bonds without an > > immediate tax consequence. See > > http://www.savingsbonds.com/bond_basics/ebond1.cfm > I believe the Treasury stopped issuing series HH bonds about a year > ago, and they weren't replaced with anything. :-( Notice: August 31st, 2004 was the last issue date for HH/H Bonds. After August 31, 2004, the government discontinued the exchange of bonds for HH/H bonds. Current holders of HH/H Bonds will not need to do anything different than they normally would have. As far as I can tell, there's nothing the OP can do to avoid the tax hit other than sit on the bonds and just stop earning interest. Rich suggested that one might owe taxes on the bond in the year in which it matures whether one cashes it in or not - I could not find any reference to this on the Treasury site, so I couldn't confirm it. On http://www.savingsbonds.gov/indiv/re.../res_e_tax.htm it says: You can postpone reporting the EE/E Bond's accumulated interest for Federal income tax purposes until you redeem the bond or the bond stops earning interest 30 years (40 years if the issue date is before 12/1965). When EE Bonds in TreasuryDirect accounts stop earning interest, they're automatically redeemed and the interest earned is reported for Federal income tax purposes. That *suggests* that taxes are due as Rich indicated, but it's not exactly clear. -- Plain Bread alone for e-mail, thanks. The rest gets trashed. No HTML in E-Mail! -- http://www.expita.com/nomime.html Are you posting responses that are easy for others to follow? http://www.greenend.org.uk/rjk/2000/06/14/quoting |
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#4
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| I already use the Wizard. That's how I know that the bonds will be reaching maturity soon. I know that they will stop earning interest when they mature. I would like to convert them to something else that would continue earning interest. And I would like to have that conversion to have no tax consequence. If a viable option to do this exists, I would be interested in hearing about it. Thanks. BMS wrote: - quote - > Go here: > http://www.publicdebt.treas.gov/sav/savwizar.htm > Put the inventory into the wizard, it'll give you values and other info. If > the bonds are over 30 years old they simply stop earning interest. > Good luck > "BRH" <BRH[at]giganews.com> wrote in message > news:KLSdnYF3XrmQGQnenZ2dnUVZ_tadnZ2d[at]comcast.com... > > I have approximately 30 individual Series E (yes - E, not EE) US Savings > > Bonds which will reach full maturity (30 years) in a few years. (These are > > bonds in my name that I bought myself through payroll deductions). > > > I would rather not cash them in (and get hit with a large tax bill), if I > > can help it. But, from what I understand, they will no longer earn > > interest after they mature. I would prefer to apply them in some way as > > part of my overall retirement savings. > > > Is there some way to convert them to something else without incurring a > > tax liability? > > > Thanks! > |
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#3
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| Go here: http://www.publicdebt.treas.gov/sav/savwizar.htm Put the inventory into the wizard, it'll give you values and other info. If the bonds are over 30 years old they simply stop earning interest. Good luck "BRH" <BRH[at]giganews.com> wrote in message news:KLSdnYF3XrmQGQnenZ2dnUVZ_tadnZ2d[at]comcast.com... - quote - > I have approximately 30 individual Series E (yes - E, not EE) US Savings > Bonds which will reach full maturity (30 years) in a few years. (These are > bonds in my name that I bought myself through payroll deductions). > I would rather not cash them in (and get hit with a large tax bill), if I > can help it. But, from what I understand, they will no longer earn > interest after they mature. I would prefer to apply them in some way as > part of my overall retirement savings. > Is there some way to convert them to something else without incurring a > tax liability? > Thanks! |
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#2
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| bo peep wrote: - quote - > It looks like you could convert them to HH savings bonds without an > immediate tax consequence. See > http://www.savingsbonds.com/bond_basics/ebond1.cfm > John Cowart I believe the Treasury stopped issuing series HH bonds about a year ago, and they weren't replaced with anything. :-( Best regards, Bob |
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#1
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| BRH <BRH[at]giganews.com> writes: - quote - > I have approximately 30 individual Series E (yes - E, not EE) US Savings
Double-check this, but I believe that when savings bonds hit final> Bonds which will reach full maturity (30 years) in a few years. (These > are bonds in my name that I bought myself through payroll deductions). > I would rather not cash them in (and get hit with a large tax bill), if > I can help it. But, from what I understand, they will no longer earn > interest after they mature. maturity and cease earning interest, the deferred interest becomes taxable that year whether or not you cash them in. -- Rich Carreiro rlcarr[at]animato.arlington.ma.us |
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| It looks like you could convert them to HH savings bonds without an immediate tax consequence. See http://www.savingsbonds.com/bond_basics/ebond1.cfm John Cowart |
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#-1
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| I have approximately 30 individual Series E (yes - E, not EE) US Savings Bonds which will reach full maturity (30 years) in a few years. (These are bonds in my name that I bought myself through payroll deductions). I would rather not cash them in (and get hit with a large tax bill), if I can help it. But, from what I understand, they will no longer earn interest after they mature. I would prefer to apply them in some way as part of my overall retirement savings. Is there some way to convert them to something else without incurring a tax liability? Thanks! |
| Tags |
| bond, question, savings, series |
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