Qualified Distributions Qualified distributions from your Xxxx XXX (both the contributions and earnings) are not included in your income. A qualified distribution is a distribution which is made after the expiration of the five-year period beginning January 1 of the first year for which you made a contribution to any Xxxx XXX (including a conversion from a Traditional IRA), and is made on account of one of the following events. • Attainment of age 59½ • Disability • First-time homebuyer purchase • Death For example, if you made a contribution to your Xxxx XXX for 2007, the five-year period for determining whether a distribution is a qualified distribution is satisfied as of January 1, 2012.
Distributions; Upstream Payments Declare or make any Distributions, except Upstream Payments and Permitted Distributions; or create or suffer to exist any encumbrance or restriction on the ability of a Subsidiary of Parent to make any Upstream Payment, except for restrictions under the Loan Documents, under Applicable Law or in effect on the Closing Date as shown on Schedule 9.1.15.
Nonqualified Distributions If you do not meet the requirements for a qualified distribution, any earnings you withdraw from your Xxxx XXX will be included in your gross income and, if you are under age 59½, may be subject to an early distribution penalty tax. However, when you take a distribution, the amounts you contributed annually to any Xxxx XXX and any military death gratuity or Servicemembers’ Group Life Insurance (SGLI) payments that you rolled over to a Xxxx XXX, will be deemed to be removed first, followed by conversion and employer-sponsored retirement plan rollover contributions made to any Xxxx XXX on a first-in, first-out basis. Therefore, your nonqualified distributions will not be taxable to you until your withdrawals exceed the amount of your annual contributions, military death gratuity or SGLI payments and your conversions and employer-sponsored retirement plan rollovers.