1-800-607-0145 info@midatlanticira.com

Upcoming Strategy Groups

From Blueprint To Buy-In
Monday June 9th at 6:30pm EST

The Rehab Playbook
Tuesday, June 24th at 6:30pm EST

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Introduction to Self-Directed IRAs
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Investing in Real Estate
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Traditional vs Roth IRAs
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The Power of Leverage
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Self-Directing Your IRA

Investing in what you know best is part of the power of a Self-Directed IRA. A truly Self-Directed IRA allows you to invest in assets that are alternatives of conventional stocks, bonds and mutual funds. These assets, which are also approved by the IRS, include real estate, notes, private placements, gold, natural resources and much more. Many types of IRA accounts (Traditional IRA, Roth IRA, Individual 401(k), SEP IRA and SIMPLE IRA) have the capability of being self-directed.

What We Offer

At MidAtlantic IRA, we allow to you to invest in any asset that is permitted by the IRS. Some of your investment options include:

Real Estate
Notes
Private Stock
Precious Metals
Oil and Gas
Raw Land

Saving for Retirement in 2019

How much you can contribute to your retirement plans each year depends in part on the annual limits. Sometimes these go up from one year to the next, and sometimes they don’t. Learn what’s changed and what hasn’t for 2019.

Save on your Investments before Year-End

While time, not timing, is generally the key to long-term investment success, taking timely action before year end can help save taxes on your investments. Here’s how.

Annual Contribution Limits for 2019

As 2018 is comes to a close, we all begin to look ahead to 2019. For 2019 many of the contribution limits increased from their 2018 levels. In calculating these, IRS compares the official cost of living increase from September of 2018 to September of 2017. Because the cost of living was higher in 2018 many of the indexed (for inflation) contributions, limitations, thresholds, etc in the IRS were adjusted.

2019 Quarter One Tax Calendar

A lot has changed for businesses when it comes to filing their 2018 income tax returns. But one thing that hasn’t changed is the multitude of tax-related deadlines businesses face in the first quarter of the year.