Your IRA Contribution Options
For over 40 years, individuals have been able to set up personal retirement plans called individual retirement accounts (IRAs). Nearly everyone who receives “compensation,” either as an employee or as a self-employed individual, can contribute to an IRA. You can choose from a variety of different types; some give you a tax deduction, while others don’t. This article highlights in general terms the IRA options available under current law and points out some of the advantages of each. For more details about which IRAs fit best with your specific situation, please call this office.
Setting up an IRA: To select the best type of IRA to meet your current income level and your long-term investment goals generally requires the advice of a professional. You are strongly advised to seek the advice of this office before selecting a specific type of IRA and the investment vehicle for your IRA. Although others, not fully cognizant of your current tax planning objectives or your long-range financial and estate planning needs, will be eager to assist you, prudent planning may be more appropriate.
Types of Investments: Examples of typical IRA investment vehicles include insurance annuities, stocks, bonds, mutual funds and cash (in savings institutions or brokerage accounts).
Definition of Compensation: You can open and contribute to an IRA only if you receive “compensation.” Compensation includes wages, salaries, tips, professional fees, commissions, self-employment income and taxable alimony. Compensation does not include rental income, interest or dividend income, pensions or annuities, deferred compensation, or amounts that are excluded from income.
IRA Penalties
Remember that various penalties can apply to most IRAs. When you contribute more than the IRA limits allow, withdraw from the account too early, or don’t take sufficient distributions when required, penalties can apply. Under certain circumstances, penalties can be avoided for premature IRA withdrawals. Exceptions apply, for example, when withdrawal is due to disability, for paying certain first-time home purchase expenses, and for paying educational costs. Be sure to check with this office concerning the exact rules on penalties to ensure against receiving unwelcome “surprises” when filing your tax return.
Tradiitional IRAs
With a Traditional IRA, if you’re under age 70, you can contribute up to the annual limit to your IRA account. However, if your taxable compensation is less than the annual limit in a given year, your contribution will be limited to the amount of your compensation.
Traditional IRA contributions are generally deductible on your tax return. However, one can designate them as nondeductible. If this choice is made, you build up a basis in your IRA so that part of each withdrawal is nontaxable when you start making withdrawals from the account. However, the choice not to deduct an IRA contribution should be made with caution in light of your particular tax situation.
If you’re married, file jointly, and your spouse has little or no compensation, a Traditional IRA may be set up as a spousal IRA, allowing your spouse to make IRA contributions based upon your compensation. However, neither spouse can deposit more than the annual limit to his/her individual account.
Participation in Other Plans: One complication of Traditional IRAs affects taxpayers who actively participate in other retirement plans – e.g., an employer plan, a Keogh or SEP, etc. When you are covered by another retirement plan, your IRA deduction “phases out” (i.e., gradually reduces to zero) depending on your filing status and your income level. Phase-out begins at income levels according to the following schedule:


Contributions to Roth IRAs phase out if income is within the phase-out range for the year (may differ from the traditional IRA phase-out range). The phase-out applies regardless of whether the taxpayer (or spouse, if married) is an active participant in another plan.


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