ROTH/IRA. Contributions
A married couple make around $245,000 a year. They file join taxes. One spouse opened a Roth//Ira last year with $4,900 and is contributing $300 a month. They do not qualified for a Roth/Ira account due to their income. Please advise what does he has to do with this account? Any tax consequences? Thanks
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Mon, 2015-02-09 22:48
Permalink Submitted by Eduardo Arenas on Mon, 2015-02-09 23:18
could you please call me 925-858-9138? I am confuse with the answer, the $4,900 and the $300 is after tax money..what is the excesscontribution For th IRA? The spouse opened a Roth/Ira with after tax money. Please advise
Permalink Submitted by Jose Morales on Tue, 2015-02-10 00:08
the $4,900 and any $300 contributions made in addition to that are all excess contributions because the MAGI for this couple is above the contribution limits. As you stated, they do not qualify for a Roth because of these income limits. If they withdraw the funds as an excess contribution correction, including earnings attributable to the excess, by the tax filing due date they will not be negatively affected. That is assuming the contributions are for tax year 2014, as Alan explained. The alternative, again as Alan stated, is to recharacterize the contribution to a Traditional IRA contribution. The reason this is an option is because there is no limit on MAGI when determining eligibility for a Traditional IRA contribution. However it is highly likely that they cannot take a tax deduction if they recharacterize because they probably have an employer sponsored retirement plan that they can participate in. Just because you do not qualify for a tax deduction on a Traditional IRA contribution does not mean that you cannot still make a non-deductible contribution. Hope that helps.