Solo 401k affecting IRA deduction
1. I’d like to do a backdoor Roth because my income limit is higher this year to fund a Roth directly. I read that I first need to rollover my old traditional IRA into a 401k, so I want to open a Fidelity solo 401k. My main job does not offer a 401k plan at work, but I am doing some school tutoring work on the side and will get this tutoring work reported on a 1099 form (which earns me about $1,000 a year). My main job does not offer a 401k or any other benefits plan. If I open a solo 401k, does that mean that I would now be considered to be covered by a retirement plan at work? The IRS sets the IRA deduction limits differently depending on whether I am covered by a retirement plan at work (such as a 401k or not), so I was wondering if that means that I would now be considered “covered” by a retirement plan at work even if what I would be able to contribute to the 40k would be small?
2. If yes to #2: Let’s say that I am a tutor this year and then stop by December 31 so that I do not earn this side income next year. I imagine I cannot contribute to the solo 401k next year since I would not be working as a tutor anymore, right? Would I still be able to keep my Fidelity solo 401k open in future years to use for rollovers if needed at least?
3. If yes to #3: does that mean that as long as I have the solo 401k account open or active, I will be considered “covered” by a retirement plan at work in the future? Or does that depend on whether I cannot contribute to it once my solo tutoring job ends? Can I keep it “open” to use for future rollovers even if I cannot contribute to it, and I would then be considered “not covered” with a retirement plan at work?
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Thu, 2017-11-16 17:24