Rollover IRA Contribution
Hello and happy new year!
I’m helping my friend with her retirement investments and taxes and wanted to run a few question by the experts.
Here is her situation:
* My friend retired from her employer on December 31, 2019 at age 63.
* Her first pension payment was on January 1, 2020.
* Separately from her pension, she received a paycheck January 10, 2020 for the 2-week period of December 23, 2019 through January 5, 2020 which consisted of only vacation and holiday pay as well as sick leave payout. This paycheck included approximately $900 of 401K contributions.
* She received another paycheck on January 24, 2020 with a $150,000 bonus for volunteering to retire, and this paycheck did not include any 401K contributions.
* In mid-2020, she rolled over her 401K into an IRA.
* Her most recent rollover IRA statement reminded her to make a $7,000 deposit for year 2020.
* Her income tax filing status is Single.
Questions:
1. Is she entitled to make a $7,000 deposit into her rollover IRA for 2020 given that her last day of employment was December 31, 2019, but she still received paychecks in January 2020? I think the answer is yes, since she received 2 paychecks in 2020, so that qualifies as earned income for 2020.
2. If the answer to question #1 is yes, can she deposit the full $7,000 into her rollover IRA, given that she already deposited approximately $900 into the 401K that was rolled over into this IRA? I think the answer is yes, since IRA contributions are separate from 401K contributions.
3. If the answer to question #2 is yes, can she deduct the full $7,000 from her 2020 taxes? She earned the income while she was covered by the employer retirement plan and her MAGI is over $75,000, so I think she cannot deduct the IRA contribution. But she’s no longer covered by an employer retirement plan when she’ll be making the contribution to her rollover IRA, so perhaps she can deduct the IRA contribution?
4. And finally, I understand that pension is not considered earned income, so in future years, she cannot make contributions to her rollover IRA based on her pension earnings. Is my understanding correct?
Thank you in advance for your guidance.
Alice
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Tue, 2021-01-26 14:14
She should receive a 2020 W-2 showing earned income in 2020 from which she can make a regular IRA contribution for 2020. However, if she makes the regular IRA contribution into her rollover IRA, that account ceases to be a rollover IRA and that could impair her IRA creditor protection if she lives in a state that provides limited IRA creditor protection. In that case, she should open a separate IRA for the 7000 contribution so the rollover IRA can remain uncommingled.
Agree.
Agree, and her W-2 will likely show Box 13 (Retirement Plan participant) checked. If someone is a participant for even 1 day they are treated as a participant the entire year. Further, the 150k check (severance pay) will cause her to exceed the Roth IRA MAGI limit as well. So her only choice is a non deductible TIRA contribution, reported on Form 8606. If she has no prior non deductible contributions and will not return to work earning similar amounts, she may not want to have to deal with Form 8606 for every year she takes an IRA distribution for the rest of her life. In that case, she might must invest the 7000 in a taxable account.
Yes, you are correct.