Is it possible: IRA Contributions in same year as taking distribution?
I am nearing retirement (age 68), still on W2, my wife is not employed. My W2 will be
$12000 for 2017. I have been in the habit of funding both our Roths using distribution
from my IRA. In March of 2017, I took a distribution from my IRA ($15k)and used the
proceeds to fund my Roth and my wife’s Roth ($6500 each, $2k went to pay bills).
I now find that my Adjusted Gross is higher than I anticipated. I plan to:
1) Contribute $6500 to Spousal IRA; does this have to be a separate IRA account or can I
just deposit the funds to my wife’s current IRA?
2) I would like to contribute to my own IRA as a way to further reduce our Adjusted Gross
(I assume maximum of $5500 given my W2 wage income). Is this still possible given that I
already took a distribution from this same account?
Thanks for your help,
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Wed, 2017-12-27 18:46
Permalink Submitted by Larry DuLude on Thu, 2017-12-28 01:39
i will try to clear up some of my muddied post. I understand about the usual conversion, just some details about the accounts and timing caused me to do this in 2 transactions. Funding for 2016 Roths was from a 2017 distribution just prior to filing 2016 taxes (March 2017). So, as I now look at 2017 tax filing, AGI will be higher than I would like….I’m not I’m hitting the limit (MAGI is no where near 186k), I just want to lower AGI to reduce taxes. So I am considering a 2017 spousal IRA, basing it on my W2 income (I am not covered by a workplace retirement plan). I would plan to use cash to fund the spousal IRA, no IRA distribution.You answered the question re: spousal IRA contribution does not have to go into a new account, which I appreciate.Thank you for your post.
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Thu, 2017-12-28 02:11
OK, that makes sense. You can make a total of 12,000 in deductible TIRA contributions between your IRA and spouse’s IRA for 2017, with a maximum of 6500 for any one spouse (include 1,000 catch up contribution for age 50+).
Permalink Submitted by Larry DuLude on Thu, 2017-12-28 15:25
Thank you Alan, much appreciate your information. all the best for the New Year