am i correct in saying there is no income limit if a spouse in not working and not making any money, she would be entitled to full deduction for opening an ira since the other spouse has income? i understand also if the working spouse is not participating in any retirment plans, he can open a deductable IRA regardless of his income.
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They can contribute to a spousal IRA as long as the other spouse has enough earned income to cover them both.
As to your second "statement", the spouse cannot open up a deductible IRA if the other spouse is covered by (notice that this does not say "participating in") a retirement plan and you file a joint return or lived with each other at any time during the year. See Publication 590, page 6.Michael
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The key part of that sentence was supposed to be to open a *deductible* IRA (I assumed that the original poster broke the threshold based on the phrasing of their question...maybe that was a bad assumption). You can open an IRA, but your contrbutions will not be fully deductible if you break the phase-out threshold. I have quite a few clients use non-deductible IRAs and then roll the money into a Roth IRA.
Sorry that I wasn't clear. It has been a long day...Michael
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Originally posted by MilTaxEA View PostThey can contribute to a spousal IRA as long as the other spouse has enough earned income to cover them both.Last edited by NotEasy; 01-30-2012, 07:51 PM.
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Originally posted by NotEasy View PostIs a "spousal IRA" just the same as a deductible (regular/traditional) IRA? Does the wife have to specifically tell the custodian that she needs to open a "spousal IRA", not a regular/traditional IRA?
So, for example, if the spouse goes back to work and qualifies without need for the "spousal IRA rules", the same account can be used.
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