I'm not clear on my readings on this but a client asked if she could still contribute and deduct an IRA contribution if she also has a 401(k) at work. I don't believe she can. My understanding is if you are in a 401(k), you are considered in a retirement plan and that precludes you from making tax deductible IRA contributions. Would appreciate your comments. Thanks.
401(k) and deductible IRA
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When those questions come in and you want to answer quickly you have to catch yourself because of the phaseout rules:
Trad IRA with Active Participation (Their W2 has the pension or ret plan box 13 checked)
MFJ 95,000 to 115,000
Single, HOH 59,000 to 69,000
BTW I keep my TTB next to the phone. The cover has all this nicely listed.Taxes after all are the dues that we pay for the privileges of membership in an organized society. - FDRComment
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TTB: rtfm?
When those questions come in and you want to answer quickly you have to catch yourself because of the phaseout rules:
Trad IRA with Active Participation (Their W2 has the pension or ret plan box 13 checked)
MFJ 95,000 to 115,000
Single, HOH 59,000 to 69,000
BTW I keep my TTB next to the phone. The cover has all this nicely listed.Friends double; family triple. Don't buy an audit for yourself. If someone has to go to jail make sure it is the client. Remember it is only taxes, nothing important.Comment
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Yes, certainly. It's all about the phaseout limits for the filing status. (Keep in mind that a non-deductible contribution can be made in any case; however, if a contribution is going to be non-deductible anyway, a Roth contribution should be favored over a non-deductible contribution to a Traditional IRA if AGI allows it.)--
James C. Samans ("Jamie")Comment
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