Client started a 401K with employer in December for $875. Clients wants to contribute the balance of $6125 to his IRA. Can this be done?
Ira and 401k
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AGI is fine but W2 shows a pension plan participant and program is saying NO DEDUCTIBLE IRA.This post is for discussion purposes only and should be verified with other sources before actual use.
Many times I post additional info on the post, Click on "message board" for updated content.Comment
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Since you said AGI is not a problem I suspect you have not entered the information correctly. Any boxes need to be checked?Comment
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1) The vast majority of taxpayers don't understand what it means.
2) Years down the road when they take it out they will either forget or have lost the documentation for it.
3) Too many tax preparers don't understand how to calculate the taxable portion on distribution.
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"discourage people from putting money in a non deductible Traditional."
Please convince all those "back door Roth IRA" fanatics! They'd be better off taking the money and paying the tax on a Roth conversion, assuming they have any Trad. IRA money without basis (and why wouldn't they, at the higher income levels we're talking about? Surely they would have rolled over a 401k to an IRA at least once along the way)
I have basis (not much) in my Trad IRA from before Roth IRAs existed, and being a tax nerd (long before becoming a tax pro) I have a spreadsheet with all IRA contributions and distributions going back to 1985. Good tax software will also maintain IRS basis worksheets (including separate Roth contribution and conversion bases) every year."You said it, they'll never know the difference. Come on, we'll paint our way out!" - Moe Howard
"That's enough! When you didn't know what you were talking about, you really had something! [to Curly]" -Moe HowardComment
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Are your responses talking about a deductible IRA?This post is for discussion purposes only and should be verified with other sources before actual use.
Many times I post additional info on the post, Click on "message board" for updated content.Comment
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Then he is in the phase out range, which is something you left out. At 110K MFJ over age 50 he can put 5,250 into a deductible traditional IRA.
If wife is not covered by retirement plan at work, she can contribute 7K (over age 50) to a deductible traditional IRA.Comment
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To Bob W: the UltraTax worksheet will correctly calculate the phaseout range for how much is deductible and how much is not;"You said it, they'll never know the difference. Come on, we'll paint our way out!" - Moe Howard
"That's enough! When you didn't know what you were talking about, you really had something! [to Curly]" -Moe HowardComment
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True. I personally strongly discourage people from putting money in a non deductible Traditional.
1) The vast majority of taxpayers don't understand what it means.
2) Years down the road when they take it out they will either forget or have lost the documentation for it.
3) Too many tax preparers don't understand how to calculate the taxable portion on distribution.
I have a client who, a number of years ago, put funds into a non-deductible Traditional IRA. Said client is now in the world of RMDs.
Form 8606 continues to haunt us each year.
To add insult to injury, IIRC there was/is a stiff preparer penalty if a required Form 8606 is not prepared annually.
As for this discussion, having the "retirement plan" box checked on ANY W2 changes the tilt of the IRA table.Comment
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