Roth IRAs

Roth IRAs Contribution Limits—2021

Lesser of: Taxable compensation for the year, or:
Under age 50
$6,000
Age 50 or older
$7,000

What is a Roth IRA?

A Roth IRA is an individual retirement arrangement. It is a personal savings plan that gives you tax advantages for setting aside money for retirement. An account must be designated as a Roth IRA when opened.

Roth IRAs tax advantages and rules compared to a traditional IRA:

  •  Contributions are not deductible. Being covered by an employer retirement plan is irrelevant.
  •  If certain requirements are satisfied for qualified distributions, distributions are tax free.
  •  Can withdraw contributions any time for any reason without owing taxes or penalties.
  •  The required minimum distribution (RMD) rules do not apply. Distributions are not required until death of the participant.
  •  Contributions are not allowed when modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) is above certain limits.
  •  Neither a SEP IRA nor a SIMPLE IRA can be set up as a Roth IRA.

Who Can Contribute to a Roth IRA?

Generally, you can contribute to a Roth IRA if you have taxable compensation and income less than the top of the phaseout range for your filing status, see Roth IRAs Phaseouts chart, below.

Roth IRAs Phaseouts—2021
Filing Status MAGI Contribution Limit
Single, Head of Household, or Married Filing Separately (lived apart from spouse all year)
Less than $125,000.
Up to $6,000 ($7,000, age 50 and older).
At least $125,000, but less than $140,000.
Contribution limit reduced.*
$140,000 or more.
Cannot contribute to Roth IRAs.
Married Filing Jointly or Qualifying Widow(er)
Less than $198,000.
Up to $6,000 ($7,000, age 50 and older).
At least $198,000, but less than $208,000.
Contribution limit reduced.*
$208,000 or more.
Cannot contribute to Roth IRAs.
Married Filing Separately (lived with spouse at any time during the year)
Zero.
Up to $6,000 ($7,000, age 50 and older).
More than zero, but less than $10,000.
Contribution limit reduced.*
$10,000 or more.
Cannot contribution to Roth IRAs.
*To calculate reduced contribution limit:
Example: Bob, age 35, Single, $127,000 MAGI:
1) Subtract the lower limit of the phaseout range from MAGI.
1) $127,000 – $125,000 = $2,000.
2) Divide result by $10,000 (MFJ and MFS, lived with spouse) or $15,000 (all others).
2) $2,000/$15,000 = 0.133.
3) Multiply result by maximum contribution amount.
3) 0.133 × $6,000 = $800.
4) Subtract the result from the maximum contribution limit.
4) $6,000 – $800 = $5,200 (Bob’s maximum contribution limit).
Compensation.

Compensation includes wages, salaries, tips, professional fees, bonuses, and other amounts received for providing personal services. It also includes commissions, self-employment income, nontaxable combat pay, military differential pay, and taxable alimony and separate maintenance payments.

Contributions.

Total contributions are combined with traditional IRA contributions to determine limits. For example, a $1,000 contribution to a traditional IRA will reduce total contributions allowable to a Roth IRA by $1,000. Employer contributions under a SEP or SIMPLE IRA plan do not affect this limit.

If your modified AGI is within the phaseout amounts, your contribution limit is gradually reduced.

When Can You Make Contributions?

You can make contributions to a Roth IRA for a year at any time during the year or by the due date of your return for that year (not including extensions). This means that most people can make contributions for 2021 by April 15, 2022.

Conversion Rules

There are no modified AGI limits or filing status requirements relating to rollovers from eligible retirement plans into Roth IRAs.

Conversion contribution.

Money distributed from a qualified plan or IRA and reinvested within 60 days into a Roth IRA is called a conversion contribution. The distribution is taxable to the extent it does not represent a return of nondeductible basis. A conversion contribution is not subject to the 10% early withdrawal penalty. A conversion contribution can also be accomplished through a trustee-to-trustee transfer or a same trustee transfer where the trustee simply redesignates a traditional IRA as a Roth IRA rather than open up a new account or issue a new contract.

Income.

In the year of conversion, the amount of the distribution from a traditional IRA or employer plan converted to a Roth IRA is included in gross income.

Employer plan conversions.

Money in an employer-sponsored retirement plan, such as a 401(k), annuity, section 403(b) plan, government deferred compensation (§457 plan), or profit-sharing plan, may be directly converted to a Roth IRA.

Inherited IRA.

An inherited traditional IRA from someone other than a spouse cannot be converted into a Roth IRA.

Qualified Distributions

A nontaxable qualified distribution is any payment or distribution from a Roth IRA that meets the following requirements.

  • It is made after the 5-year period beginning with the first taxable year for which a contribution was made to a Roth IRA set up for your benefit, and
  • The payment or distribution is:

 – Made on or after the date you reach age 59½, or

– Made because you are disabled, or

– Made to a beneficiary or to your estate after your death, or

– Made to purchase a first home (up to a $10,000 lifetime limit).

Additional tax on early distributions.

If you receive a nonqualified distribution, you must pay the 10% additional tax on early withdrawals penalty on the taxable part of any distributions. Exceptions apply.

Nonqualified distributions.

A distribution from a Roth IRA that is not qualified may be partly taxable or nontaxable as there is a set order in which contributions and earnings are considered to be distributed from a Roth IRA. The order is as follows:

  1. Regular contributions.
  2. Conversion and rollover contributions, on a first-in firstout basis.
  3. Earnings on contributions.

Distributions from a Roth IRA that are a return of regular contributions are not subject to tax or penalty, no matter when they are withdrawn. Only the portion of the nonqualified distribution allocable to earnings may be subject to tax and the 10% additional tax.

Are Distributions From Roth IRAs Required?

You are not required to take distributions from your Roth IRA at any age. The required minimum distributions (RMD) rules that apply to traditional IRAs do not apply to Roth IRAs while the owner is alive.