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@VolvoGirl wrote:

To count as earned income he has to have a net profit of $433 or more on schedule C for self employment income.  It needs to be at least  $433 to pay self employment tax on it.  You need to pay self employment tax to count as earned income.  

 

Then, If you have self-employment income you can only contribute to a IRA up to your net profit reduced by the deduction allowed for the ER portion of your self-employment taxes. See IRS publication 590A (page 39 for ROTH) https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p590a.pdf 


I don't believe that "taxable compensation" for purposes of a Roth IRA is the same thing as "earned income".  There's nothing in pub 590-A that says household employee wages (HSH on line 1) can't be taxable compensation, and worksheet 2-1 would allow line 1 HSH wages to work for a Roth.   And there are several other kinds of "taxable compensation" that are not earned income.

 

The important question is whether the IRS will view this as a sham.