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Business profit $9026. I put $5000 in my Roth, wife $4000 in hers. TT reports $500 excess in her contribution. Why is there an excess?
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Business profit $9026. I put $5000 in my Roth, wife $4000 in hers. TT reports $500 excess in her contribution. Why is there an excess?
if that was your total earned compensation for 2017, then it must be reduced by the deductible part of the SE (Self-Employment) tax which is 15.3% of your income. The deductible part would be half of that. That probably accounts for the excess.
See IRS Pub 590B "What Is Compensation?"
https://www.irs.gov/publications/p590a#en_US_2016_publink1000230355
Self-employment income.
If you are self-employed (a sole proprietor or a partner), compensation is the net earnings from your trade or business (provided your personal services are a material income-producing factor) reduced by the total of:
The deduction for contributions made on your behalf to retirement plans, and
The deduction allowed for the deductible part of your self-employment taxes.
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Business profit $9026. I put $5000 in my Roth, wife $4000 in hers. TT reports $500 excess in her contribution. Why is there an excess?
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Business profit $9026. I put $5000 in my Roth, wife $4000 in hers. TT reports $500 excess in her contribution. Why is there an excess?
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Business profit $9026. I put $5000 in my Roth, wife $4000 in hers. TT reports $500 excess in her contribution. Why is there an excess?
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Business profit $9026. I put $5000 in my Roth, wife $4000 in hers. TT reports $500 excess in her contribution. Why is there an excess?
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Business profit $9026. I put $5000 in my Roth, wife $4000 in hers. TT reports $500 excess in her contribution. Why is there an excess?
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Business profit $9026. I put $5000 in my Roth, wife $4000 in hers. TT reports $500 excess in her contribution. Why is there an excess?
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Business profit $9026. I put $5000 in my Roth, wife $4000 in hers. TT reports $500 excess in her contribution. Why is there an excess?
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Business profit $9026. I put $5000 in my Roth, wife $4000 in hers. TT reports $500 excess in her contribution. Why is there an excess?
if that was your total earned compensation for 2017, then it must be reduced by the deductible part of the SE (Self-Employment) tax which is 15.3% of your income. The deductible part would be half of that. That probably accounts for the excess.
See IRS Pub 590B "What Is Compensation?"
https://www.irs.gov/publications/p590a#en_US_2016_publink1000230355
Self-employment income.
If you are self-employed (a sole proprietor or a partner), compensation is the net earnings from your trade or business (provided your personal services are a material income-producing factor) reduced by the total of:
The deduction for contributions made on your behalf to retirement plans, and
The deduction allowed for the deductible part of your self-employment taxes.
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Business profit $9026. I put $5000 in my Roth, wife $4000 in hers. TT reports $500 excess in her contribution. Why is there an excess?
9026 - 690 = $8336 maximum contributions to both spouse's IRAs
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Business profit $9026. I put $5000 in my Roth, wife $4000 in hers. TT reports $500 excess in her contribution. Why is there an excess?
After further searching, I get the same result by a different calculation. The maximum IRA contribution is equal to net earnings, defined as profit x 0.9235, in my case 9026 x 0.9235 = 8336.
Apparently the difference between profit and net earnings is Social Security and Medical payment.
SE tax is net earnings x 0.153 = 8336 x 0.153 = 1275, which is what TT comes up with. Half of that amount becomes a deduction on the personal tax calculation.
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Business profit $9026. I put $5000 in my Roth, wife $4000 in hers. TT reports $500 excess in her contribution. Why is there an excess?
$9,026 × 0.9235 × 0.153 = $1,275 SE tax
The deduction for ½ SE tax = $638
$9,026 - $638 = $8,388 maximum combined IRA contributions.
This is the calculation that TurboTax performs.
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Business profit $9026. I put $5000 in my Roth, wife $4000 in hers. TT reports $500 excess in her contribution. Why is there an excess?
Multiplying by .9235 may appear weird, but there's a rationale behind it. W-2 employees essentially get the benefit of the employer paid part of FICA tax free. This multiplier puts the self employed on the same footing