Is it legal for a taxpayer (who is in their 60s and eligible to make a fully-deductible TIRA contribution) to shift taxable income from last year to the this year by making a previous-year TIRA contribution and immediately withdrawing it ?
In other words, when filing my 2021 tax return in April 2022, I would make a Traditional IRA contribution, thereby reducing my 2021 taxable income by $7000. Then later in 2022 (or immediately) I would withdraw the money, adding $7000 (assuming no growth or decline of value) to my 2022 taxable income.
Is this legal ?
You'll need to sign in or create an account to connect with an expert.
It is not illegal. However, you will have taxable income for tax year 2022 for the distribution you took, so it would only work once to defer taxes on your income.
Yeah, I realize I can't keep doing it. It's a one-time issue this year, because of taking a bunch of cap-gains and trying to avoid an IRMAA hit.
Still have questions?
Questions are answered within a few hours on average.
Post a Question*Must create login to post
Ask questions and learn more about your taxes and finances.
mpapadop
Level 1
bhsong206
Level 2
singmari
New Member
christoft
New Member
JP2815
Returning Member