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No, from the information you have here you did not over contribute. One way for you to be able to contribute the full amount to a Roth IRA and not concern yourself with the income limitations is to do a BackDoor Roth IRA.
To have this work, you contribute to a regular IRA account (which is not deductible for you due to your income) then you convert it, during the same year to a Roth IRA. By doing this there are no limits based on your income and you can make the full contribution to your Roth IRA account.
Link on how to enter a Backdoor Roth IRA in TurboTax
I did some math and seems like I should be fine. Can someone confirm?
(190500 - 189000)/10000 = 0.15
0.15 * 5500 = 825
5500 - 825 = 4675
Max I could contribute in 2018 would be $4675
No, from the information you have here you did not over contribute. One way for you to be able to contribute the full amount to a Roth IRA and not concern yourself with the income limitations is to do a BackDoor Roth IRA.
To have this work, you contribute to a regular IRA account (which is not deductible for you due to your income) then you convert it, during the same year to a Roth IRA. By doing this there are no limits based on your income and you can make the full contribution to your Roth IRA account.
Link on how to enter a Backdoor Roth IRA in TurboTax
sdarora, your math is correct except that the $4,675 is to be rounded up to the next $10 multiple, $4,680.
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