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Level 2
March 22, 2024
Solved

Nondeductible IRA Contribution limit

  • March 22, 2024
  • 1 reply
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I am entering a Backdoor Roth.  I have entered info from my 1099R and the traditional nondeductible IRA contribution (same amount = $7,000).  I do not have an employer sponsored retirement plan and am over 55.  I keep getting a notice that the IRA worksheet is showing that my IRA nondeductible limit is $5,030.  Any idea why?

    Best answer by DanaB27

    Those are good tips! Thanks for your help!


    If you are in the phaseout range of the IRA deduction, then part of your traditional IRA contribution will be automatically nondeductible. Therefore, you can only choose to make the part nondeductible that is still deductible.

     

    For example, for a $6,500 contribution if it shows that $2,250 is still deductible then you can only enter $2,250 for the “Amount of your contribution to make Nondeductible”. The rest of the contribution ($4,250) is already automatically nondeductible. Therefore, you will have a total of $6,500 nondeductible.

     

     

    @MichVan 

    1 reply

    Level 15
    March 22, 2024

    A rollover/conversion is not the same as a contribution.  The rollover is entered into Turbotax via the 1099-R only.  Delete the contribution, unless you also made a separate contribution of new funds that was not a rollover.  

     

    Your IRA contribution is limited to the amount of your compensation from working.  Compensation is your W-2 wages plus your self-employment income minus the deductible portion of self-employment tax.  If you are semi-retired and only working part-time, your IRA eligibility may be limited by that.  

    MichVanAuthor
    Level 2
    March 22, 2024

    Thanks for your reply! I was following the Turbo Tax directions for BackDoor Roth:

    step 1. Enter the info on my 1099R under income 

    step 2. Enter the IRA contribution under deductions as a nondeductible contribution. I just can’t figure out why it will not let me indicate the entire $7,000 contribution as nondeductible…

    Level 15
    March 24, 2024

    Okay, I made $80,000 in 2023 and am over age 50. I should be able to make a non deductible Ira contribution of $7,000, but turbo tax is limiting me to $5,030. I have gone over the 2 step BackDoor Roth instructions many times and keep hitting this roadblock!!


    @MichVan 

    Here, we have to go back to your income.  Something is happening to your income that I don't understand.  You may need to contact customer support, since no one on this board can see your information.

     

    I would also like you to carefully review @DanaB27 's answer and example image.  If you are single and your income is between $73,000 and $83,000, your ability to deduct your IRA contribution is limited as a result of your income.  You can still make a non-deductible contribution, as I explained.  But by default, Turbotax will try to deduct your contribution first.  You might be getting a message that out of the $7000 you contributed, only $1970 is deductible, and the remaining $5030 is non-deductible.   What you can do in this case is tell Turbotax to make the other $1970 non-deductible as well.

     

    (Or, you might be getting a message that only $5030 is deductible, because the other $1970 is non-deductible due to your income, but then you have the option of manually declaring that you want the remaining $5030 to be non-deductible as well.)

     

    If that is not the answer, you need to contact customer support.