TurboTax Premier is stating I have exceeded the max income limits for contributing to my Roth IRAs. Our Married Joint W-2 income is $163K, but with my military pension, it is over the $189-199K max. I am being told by TurboTax that I have excess Roth IRA contributions and will be paying the 6% penalty for the $4200 (each) we contributed this year.
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Your Roth IRA contribution might be limited based on your filing status and income, which includes the pension and W-2s. Please see 2018 - Amount of Roth IRA Contributions You Can Make for 2018 for details on the limit.
Excess contributions are taxed at 6% per year as long as the excess amounts remain in the IRA. The tax can’t be more than 6% of the combined value of all your IRAs as of the end of the tax year.
To avoid the excess contributions tax:
The response is incorrect. Military retirement is not included in the AGI for purposes of a ROTH IRA. If turbo tax shows it this way without a way to correct it when filing then I may have to use a different service.
Compensation doesn’t include any of the following items.
Earnings and profits from property, such as rental income, interest income, and dividend income.
Pension or annuity income.
@2020PA wrote:
The response is incorrect. Military retirement is not included in the AGI for purposes of a ROTH IRA. If turbo tax shows it this way without a way to correct it when filing then I may have to use a different service.
What Isn’t Compensation?Compensation doesn’t include any of the following items.
Earnings and profits from property, such as rental income, interest income, and dividend income.
Pension or annuity income.
Where in IRS Publication 590-A Contributions to Individual Retirement Arrangements (IRAs) (2019), do you see that military pension income is not to included in the MAGI Worksheet 2-1 Modified Adjusted Gross Income for Roth IRA Purposes, page 40 - https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p590a.pdf#page=40
TurboTax does not use pension or annuity income when calculating MAGI for an IRA.
Your AGI includes all compensation (wages on W-2, salaries, bonuses, self-employment income, etc.), Interest, Dividends, Social Security Benefits, Pensions/Annuities (military retirement), etc. How much you can contribute to a Roth IRA is based on taxable compensation (wages, salaries, bonuses, self-employment income) and your modified AGI (which includes military retirement pension). Your military retirement doesn't count towards compensation but it is included in the modified AGI.
If your modified AGI is above a certain amount, your contribution limit may be reduced. (See Publication 590A, Table 2-1). If your income is between 193,000 but less than $203,000 your contribution is reduced. If it is greater than $203,000 for married filing jointly your contributions are not deductible.
Isn't it in line 5b of the 1040. That Roth MAGI calculation worksheet has you subtracting 4b and 5b from your AGI on 11. Turbo Tax has my traditional pension on 5b so I presume a military pension is also on that line.
Your military pension will show up on line 5b.
That is what I expected, but back to original question then, it should not have shown that he had excess Roth IRA contributions, because the military pension amount should have been subtracted from AGI to calculate MAGI for Roth IRA contributions. This may be fixed now, but it was clearly an issue in the original post.
It may well have been an issue in the TurboTax 2020 product that had to be fixed at that time. But it has not been an issue in the TurboTax 2022 product.
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