Why sign in to the Community?

  • Submit a question
  • Check your notifications
Sign in to the Community or Sign in to TurboTax and start working on your taxes
New Member
posted Feb 12, 2025 11:20:23 AM

turbotax program not allowing a tax strategy that IRS has allowed by law

Married filing joint for 2 over 70 year old retired . one spouse has greater than $20,000 1099-NEC income while other spouse has no earned income. IRS has verified that with the one spouse income we qualify to contribute $7500 each to a simple IRA. My turbotax program is saying the non earned income spouse is not allowed to contribute to an IRA for tax year 2024. Is there a program update needed to address this discrepancy?

 

0 2 1800
2 Replies
Expert Alumni
Feb 13, 2025 4:06:05 PM

There are no known issues. Your ability to deduct contributions may be reduced or eliminated depending on your MAGI, filing status, and whether you have a workplace retirement plan.  Let's look at the factors to make the fully allowed deductible contribution for each of you. 

  • MAGI - Income of $20,000 on the NEC is the gross income. The IRA deductions look at the income available. Look at your 1040 line 11 to verify the income.
  • Filing Status - covered with MFJ
  • Workplace retirement plan - you must mark that your spouse is not actively participating in a retirement plan at work. There is a difference between receiving a pension versus working and contributing to your retirement plan.

Contribution allowed:

In 2024, the contribution limit for a spousal IRA is $7,000 per spouse, or $8,000 if you're 50 or older. This limit is the same as for regular IRAs. 

 

Side note:

Making traditional IRA contributions would reduce your income and could cause a circle, with the math trying to make sense inside the program. ROTH contributions make the most sense for you since you don't have taxable income. 

 

Level 15
Feb 13, 2025 6:02:10 PM

Is it $20,000 PROFIT from the business?  Were there any employer retirement plans that would reduce the amount allowed to contribute to an IRA?

 

Are you entering it as a "Traditional" IRA?  You mentioned a "simple" IRS, but a "SIMPLE" is a different kind of retirement plan.