Monthly Archives: April 2019

What to Do if You Don’t Qualify for a Backdoor Roth IRA

In my last post, I discussed the basics of the Backdoor Roth IRA, which can be a great planning tool for some higher income Americans. But not everyone qualifies for a tax-efficient Backdoor Roth IRA. Recall Jennifer’s case:

Jennifer makes too much to qualify to make a Roth IRA contribution in 2022. She contributed $6,000 to a nondeductible traditional IRA on April 19, 2022. She also had a separate traditional IRA with no basis. As of December 31, 2022, that separate traditional IRA was worth $93,998.53.

If, in 2022, Jennifer were to convert the $6,000 that she put into the nondeductible traditional IRA to a Roth IRA she would increase her taxable income by over $5,600. Ouch!

Options

Jennifer has two possible options to qualify for a much more tax efficient Backdoor Roth IRA. The first option is to use her workplace 401(k), 403(b), or 457 plan. Some 401(k) plans and other workplace plans allow participants to “roll in” amounts in traditional IRAs. Workplace plans are not required to offer participants this option. If a workplace plan does, it can be worthwhile to consider this option in order to facilitate Backdoor Roth IRA planning.

Of course, there are considerations that go beyond income tax planning, including the quality of the investment choices available in a traditional IRA versus a workplace 401(k) or other retirement plan, and the expenses associated with each option.

A second option is rolling the traditional IRA into a Solo 401(k) plan. Jennifer must have a Solo 401(k) plan from self-employment and the plan must accept IRA roll ins in order for her to do this. As with workplace retirement plans, Solo 401(k) plans are not required to accept traditional IRA roll ins, and any decision must appropriately consider the relevant non-tax issues (as discussed above). Further, a Solo 401(k) plan has several requirements (including the conduct of a trade or business) that should be carefully considered before opening a Solo 401(k).

Considerations

Trustee-to-Trustee Rollover

If Jennifer wants to roll her traditional IRA into a workplace retirement plan or Solo 401(k), she should structure the transfer as a “trustee-to-trustee” direct rollover of the money between the financial institution holding the traditional IRA and the workplace retirement plan or Solo 401(k). If instead of a trustee-to-trustee direct rollover, Jennifer receives a check from her IRA financial institution payable to her, she has 60 days to roll over that check (i.e., to get it to her workplace retirement plan or Solo 401(k)). If she does not move the money within the 60 days, the distribution from the IRA is taxable, subject to early withdrawal penalties if Jennifer is under age 59 ½, and cannot be transferred into a retirement plan.

Timing

Roll ins should be completed by December 31st of the year of the Roth IRA conversion. Otherwise the pro-rata rule will bite, because there will be a balance in the taxpayer’s traditional IRAs at year-end. That balance will attract a sizable portion of the $6,000 of IRA basis established by the nondeductible traditional IRA contribution. This causes the Roth IRA conversion to grab little basis and thus be tax inefficient.

For simplicity’s sake, it is usually best to clean out traditional IRAs, SEP IRAs, and SIMPLE IRAs and then make the nondeductible traditional IRA contribution.

Basis

Prior to implementing a traditional IRA to 401(k) “roll-in” strategy, Jennifer should review all of her traditional IRAs to ensure that she has no basis in any existing traditional IRA. IRA basis amounts cannot be rolled into the 401(k) and must be left behind under the rule of Section 408(d)(3)(A)(ii) and this technical write up.

SIMPLE IRAs and SEP IRAs

Those with amounts in SIMPLE IRAs, need to be careful. During the first two years of the SIMPLE IRA account, it cannot be rolled into a plan other than another SIMPLE IRA plan. Doing so would create a taxable event, subject to both early withdrawal and excess contribution penalties (on the transfer to the non-SIMPLE IRA).

Thus, if Jennifer’s traditional IRA balance is in a SIMPLE IRA and she first deposited into the SIMPLE IRA less than two years ago, she must wait until the two year window has expired to roll her SIMPLE IRA into a workplace retirement plan or a Solo 401(k).

In addition, those with a SIMPLE IRA (beyond the two year window) or a SEP IRA from their current employer may not be allowed in-service distributions. Thus, they would not be able to roll over those accounts into a 401(k)/Solo 401(k)/403(b)/457. Additionally, amounts may be added to these accounts prior to December 31st. These considerations make it difficult to successfully execute Backdoor Roth IRA planning for those currently covered by an employer’s SIMPLE IRA or SEP IRA.

December 31st

Any Backdoor Roth IRA planning should involve an additional diligence step: ensuring that as of December 31st of the year of the Roth conversion step, the taxpayer has a zero balance in all traditional IRAs, SEP IRAs, and SIMPLE IRAs. This helps ensure the Backdoor Roth IRA is a tax-efficient tactic.

Illustrative Example

Jennifer expects to earn $300,000 from her W-2 job in 2022, is covered by a workplace 401(k) plan, and expects to have some investment income. On March 1, 2022, Jennifer has a $90,000 balance in a traditional IRA but otherwise has no balance in a traditional IRA, SEP IRA, or SIMPLE IRA.

On March 2, 2022, Jennifer directs her workplace 401(k) plan and her IRA custodian to roll her traditional IRA to her workplace 401(k) plan. Her traditional IRA is rolled into her workplace 401(k) through a trustee-to-trustee direct rollover.

Jennifer contributes $6,000 to a traditional IRA on April 20, 2022. The contribution is nondeductible. Because the contribution is nondeductible, Jennifer gets a $6,000 basis in her traditional IRA. Jennifer must file a Form 8606 with her 2022 tax return to report the nondeductible contribution.

On May 2, 2022, Jennifer converts all the money in her traditional IRA to a Roth IRA (a Roth IRA conversion). At that time, Jennifer’s traditional IRA had a value of $6,001.47. Jennifer also ensures that as of December 31, 2022, she has a $0 balance in all traditional IRAs, SEP IRAs, and SIMPLE IRAs.

If Jennifer executes the above steps as described above, she will get the desired result. Done in this manner, the Roth IRA conversion step results in an increase in Jennifer’s taxable income of just $1.47 ($6,001.47 fair market value less $6,000 of traditional IRA basis).

Tactics vs. Goals

What if Jennifer’s workplace retirement plan does not accept roll ins? What if Jennifer doesn’t have access to a Solo 401(k)? What if Jennifer’s workplace retirement plan accepts roll ins but does not have quality investment options and/or charges high fees?

Remember, Jennifer’s ultimate goal is not to do a Backdoor Roth IRA. Her goal is financial independence! She should not let what I call the “tyranny of tactics” distract her from her ultimate goal.

The Backdoor Roth IRA is a great tactic to employ toward achieving that goal. But it’s okay if you can’t use this particular tactic. Plenty of people have and will achieve financial independence without executing a Backdoor Roth IRA.

If you can’t use the Backdoor Roth IRA for whatever reason, simply use other appropriate tactics, including but not limited to a high savings rate, to achieve your financial goals.

Further Reading

I discuss how to properly report a Backdoor Roth IRA on a tax return and what to do if has been incorrectly reported here.

FI Tax Guy can be your financial planner! Find out more by visiting mullaneyfinancial.com

Follow me on Twitter: @SeanMoneyandTax

This post is for entertainment and educational purposes only. It does not constitute accounting, financial, investment, legal, or tax advice. Please consult with your advisor(s) regarding your personal accounting, financial, investment, legal, and tax matters. Please also refer to the Disclaimer & Warning section found here.

Backdoor Roth IRAs for Beginners

If you read enough FI blogs, you will eventually come across the term “Backdoor Roth IRA.” This post answers the question “What’s the deal with Backdoor Roth IRAs?”

Why Do a Backdoor Roth IRA?

Why would someone do a Backdoor Roth IRA? The Backdoor Roth IRA gets money into a Roth IRA in cases where the taxpayer earns too much to make a direct annual contribution to a Roth IRA. Doing the Backdoor Roth IRA gets money that would have been invested in a taxable account into a tax-free Roth account. Further, the money in the Roth account gets better creditor protection than money in a taxable account.

History of the Backdoor Roth IRA

Before 2010, what is now referred to as a Backdoor Roth IRA would have been permissible and/or necessary in only relatively limited circumstances, and then only in years prior to 2008. But a 2006 change in the law opened up the Backdoor Roth IRA in the form we know now (starting in 2010).

Two fundamental concepts must now be addressed. The first is a Roth IRA contribution.

Roth IRA Contributions

This post discusses Roth IRA contributions in detail. Simplified, U.S. citizens and residents with earned income can make an annual Roth IRA contribution of up to $7,000 in 2024 ($8,000 if 50 or older). Done for many years, it can be a tremendous wealth building tool, since it moves wealth into an account that is tax-free (if properly executed).

The one catch is that your “modified adjusted gross income” (or “MAGI”) must be below a certain threshold in order to make a Roth IRA contribution. To make a full contribution in 2024, your MAGI must be less than $146,000 (if single) or $230,000 (if married filing joint).

Because of these limits, many taxpayers are unable to make a Roth IRA contribution. Further, based on the qualification rules for traditional deductible IRA contributions, most taxpayers unable to make a Roth IRA contribution are also unable to make a deductible traditional IRA contribution.

Roth IRA Conversions

The second fundamental concept is a Roth IRA conversion. A Roth IRA conversion is a movement of amounts in traditional accounts to a Roth IRA. This creates a taxable event. The amount of the Roth IRA conversion, less any “basis” in the traditional account (more on that later), is taxable as ordinary income on the taxpayer’s tax return.

Prior to 2010, only taxpayers with a modified adjusted gross income of $100,000 or less were allowed to do a Roth IRA conversion. This amount was not indexed for inflation and applied per tax return, making it particularly difficult for many married couples to qualify.

In 2006, Congress changed the law, effective beginning in 2010. As of January 1, 2010, there is no modified adjusted gross income limitation on the ability to do a Roth IRA conversion. The richest, highest earning Americans now qualify to do a Roth IRA conversion just as easily as anyone else.

The Backdoor

Okay, so there’s no MAGI limitation on the ability to execute a Roth IRA conversion. So what? Aren’t they taxable? What’s the advantage of doing one?

Recall I mentioned a taxpayer’s basis in a traditional account. Basis in an IRA occurs when a taxpayer makes a nondeductible contribution to a traditional IRA. Here is an example.

Mike expects to earn $300,000 from his W-2 job in 2024, is covered by a workplace 401(k) plan, and expects to have some investment income. Mike has no balance in a traditional IRA, SEP IRA, or SIMPLE IRA.

Mike contributes $7,000 to a traditional IRA on April 20, 2024. The contribution is nondeductible. Because the contribution is nondeductible, Mike gets a $7,000 basis in his traditional IRA. Mike must file a Form 8606 with his 2024 tax return to report the nondeductible contribution.

The “backdoor” opens because of the confluence of two rules: the ability to make a nondeductible traditional IRA contribution and the ability to do a Roth IRA conversion regardless of your income level. Let’s extend Mike’s example a bit.

On May 2, 2024, Mike converts all the money in his traditional IRA to a Roth IRA (a Roth IRA conversion). At that time, Mike’s traditional IRA had a value of $7,011.47.

What result? To start, all $7,011.47 is taxable. All money converted in a Roth IRA conversion is taxable. Uh oh! But there’s good news for Mike. Mike gets to offset the $7,011.47 that is taxable by the $7,000 of basis in his traditional IRA. Thus, this Roth IRA conversion will only increase Mike’s taxable income by $11.47 ($7,011.47 minus $7,000).

The combination of these two separate, independent steps (a nondeductible traditional IRA contribution and a later Roth IRA conversion) is what many now refer to as the Backdoor Roth IRA. Notice this is only possible because of the repeal of the MAGI limitation on Roth IRA conversions. Under the rules effective prior to 2010, Mike would have been allowed to make the nondeductible traditional IRA contribution, but his income (north of $300,000) would have prohibited him from a Roth IRA conversion.

The Backdoor Roth IRA allows Mike to obtain the benefits of an annual Roth IRA contribution without qualifying to make a regular annual Roth IRA contribution.

December 31st

Any Backdoor Roth IRA planning should involve an additional diligence step: ensuring that as of December 31st of the year of the Roth conversion step, the taxpayer has a zero balance in all traditional IRAs, SEP IRAs, and SIMPLE IRAs. This helps ensure the Backdoor Roth IRA is a tax-efficient tactic.

The Pro-Rata Rule

The Backdoor Roth IRA works well for someone with Mike’s profile. But it does not work well for everyone. Let’s change up the example a bit.

Jennifer’s story is the same as Mike’s story above, except that she had a separate traditional IRA before she did her 2024 nondeductible IRA contribution. That separate IRA had no basis. As of December 31, 2024, that separate traditional IRA was worth $92,988.53.

This one change in facts dramatically increases Jennifer’s taxable income from the Roth IRA conversion. Jennifer must apply the so-called Pro-Rata Rule to the Roth IRA conversion. Even though her two IRAs are in separate accounts, they are treated as one IRA for purposes of determining how much of Jennifer’s $7,000 of basis she recovers upon her Roth IRA conversion.

Jennifer starts with $7,011.47 of income (the amount she converts). To determine the amount of her $7,000 of basis she gets to recover against the proceeds of the Roth IRA conversion, we must multiply that $7,000 times the amount converted ($7,011.47) divided by the sum of the amount converted and her traditional IRA balance at the end of the year ($7,011.47 plus $92,988.53). Thus, Jennifer gets to recover 7.00147 percent of the $7,000 of basis, which is only $490.80. This results in Jennifer’s Roth IRA conversion increasing her taxable income by $6,520.67 ($7,011.47 minus $490.80).

What was a great idea for Mike becomes a horrible idea for Jennifer when she has a significant balance in another traditional IRA.

Note further that Jennifer would have the same bad outcome if that $92,988.53 traditional IRA was instead in a traditional SEP IRA or in a traditional SIMPLE IRA.

Tax Reporting

Assume Mike did his Roth IRA conversion and did not have any other money in traditional IRAs in 2024. He will get a Form 1099-R from his financial institution. In box 1 it will report a gross distribution of $7,011.47 (the amount of the Roth IRA conversion).

In box 2a the Form 1099-R will say that the “taxable amount” is $7,011.47 and box 2b will be checked to indicate that the “taxable amount not determined.” Wait, what? How can $7,011.47 be the taxable amount while the next box claims the taxable amount is not determined? The answer is the basis concept discussed above.

Mike’s financial institution does not know the rest of Mike’s story (his income, retirement plan coverage at work, IRAs at other institutions, etc.), so it has no way of determining how much basis, if any, Mike recovers when he did the Roth IRA conversion. Box 2b simply means that Mike might have recovered some basis, but the institution is not in a position to determine if he did.

Form 8606 helps complete the tax reporting picture. By filing that form, Mike establishes that he was entitled to $6,000 of traditional IRA basis and how the pro-rata rule applies (if at all) to his Roth IRA conversion. It is important that Mike file a properly completed Form 8606 with his timely-filed 2024 federal income tax return.

When Mike files his 2024 Form 1040, he puts $7,011.47 on line 4a (“IRA distributions”) and $11.47 on line 4b (“Taxable amount”). Most tax return preparation software will round cents to the nearest whole dollar.

Note that failing to report the transactions on the Forms 8606 and 1040 in this way can result in Mike paying an incorrect amount of tax.

Further Reading

This post discusses what you can do if you find yourself in Jennifer’s situation to get a result similar to Mike’s result. I discuss how to properly report a Backdoor Roth IRA on your tax return and what to do if has been incorrectly reported here.

FI Tax Guy can be your financial planner! Find out more by visiting mullaneyfinancial.com

Follow me on Twitter: @SeanMoneyandTax

This post is for entertainment and educational purposes only. It does not constitute accounting, financial, investment, legal, or tax advice. Please consult with your advisor(s) regarding your personal accounting, financial, investment, legal, and tax matters. Please also refer to the Disclaimer & Warning section found here.