Income Limit Removed for Converting to Roth IRA after 2009
The Tax Increase Prevention and Reconciliation Act, signed into law on May 17, 2006, eliminates the $100,000 adjusted gross income ceiling for converting a traditional IRA into a Roth IRA. While this benefit won't begin (AGI) to apply until after 2009, plans to maximize this opportunity should start immediately for many taxpayers. For persons in the upper tax brackets, a Roth IRA can save a significant amount of tax, especially when incorporated into an estate plan in which Roth assets are eventually passed down to the next generation.
Currently, a taxpayer is allowed to convert a traditional IRA to a Roth IRA only if adjusted gross income in the year of conversion does not exceed $100,000. (Since this amount has remained unadjusted for inflation since its inception in 1998, the AGI level gets harder to get under each year and will become harder still through 2009.) A married taxpayer filing a separate return is currently prohibited from making a conversion. The amount converted is treated as distributed from the traditional IRA and, as a consequence, is included in the taxpayer's income, but the 10-percent additional tax for early withdrawals does not apply.
Starting in 2010, the $100,000 adjusted gross income cap is eliminated. All other rules continue to apply, which means that the amount converted to a Roth IRA still will be taxed as income at the individual's marginal tax rate. One exception for 2010only: taxpayers will have a choice between recognizing the conversion income in 2010 or averaging it over 2011 and 2012.
Benefits
While recognizing income sooner rather than later is usually not smart tax planning, in the case of this new opportunity to convert a traditional IRA to a Roth IRA, the math encourages it. The difference is twofold:
--All furture earnings on the account are tax free; and
--The account can continue to grow tax free longer than a traditional IRA without being forced to be distributed gradually after
reaching age 70 1/2.
These can work out to be significant advantages, especially valuable to individuals with substantial assets who won't need the Roth IRA account to live on during retirement. After a Roth IRA is inherited, it is only then subject to required minimum distribution rules, based on the beneficiary's life expectancy.
Contribution limits
The maximum annual contribution that can be made to a Roth IRA is phased out for a single individual with modified AGI between $101,000 and $116,000, for joint filers with modified AGI between $159,000 and $169,000, and for individuals who are married filing separately with modified AGI between $0 and $10,000.
There is no AGI limitation for nondeductible IRA contributions, however. The annual nondeductible contribution limit is that the total of all contributions to a Roth IRA and all deductible and nondeductible contributions to traditional IRAs may not exceed the lesser of $5,000 for tax year 2009 ($6,000 if catch-up contributions are made), or an amount equal to the compensation includable in the individual's gross income for the year. Thus, allowable contributions to a nondeductible IRA are reduced to the extent of allowable Roth IRA contributions and deductible contributions made to traditional IRAs.
Nondeductible IRA strategy
Those taxpayers who can now contribute to a Roth IRA should contribute to a Roth IRA and not to a nondeductible IRA. Many taxpayers, however, are closed out of Roth or deductible IRA contributions because of participation in an employer's qualified plan and/or being over an AGI limit. For them, maximizing annual nondeductible IRA contribution limits now makes sense no matter what their AGI levels.
Any nondeductible traditional IRA after 2009 will be able to be converted into a Roth IRA. As a result, the present AGI Roth contribution barriers will be ineffective. An individual with higher income need only first contribute to a nondeductible traditional IRA and then convert that amount into a Roth IRA.
Even before 2010, those below the $100,000 AGI Roth conversion level can convert nondeductible traditional IRA accounts into Roth IRAs. For those above the $100,000 AGI level, 2010 is the start date for conversions.
Rollover 401(k) accounts
Contributions to a Section 401(k) plan cannot be rolled over directly into a Roth IRA. The lifting of the $100,000 AGI limit does not change this rule. However, 401(k) account balances often can be rolled over into a traditional IRA and then, after 2009, converted into a Roth IRA irrespective of AGI level.
Most 401(k) plan participants cannot voluntarily pull out assets and roll them over into a traditional IRA. A plan amendment usually must permit it. Nevertheless, those growing ranks of 401(k) plan participants who are changing jobs or otherwise leaving employment can choose to roll over the balance into an IRA rather than elect to continue to have it managed in the 401(k) plan. Doing so will allow them to convert to a Roth IRA either before or after the 2010 date, depending on income level.
Another option for current employee contributions is to amend the 401(k) plan to allow for Roth 401(k) accounts. While those contributions are nondeductible, the effective tax is spread out each year and therefore is usually lower than waiting to do a Roth conversion transaction to cover several years all at once.
Gather those old IRA accounts
Many taxpayers opened IRA accounts when they were first starting out in the work world and their incomes were low enough to contribute. Over the years, many have seen those account balances grow. These accounts now may be converted into Roth IRAs starting in 2010, regardless of income.
Conversion tax
In spite of all the advantages of a Roth IRA, a conversion is generally advisable only if the taxpayer can pay the conversion tax out of proceeds other than from the account being converted. If the tax is paid out of a distribution from the converted IRA, that amount is not only taxed without the benefit of being placed in a tax-free account but it usually is also subject to an early withdrawal penalty tax of 10 percent. For those taxpayers considering a Roth conversion in 2010, plans to set aside other assets to pay the tax also should be made.
Wild cards
Most plans carry uncertainties. Planning for a Roth conversion in 2010 is no exception. Congress might reconsider its generosity before 2010 and roll back some of the opportunities for Roth conversions. Capital gains rates might be lowered even further sometime in the future, making investments in non-deferred accounts more desirable. Income tax rates might rise and make paying the initial tax on conversion more onerous, either in 2010 or when income from 2010 conversions is otherwise averaged into 2011 and 2012.
So far, however, prospects for overall tax savings by high-income taxpayers in converting traditional IRAs into Roth IRAs are sufficiently stable to point to a tax-saving course of action that should begin as soon as practicable.
Please contact our office for more information.