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November 12, 2022

Individual Retirement Arrangement (IRA)

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IRA

A tax-deferred retirement savings account that eligible individuals can fund. An IRA can be a traditional IRA or a Roth IRA. Employers can also establish SEP IRAs and SIMPLE IRAs for their employees

 Definition

Individual retirement arrangement (IRA) is an umbrella term that covers individual retirement account and individual retirement annuity. These are retirement savings vehicles established by individual taxpayers.

There are several versions of an individual retirement arrangement,

(a) traditional IRAs, where assets accrue earnings on a tax-deferred basis and distributions are treated as ordinary income,

(b) Roth IRAs, where assets accrue on a tax-deferred basis, but qualified distributions are tax-free

(c) SEP IRAs, which are established and funded by business owners/employers for their employees. The funding vehicle for a SEP IRA is a traditional IRA and

(d) SIMPLE IRAs, are established and funded by business owners/employers for their employees. Employees may also make salary deferral contributions to SIMPLE IRAs, and versions of SEPs that are referred to as SARSEPs.

  • Individual retirement account is the ‘account’ version of an individual retirement arrangement. The account can be established at a bank, credit union, brokerage firm, savings & loan, or other financial institution that satisfies the requirements established under the tax code IRC § 408(n)
  • Individual retirement annuity is the annuity-contract version of an individual retirement arrangement, issued by an insurance company. IRC § 408(b)

Additional Helpful Information

Individuals may contribute up to 100% of their taxable compensation/income up to the dollar limit that is in effect for the year to their traditional and/or Roth IRAs. Individuals who reach age 50 by the end of the year may contribute additional amounts referred to as ‘Catch-up’ contributions.

The dollar limits for 2005 and after are as follows:

Year IRA contribution limit Catch-up contribution limit
2006 $4,000 $1,000
2007 $4,000 $1,000
2008 $5,000 $1,000
2009 $5,000 $1,000
2010 $5,000 $1,000
2011 $5,000 $1,000
2012 $5,000 $1,000
2013 $5,500 $1,000
2014 $5,500 $1,000
2015 $5,500 $1,000
2016 $5,500 $1,000
2017 $5,500 $1,000
2018 $5,500 $1,000
2019 $6,000 $1,000
2020 $6,000 $1,000
2021 $6,000 $1,000
2022 $6,000 $1,000
2023 $6,500 $1,000

 

  • An individual can split the annual limit between a traditional and a Roth IRA or contribute the entire amount to either. Eligibility requirements apply to Roth IRA contributions.
  • These contributions must be made in cash.

 

Definition

Individual retirement arrangement (IRA) is an umbrella term that covers individual retirement account and individual retirement annuity. These are retirement savings vehicles established by individual taxpayers.

There are several versions of an individual retirement arrangement,

(a) traditional IRAs, where assets accrue earnings on a tax-deferred basis and distributions are treated as ordinary income,

(b) Roth IRAs, where assets accrue on a tax-deferred basis, but qualified distributions are tax-free

(c) SEP IRAs, which are established and funded by business owners/employers for their employees. The funding vehicle for a SEP IRA is a traditional IRA and

(d) SIMPLE IRAs, are established and funded by business owners/employers for their employees. Employees may also make salary deferral contributions to SIMPLE IRAs, and versions of SEPs that are referred to as SARSEPs.

  • Individual retirement account is the ‘account’ version of an individual retirement arrangement. The account can be established at a bank, credit union, brokerage firm, savings & loan, or other financial institution that satisfies the requirements established under the tax code IRC § 408(n)
  • Individual retirement annuity is the annuity-contract version of an individual retirement arrangement, issued by an insurance company. IRC § 408(b)

Referring Cite

IRC § 408 (a), IRC § 408 (b), IRS Publication 590

Roth IRA Contributions Eligibility Limits

Individuals may contribute to a Roth IRA only if their MAGI does not exceed a certain amount. The limits are as follows:

Tax Filing Status 2022 MAGI

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2023 MAGI Allowed contribution
Single or Head of Household $129,000 or less $138,000 or less 100%
$129,000 to $144,000 $138,000 to $153,000 Partial
$144,000 or more $153,000 or more None
Married filing jointly $204,000 or less $218,000 or less 100%
$204,000 to $214,000 $218,000 to $228,000 Partial
$214,000 or more $228,000 or more None
Married filing separately Less than $10,000 Less than $10,000 Partial
$10,000 or more $10,000 or more None

Traditional IRA Deductibility

Individuals who are active participants are eligible to deduct their traditional IRA contributions, only if their MAGI amounts do not exceed certain limits. For details on how this works, see the article Active Participant Status–Can You Deduct Your IRA Contribution?

The MAGI that applies to each tax-filing status is as follows:

Tax Filing Status 2022 MAGI

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2023 MAGI Allowed deduction
Single or Head of Household $68,000 or less $73,000 or less 100%
$68,000 – $78,000 $73,000 to $83,000 Partial
$78,000 or more $83,000 or more None
Married filing jointly or a qualifying widower, and active $109,000 or less $116,000 or less 100%
$109,000- $129,000 $116,000 to $136,000 Partial
$129,000 or more $136,000 or more None
Married filing jointly. Not active, but spouse is active $204,000 or less $218,000 or less 100%
$204,000 – $214,000 $218,000 to $228,000 Partial
$214,000 or more $228,000 or more None
Married filing separately Less than $10,000 Less than $10,000 Partial
$10,000 or more $10,000 or more None

 

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