An Individual Retirement Account, or IRA, is a personal savings plan which
allows you to set aside money for retirement, while offering you tax advantages.
You may be able to deduct some or all of your contributions to your IRA. Amounts
in your IRA, including earnings, generally are not taxed until distributed to
you. IRAs cannot be owned jointly. However, any amounts remaining in your IRA
upon your death can be paid to your beneficiary or beneficiaries. To contribute
to a traditional IRA, you must be under age 70 1/2 at the end of the tax year
and you, or your spouse if you file a joint return, must have taxable compensation,
such as wages, salaries, commissions, tips, bonuses, or net income from self–employment.
In addition, taxable alimony and separate maintenance payments received by an
individual are treated as compensation for IRA purposes. Compensation does
not include earnings and profits from property, such as rental income, interest
and dividend income or any amount received as pension or annuity income, or as
deferred compensation. The most you could contribute to your traditional
IRA for 2001 was the smaller of $2,000 or your taxable compensation for the year.
For 2002, the $2,000 was increased to $3,000 or if you were 50 or older, $3,500.
Keep in mind that contributions on your behalf to a traditional IRA reduce your
limit for contributions to a 'Roth IRA'. If neither you nor your spouse is covered
by a qualified retirement plan at any time during the year, your allowable contributions
to a traditional IRA will be fully deductible. If you, your spouse, or both
of you are covered by a qualified retirement plan, your IRA deduction may be reduced
or eliminated, depending on the amount of your income and your filing status. If
you and your spouse file a joint return and your spouse is under age 70 1/2 at
the end of the year, you may be able to make a contribution to a separate spousal
IRA. For 2001, your total contribution to both your IRA and your spouse's IRA
was limited to the smaller of $4,000 or your combined taxable compensation. You
could not contribute more than $2,000 to either IRA for 2001. The deadline
for making a contribution to a traditional IRA for the year is the due date of
your return, not including any extensions of time to file, normally April 15th. You
may choose to take the deduction on a return filed before the contribution is
actually made, provided you make the contribution by the due date of that return,
not including extensions. Amounts you withdraw from your IRA are fully or
partially taxable in the year you withdraw them. If you made only deductible contributions,
withdrawals are fully taxable. If you made any non–deductible contributions, withdrawals
are partially taxable. Amounts you withdraw before you reach age 59 1/2
may be subject to a 10% additional tax. You also may owe an excise tax if you
do not begin to withdraw minimum distribution amounts by April 1st of the year
after you reach age 70 1/2. If you are 70 1/2 and would like to reduce
the amount of your distribution you might consider a multi-generational IRA.
Special Distribution Rules of IRA's and
Roth IRA after 2000 Confused which is best for you, a Roth IRA or a
traditional IRA, click below. Traditional
IRA VS Roth IRA? |