You Can Now Make IRA Contributions at Any Age. But Should You?

In the wake of the SECURE Act, a wide-ranging piece of retirement legislation passed in 2019's waning days, the death of the stretch IRA and delayed required minimum distribution received the lion's share of the chatter in retirement- and tax-planning circles.

But a related provision that received less attention allows account owners to continue making contributions to traditional IRAs after age 72, provided they have earned income. Prior to the SECURE Act's passage, people couldn't contribute to a traditional IRA if they were of RMD age or older: 70 1/2.

The delayed age for first-time RMDs and the lifting of the age requirement for traditional IRA contributions are both nods to the fact that Americans are working longer than they once did. More than 20% of people over age 65 were working or looking for work in 2019, nearly double the percentage of people 65 and older who were employed in 1985, according to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

The fact that people are working longer is an outgrowth of increasing rates of longevity and declining pension coverage, both of which stress finances in retirement. But it's also worth noting that people 65-plus who work longer today tend to be wealthier, healthier, and better-educated than 65-year-olds as a group. Enter the new rules about delayed RMDs and ongoing contributions: More-affluent older workers are less inclined to need their RMDs and are also more likely to have the discretionary cash on hand to make additional contributions when they have earned income.

The question is, even though traditional IRA contributions are available to older workers, even those who need to take RMDs, are such contributions advisable? After all, RMDs will need to come out at the same time those new contributions are going in. The short answer is that additional traditional IRA contributions after RMD age may make sense in a handful of situations, but not many.

Earned Income … But Not Too Much
Before we go any further, let's review the rules about retirement contributions for older adults. Essentially, the lifting of the age requirement for traditional IRAs brings the accounts into line with the other key account types. Roth IRAs don't carry age limits on contributions, and workers can also contribute to their company retirement plans (like 401(k)s) and delay RMDs from those accounts, provided they're still employed. The SECURE Act simply harmonizes the rules related to traditional IRAs with those other vehicles.

Yet even as the SECURE Act lifts the age limit on traditional IRA contributions, IRA contributions still carry strictures. Having earned income is the first one: Your income from paid work in the year for which you're making the contribution must be at least equal to or above the amount of the contribution. Note that spousal income counts. Even if you personally didn't have any earned income, if your 73-year-old spouse earned $15,000 from a consulting gig in a given year and wanted to make $7,000 IRA contributions for each of you, that would be perfectly allowable. Income from a job, net earnings from self-employment, and disability benefits received prior to minimum retirement age all count as earned income. Income from other common sources--Social Security, portfolio income, pension income, annuity payments, RMDs, and rental properties--does not count.