Updates on IRAs: What You Need to Know

Sidney Kess
Sidney Kess

Sidney Kess

Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs) have been around since they were created by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) of 1974 (Code §408). Roth IRAs, which were created by the Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997, began in 1998 (Code §408A). However, the rules relating to them are continually changing due to cost-of-living adjustments, court decisions, and IRS guidance. Here are some new considerations for 2018 and beyond.

Contribution Limits



When IRAs began, the maximum contribution was $1,500 per year, and there was no additional amount permitted as a “catch-up” for those age 50 and older. At that time, they were not serious retirement savings vehicles because of the low contribution limit. But things have changed. For 2018, the maximum contribution is $5,500, plus a $1,000 catch-up amount for those who will be at least 50 years old by the end of 2018 (Notice 2017-64). These limits were unchanged since 2013. But for 2019, the contribution limit will be $6,000, plus a $1,000 catch-up amount (Notice 2018-83).

A married person with a nonworking spouse can contribute up to the annual limit for an IRA for the nonworking spouse (assuming the working spouse has earned income at least equal to the contribution amounts). These are called the Kay Bailey Hutchison spousal IRAs.

Deductions for IRAs are permissible for those who are active participants in a qualified retirement plan only if modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) is below a set limit (with a partial deduction allowed for MAGI within a phase-out range). The MAGI limits for 2019 are higher than in 2018 due to COLAs.

Roth IRA contributions are also limited or barred, depending on MAGI; these amounts differ from limits on traditional IRA deductions for active participants. This is so regardless of active participation in a qualified retirement plan.

Timing for Making Contributions



The deadline for making 2018 contributions is April 15, 2019. This deadline applies even if an individual obtains a filing extension for Form 1040.

Contributions can be made using federal income tax refunds. All that is needed for this is to direct the Treasury to send the refund to a specific account; this is done on Form 1040. The refund can be applied for 2018 contributions (assuming that the return is filed early enough for the refund to be deposited by April 15, 2019) or for 2019. If an individual wants to apply some or all of a refund to more than one acceptable type of account (e.g., savings, checking, health savings account), file Form 8888, Allocation of Refund (Including Savings Bond Purchases). It is highly advisable to inform the account’s custodian or trustee about the year to which the contribution relates.