Contributing
To More Than One Retirement Plan for the Year
While many Americans aren't
saving enough for retirement, there are others who are saving a lot (true
story). In fact, some of you have asked whether it's possible to contribute to
more than one retirement plan for the same year. The answer is generally yes,
but there are certain traps you need to be aware of during jumping in to the
savings game feet first.
If you are making an IRA
contribution for 2014, the maximum contribution you can make is $5,500 (or
$6,500 if you’re age 50 or older this year). This limit applies to both IRAs
and Roth IRAs. Although you can contribute to both an IRA and Roth IRA, the
combined limit is $5,500 or $6,500 depending on your age. You can’t contribute
the maximum to both an IRA and a Roth IRA. For example, if you are age 50 or
older this year, the maximum combined IRA and Roth IRA contribution you can
make is $6,500. You could choose to make a $3,000 contribution to your IRA and
the remaining $3,500 to a Roth IRA. As long as you don’t exceed your $6,500
limit, you can split the IRA contribution any way you want.
If you also participate in a
retirement plan with your employer that allows you to make salary deferral
contributions, you can do that in addition to your IRA contributions. For
example, if you participate in your employer’s 401(k) plan for the year, the
maximum amount you can defer is $17,500 if you are under age 50. If you’re age
50 or older, the maximum deferral is $5,500 more, for a total of $23,000 for
the year. The IRS calls this the “annual deferral limit.”
Note that your plan may set a
lower dollar limit. If you happen to participate in more than one employer
retirement plan during the year, the annual limit must be combined for plans
such as 401(k)s, SIMPLE IRAs, and 403(b)s. The annual limit applies no matter
how many plans you participate in during the year. So, if you switched jobs
during the year, and participated in more than one plan, you have to keep track
of the annual deferral limit to make sure you don’t exceed the limit. If you do
exceed the annual deferral limit, you will have to remove the excess and the
interest it earned from the plan by April 15th to avoid tax problems.
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