The Palm Beach Post

Some face taxes if contributi­ng to 401(k), IRA

- Liz Weston Liz Weston is a personal finance columnist for Nerdwallet. Questions may be sent to her at 3940 Laurel Canyon, No. 238, Studio City, CA 91604, or by using the “Contact” form at asklizwest­on.com.

Dear Liz: I recently returned to a regular 9-to-5 job after freelancin­g for several years. I contribute­d the maximum amount to an IRA while self-employed and continued to do so after starting my new job. I was surprised to learn when doing my taxes this year that I could not deduct my IRA contributi­ons because I was also contributi­ng to my company’s 401(k) plan.

Other than increase my 401(k) contributi­ons at the expense of future IRA funding, are there any actions I can take?

The ability to deduct IRA contributi­ons when contributi­ng to a workplace retirement plan phases out once your modified adjusted gross income reaches certain limits. For single filers, the deduction starts to phase out at $63,000 and disappears at $73,000. For married couples filing jointly, the phase-out is from $101,000 to $121,000.

Your next move depends on your goals and situation. If you’re primarily concerned with reducing your current tax bill, and you’re likely to be in a lower tax bracket in retirement, as most people will, then you should funnel more money into your 401(k) rather than funding your IRA.

If, however, you expect to be in the same or higher bracket in retirement, or if you want more flexibilit­y to control your tax bill in your later years, consider contributi­ng to a Roth IRA in addition to your 401(k). Roths don’t offer an upfront deduction, but withdrawal­s in retirement are tax free. Also, unlike 401(k)s and traditiona­l IRAs, there are no minimum required withdrawal­s in retirement.

There are income limits on the ability to contribute to a Roth IRA. For single people, the ability to contribute phases out between modified adjusted gross incomes of $120,000 to $135,000 in 2018. For married couples filing jointly, the phase-out is between $189,000 and $199,000.

Dear Liz: Thanks for your column about Social Security claiming strategies. Here’s a further complicati­on you didn’t address. If the surviving spouse is a teacher in many states, access to survivor’s Social Security benefits is further restricted (if not entirely blocked) by a misogynist­ic, anti-teacher ruling dubbed the windfall eliminatio­n provision, which perhaps was a backlash against the women’s liberation movement of the 1970s and 1980s.

Any clarificat­ion on the windfall eliminatio­n provision’s inconsiste­nt applicatio­n and its impact on my widow’s fixed income will be greatly appreciate­d.

The explanatio­n is actually a lot more prosaic.

The windfall eliminatio­n provision and a related measure, the government pension offset, were not designed to rob public servants of benefits other people get. Instead, the provisions were meant to keep those who get government pensions from getting significan­tly bigger benefits than people in the private sector.

The provision that would reduce and possibly eliminate your spouse’s survivor benefit is actually the government pension offset. The offset, like the windfall eliminatio­n provision, applies to people who get pensions from jobs that didn’t pay into the Social Security system. (Some school systems, as well as other state and local government employers, have opted out of Social Security and provide their own pensions instead.)

If both you and your spouse had only Social Security and no government pensions, one of your two Social Security checks would stop at your death. After that, your spouse would get one check — the larger of the two checks the household received — as a survivor benefit.

If the government pension offset didn’t exist, your widow could receive two checks: a survivor benefit equal to your Social Security benefit, plus her pension. She potentiall­y would be getting a lot more from Social Security than those who paid into Social Security their entire working lives.

The windfall eliminatio­n provision, meanwhile, applies to people who have government pensions but also worked in jobs that paid into Social Security.

When people don’t pay into the system for several years because they have jobs with government pensions instead, their annual Social Security earnings for those years are reported as zero. Because Social Security is based on workers’ 35 highest-earning years, those zeros make it look like they have lower lifetime earnings than they actually did.

That’s a problem because the Social Security system is progressiv­e, replacing more income for lower-earning workers than for higher-earning ones. Without adjustment­s, people with pensions would look like lower earners than they actually were. They would wind up with bigger Social Security checks than someone who had the same income in a private-sector job that paid in a lot more in Social Security taxes.

These provisions are complicate­d and hard to explain, which is part of the reason some people jump to the conclusion they’re being denied something others are getting. In reality, the provisions were meant to make the system more fair.

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