I’m Bringing in $200k This Year. What’s the Best Way to Use a Backdoor Roth to Save on Taxes?

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If you’re a relatively high earner, you might be locked out of making Roth IRA contributions due to the account’s associated income caps. In that case, you can instead consider a conversion, otherwise known as a “backdoor Roth.”

The advantage to doing this is that you will avoid all income taxes on withdrawals from the assets that you convert. The disadvantage is that this comes with a significant up-front tax bill, which is money you could have otherwise invested. However, if your goal is to avoid taxes in retirement, a Roth conversion can be an effective option.

Do you have questions about managing taxes in retirement? Speak with a financial advisor today.

A Roth IRA has two restrictions that don’t apply to most other tax-advantaged retirement accounts. The first is a low contribution cap. As of 2024, individuals under 50 cannot contribute more than $7,000 per year to a Roth IRA, while that limit is $8,000 per year for those over 50. This is roughly one-third the 401(k) limit, for instance.

Roth IRAs also have income limits to contend with, though. More specifically, you cannot contribute to a Roth IRA if your income exceeds $161,000 for single filers or $240,000 for joint filers. The IRS also steadily reduces your Roth IRA contribution limits at incomes between $146,000 and $161,000 for single taxpayers and $230,000 and $240,000 for joint filers.

For high earners who want to take advantage of a Roth IRA’s after-tax perks, these income caps are a problem. A potential solution is a Roth IRA conversion, otherwise known as a “backdoor Roth.”

With a conversion, you take assets in an existing pre-tax account, like a traditional IRA or 401(k), and transfer it to a Roth IRA in one lump sum. Since this is not considered a contribution, neither the income limits nor the contribution limits apply. You can convert as many assets as you would like, up to your entire pre-tax portfolio, and there is no limit on how many times you can convert funds.

In the case of this situation, if you are an individual filer, then a $200,000 income puts you above the income caps for Roth contributions. That means a conversion is the only way you can put assets into a Roth IRA. But if you file jointly, you are below the income cap and can choose any combination of contributions and conversions.

The benefits to a Roth conversion are already in the question posed for this article. This is one way to avoid/limit paying federal income taxes in retirement. With a Roth IRA, you pay taxes on your contributions, but not your withdrawals or investment growth. Since you will ideally withdraw far more from your portfolio than you will contribute, this should be a significant tax benefit down the road.

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