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TAX TIP No. 59
Tax credit now for savings made for retirement
If your IRA contribution is to a traditional
account, you may be able to get a double tax break.
In addition to the saver's credit, look into whether
you're eligible to deduct
your IRA contributions on the front page of your
1040 or 1040A. This tax break is one of several adjustments to income that are available to all taxpayers, regardless of whether itemizing or taking the standard deduction, and the IRS
says you can claim both the retirement savings credit and deduction for
your IRA contributions.
The credit also is attractive to workers
who are eligible to participate in a 401(k) plan but who earn just over one of the saver's credit
income limits. By signing up for a company-sponsored
account, such workers could get under the earnings cap
while simultaneously boosting the potential credit amount.
Take, for example, a married employee
who is the sole earner in her family and who reports
adjusted gross income of $34,000 on her joint tax return.
She's already eligible for a partial credit, but by
contributing $2,000 to her 401(k), she
will knock her income down enough to take the maximum
credit.
Some
other restrictions apply
In addition to the income limits, there are
a few other restrictions on who can claim the saver's
credit. A taxpayer who was younger than 18 last year,
a full-time student or claimed as a dependent on another's
tax return can't take the retirement savings break.
The saver's credit is also what the IRS
calls nonrefundable. That means you can use it to reduce
your tax bill to zero, but you can't take advantage
of any excess credit amount to get a refund. So if you
owe no taxes, the credit is of no use to you.
Still, even if you can't take full advantage
of the credit, it's not too shabby of a break when you
take into account the additional tax savings you get
by contributing to a retirement account in the first
place.
Just remember, the key to this credit
is participation in retirement accounts. If you haven't
opened a retirement account yet, or have one but haven't contributed for the 2008 tax year, you have until the April 15 tax-filing deadline to open one and put in money. The deadline is the same for either a Roth or traditional IRA.
As for your 401(k), you're
locked into your credit for the 2008 tax year based
on the contributions you made last year. Make sure the
W-2 you got from your company reflects the correct amount
of all your pension contributions so that you can get
the maximum credit.
If you're not yet participating in your
company plan, you can improve your future saver's credit
potential by signing up as soon as you're eligible.
Then contribute as much as you can afford without doing
major cash-flow damage to your paycheck. It could pay
off at tax-filing time, as well as when you retire.
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Updated: March 30, 2009 |
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