Who can contribute to a Roth IRA? | Fidelity (2024)

Find out if you meet the requirements.

Fidelity Smart Money

Who can contribute to a Roth IRA? | Fidelity (1)

Key takeaways

  • You must have an earned income that falls within certain ranges to contribute to a Roth IRA.
  • Age and employment status do not determine whether you can contribute to a Roth IRA.

A Roth individual retirement arrangement (Roth IRA) gives you a chance to grow your money over time by investing already-taxed dollars in a range of different securities. In retirement, your qualified withdrawals are tax-free—provided you satisfy a few basic rules.1 Although they can offer a powerful and flexible way to save and invest for retirement, not everyone can contribute to Roth IRAs. Here's what you need to know about requirements to utilize this type of retirement account.

Who can contribute to a Roth IRA?

Anyone with both earned income greater than the amount they want to contribute and income that falls within IRS guidelines can contribute to a Roth IRA. To see if you meet these requirements, you'll need to know how much income you've received, as well as your filing status.

First, you'll want to look at your household's modified adjusted gross income (MAGI), which is your adjusted gross income (aka your total income minus certain tax credits, adjustments, and deductions), with some of those credits, adjustments, and deductions added back in. Calculating your MAGI can be complicated, so consult a tax professional if you have questions. Or use IRS Worksheet 2-1 on Publication 590-A to calculate your MAGI.

Depending on your MAGI, filing status, and earned income, you may be able to make the federal maximum contribution to your Roth IRA ($7,000 for those under 50; $8,000 for those 50 or older in 2024), a portion of that maximum amount, or nothing. The table below breaks this down.

Roth IRA income requirements for 2024
Filing statusModified adjusted gross income (MAGI)Contribution limit
Single individuals< $146,000$7,000
≥ $146,000 but < $161,000Partial contribution
≥ $161,000Not eligible
Married (filing joint returns)< $230,000$7,000
≥ $230,000 but < $240,000Partial contribution
≥ $240,000Not eligible
Married (filing separately)2

< $10,000Partial contribution
≥ $10,000Not eligible

Source: "401(k) limit increases to $23,000 for 2024, IRA limit rises to $7,000," Internal Revenue Service, November 2023.

Keep in mind:

  • Just because you have been eligible to contribute to a Roth IRA in the past does not mean you necessarily will in future years. IRS thresholds are adjusted annually, and you must qualify each year.
  • You cannot contribute more to an IRA than your earned income for the year. So if you earned less than the maximum contribution limit, the dollar value of your earned income is the most you can contribute.
  • If you don't have any earned income yourself but file jointly with your spouse, you may qualify for a spousal IRA. This special type of IRA considers your spouse's income—meaning you can contribute the lesser of the IRA contribution limit or your spouse's earned income less their IRA contribution if you meet the income requirements for married filing jointly.

What qualifies as earned income?

Earned income might take many forms. The IRS defines compensation as what you earn from working.1 Here are a few of the most common scenarios:

  1. You're employed by someone other than yourself. This includes income like your salary, tips, commissions, and even taxable benefits. Usually your earned income is reported on a W-2 in box 1 if you're a full-time employee or on a 1099 if you work part time or are a contractor.
  2. You are self-employed.
  3. You fall under certain military income streams (such as nontaxable combat pay).
  4. You receive certain disability benefits you got before hitting retirement age.

Note: This covers most people's earned income but may not account for everything. For an exhaustive list, visit the IRS's guide to earned income.

What doesn't qualify as earned income?

Generally, passive income does not qualify as earned income and is instead considered "unearned income." Pertaining to investments, this includes money generated from taxable interest, ordinary dividends, and capital gain distributions. Unearned income also includes unemployment compensation, taxable Social Security benefits, pensions, annuities, cancellation of debt, and distributions of unearned income from a trust.

If you are unsure if a certain form of income qualifies as earned or unearned, reach out to a tax professional for help.

Who can contribute to a Roth IRA? | Fidelity (2)

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Is there an age limit to contribute to a Roth IRA?

Provided you make earned income, there is no age limit to contribute to a Roth IRA. This means that even those under 18 can contribute to Roth IRAs. In fact, parents can open a Roth IRAs for kids to help their children invest for the future. Contributions are subject to the earned income requirement even for those that are 18 or younger.

When do you have to contribute to a Roth IRA by?

The latest you can contribute to a Roth IRA is your unextended tax filing deadline, which for most people is Tax Day in April. This can be helpful as you may not have a good sense of your MAGI until you've begun your taxes.

If you become ineligible after you have already made Roth IRA contributions for the year, you have until the extended filing deadline (normally October 15 the year your taxes are due) to fix the mistake. Depending on the investment income you've earned, you may owe taxes or a penalty. Find out your options if you contributed too much to your IRA.

Alternatives if you can't contribute to a Roth IRA

If you aren't eligible to contribute to a Roth IRA this year, you may have access to other options to save for retirement.

Workplace plans

If you are employed and have access to a retirement plan through work—such as a 401(k) or 403(b)—you can contribute to it, regardless of your income. In fact, your workplace may even provide Roth contributions, like a Roth 401(k) or Roth 403(b), that allows you to potentially lock in future tax-free withdrawals in retirement.

Traditional IRAs

Anyone with an earned income can contribute to a traditional IRA. However, if you earn too much to contribute to a Roth IRA and have access to a retirement plan at work, you may also earn too much to be able to deduct your traditional IRA contributions from your taxes. (Check out our guide to IRA contribution and income limits for a full breakdown.)

You could also consider a backdoor Roth IRA, where you convert nondeductible traditional IRA contributions to a Roth IRA.

Who can contribute to a Roth IRA? | Fidelity (2024)

FAQs

Who can contribute to a Roth IRA? | Fidelity? ›

If you file taxes as a single person, your Modified Adjusted Gross Income (MAGI) must be under $153,000 for tax year 2023 and $161,000 for tax year 2024 to contribute to a Roth IRA, and if you're married and filing jointly, your MAGI must be under $228,000 for tax year 2023 and $240,000 for tax year 2024.

Who cannot contribute to a Roth IRA? ›

If you file taxes as a single person, your Modified Adjusted Gross Income (MAGI) must be under $153,000 for tax year 2023 and $161,000 for tax year 2024 to contribute to a Roth IRA, and if you're married and filing jointly, your MAGI must be under $228,000 for tax year 2023 and $240,000 for tax year 2024.

Who is eligible for Roth IRA contributions? ›

If you're a single filer, you're eligible to contribute a portion of the full amount if your MAGI is $146,000 or more, but less than $161,000. For those married filing jointly, the income range to contribute a portion of the full amount is $230,000 or more, but less than $240,000.

Can a non working person contribute to a Roth IRA? ›

Generally, if you're not earning any income, you can't contribute to either a traditional or a Roth IRA. However, in some cases, married couples filing jointly may be able to make IRA contributions based on the taxable compensation reported on their joint return.

At what salary can you not contribute to a Roth IRA? ›

Roth IRA phase-out ranges
Filing status2023 income range2024 income range
Single$138,000–$153,000$146,000–$161,000
Married, filing jointly$218,000–$228,000$230,000–$240,000
Married, filing separately*$0–$10,000$0–$10,000

What disqualifies you from a Roth IRA? ›

If you don't earn anything in a tax year, you will be ineligible to contribute to your Roth IRA for that year. You can still hold the account, but you won't be able to add to it.

Who is eligible to put money in Roth IRA? ›

Provided you make earned income, there is no age limit to contribute to a Roth IRA. This means that even those under 18 can contribute to Roth IRAs. In fact, parents can open a Roth IRAs for kids to help their children invest for the future.

Who should not do a Roth IRA? ›

Key Takeaways. You may not want to open a Roth IRA if you expect your income (and tax rate) to be higher at present and lower in retirement. A traditional IRA allows you to devote less income now to making the maximum contribution to the account, giving you more available cash.

Can I contribute to Roth IRA without employer? ›

Do you have to be employed to open a Roth IRA? You can open and contribute to a Roth IRA regardless of your employment status (full-time, part-time, or not working) so long as your contributions are equal to or below your earned income.

Can I make a Roth contribution if I have no income? ›

Income: To contribute to a Roth IRA, you must have compensation (i.e. wages, salary, tips, professional fees, bonuses). Your modified adjusted gross income must be less than: $160,000 - Married filing jointly.

What happens if I contribute to a Roth IRA but my income is too high? ›

Key Takeaways

You can withdraw the money, recharacterize the excess contribution into a traditional IRA, or apply your excess contribution to next year's Roth. You'll face a 6% tax penalty every year until you remedy the situation.

At what income should you stop contributing to Roth IRA? ›

Note
Roth IRA Income and Contribution Limits for 2024
Single, head of household, or married filing separately (and you didn't live with your spouse at any time during the last year)
Less than $146,000$7,000 ($8,000 if age 50 or older)
$146,000 to $161,000Begin to phase out
$161,000 or moreIneligible for direct Roth IRA
8 more rows

How does the IRS know if you contribute to a Roth IRA? ›

IRA contributions will be reported on Form 5498: IRA contribution information is reported for each person for whom any IRA was maintained, including SEP or SIMPLE IRAs. An IRA includes all investments under one IRA plan. The institution maintaining the IRA files this form.

Who should not convert to a Roth IRA? ›

Money that you'll need soon isn't a good candidate for conversion because your assets may not have time to recoup the taxes you would have to pay. You're currently receiving Social Security or Medicare benefits.

Is Roth IRA available to everyone? ›

Anyone can open a Roth IRA. However, only those with earned income within the IRS's annual limits are eligible to contribute.

Can other people contribute to a Roth IRA? ›

To contribute to a privately held Roth IRA, someone would need your account information. As long as you are willing to provide that, someone else could contribute to your Roth IRA on your behalf as long as it didn't exceed the contribution limits and you still qualify based on your income.

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