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February 10, 2025
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Election official income and roth contribution

  • February 10, 2025
  • 1 reply
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I earned $550 in 2024 as an election official.  My earnings statement noted the amount was excluded from federal taxable wages.   I received a W2, which showed no amounts in any of the boxes.  Meanwhile, I contributed the full amount to a Roth.  When inputting that into Turbo Tax, the system shows I contributed more than I earned and noted a penalty.  How do I show that I did earn that income to offset the Roth contribution?  

    Best answer by rjs

    You cannot base a Roth IRA contribution on earnings that are not taxable. IRS Publication 590-A says:


    "If contributions are made only to Roth IRAs, your contribution limit is generally the lesser of:
    • $7,000 ($8,000 if you are age 50 or older), or
    • Your taxable compensation."


    Since your taxable compensation is zero, the maximum that you can contribute to a Roth IRA is zero.

     

    1 reply

    rjs
    rjsAnswer
    Employee
    February 10, 2025

    You cannot base a Roth IRA contribution on earnings that are not taxable. IRS Publication 590-A says:


    "If contributions are made only to Roth IRAs, your contribution limit is generally the lesser of:
    • $7,000 ($8,000 if you are age 50 or older), or
    • Your taxable compensation."


    Since your taxable compensation is zero, the maximum that you can contribute to a Roth IRA is zero.

     

    madwoman8Author
    February 13, 2025

    Thank you, but it does not seem to be that simple.  IRS states " Compensation paid to election workers is includible as wage income for income tax purposes, and may be treated as wages for Social Security and Medicare (FICA) tax purposes."  Further, "Compensation paid for services and reimbursements paid under a non-accountable plan are taxable to election workers; however, they aren't subject to income tax withholding under Internal Revenue Code (IRC) Section 3401(a).   It would appear that election worker pay is somewhat similar to combat pay which is non taxable but still eligible for Roth contributions.  

    February 13, 2025

    If election official income were really not subject to federal income tax, I would be rich, but, sadly, the money you make as an election official is just as taxable as most income.

     

    I think the confusion is derived from the fact that your county (or whoever employed you) was not required to withhold federal income tax - this is not the same as saying that this income is not taxable.

     

    Did the election authority send you a 1099-NEC or a 1099-MISC for the amount of your compensation. If a 1099-MISC (which would be the right choice, I think), then you would add this income under Wages & Income->Less Common Income-> Miscellaneous Income (this is the path under the desktop product but I believe the Online product should be similar).

     

    Now you will have taxable income to apply to your Roth IRA. But note what rjs said - the Contribution to the Roth IRA cannot exceed your taxable income.

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