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How can I do a Roth conversion in retirement if I haven’t been earning any income?

In an earlier article on Roth conversions, an advisor wrote: “For many people, a peak time for Roth conversions occurs in the years after retirement, but before Social Security and RMDs kick in. These may be years with relatively low incomes, when initiating a conversion can yield a triple benefit. Those benefits include: lower tax bills, lower RMDs, and future tax-free growth.”

My question is based on what I thought were the rules for Roth contributions, namely that you must have earned income to contribute. How can a retiree put money into a Roth IRA without having any income?

– Marking

That’s a great question, and I get a variation on it often. Unfortunately, there is a lot of nuance in the rules surrounding Roth IRAs. The recent column on the five-year rules also emphasizes this point.

This can make tracking them more complicated and confusing than you might think. The answer to your specific question simply lies in understanding some subtle differences in terminology. Although you need earned income to contribute directly to a Roth IRA, earned income is not required to convert a pre-tax account to a Roth IRA. (If you have similar questions about retirement planning, consider working with a financial advisor.)

A retiree is looking at his retirement accounts and considering a Roth conversion.

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To be clear, your understanding of the Roth contribution rules is spot on. Contributions must come from earned income. Therefore, a retiree who only receives Social Security, pensions, annuity payments, interest, or benefits from retirement plans cannot contribute to a Roth IRA (or a traditional deferred IRA).

But Roth conversions and Roth contributions are not the same.

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When you make a Roth contribution, you take money that has already been taxed and send it to a Roth account. There, it will grow tax-free and not be subject to required minimum distributions (RMDs), which begin at age 73 (age 75 for people who reach age 74 after December 31, 2032). A Roth contribution can be made with money you receive from a paycheck or with money in your checking account. The key is that you need income to contribute to a Roth IRA.

A conversion moves money already in a tax-deferred account into a Roth account. The “conversion” occurs because you pay income taxes on the money when you move it into a Roth account.

To make a conversion, you must first have money in a tax-deferred retirement account of some type, like a traditional IRA or 401(k), for example.

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