I want to establish a traditional individual retirement arrangement
(IRA) for my spouse, and I need additional information. What is the most I
can contribute to a spousal IRA during the tax year?
If both you and your spouse work and both have taxable compensation, each
of you can contribute up to $3,000 (or the amount of each IRA owner's compensation,
if less) to a separate traditional IRA. Even if one spouse has little or no
compensation, up to $3,000 can be contributed to each IRA if combined compensation
is at least equal to the amount contributed to both IRAs and you file a joint
return. You can contribute $3,000 to a separate IRA for your nonworking spouse
if you file a joint return. Your total contribution to both your IRA and
the spousal IRA for this year is limited to the smaller of $6,000, or your
taxable compensation reduced by any contributions you make to a traditional
IRA or Roth IRA. You cannot contribute more than $3,000 to either IRA for
the year. If you are 50 or older in 2004, the most that can be contributed
to your traditional IRA for 2003 is the lesser of:
$3,500 (up from $2,000), or
Your compensation that you must include in income.
For additional information, refer to Tax Topic 451, Individual
Retirement Arrangements (IRAs), or Publication 590, Individual
Retirement Arrangements (IRAs) .
Can I take an IRA deduction for the amount I contributed to a 401(k)
plan last year?
No. A 401(k) plan is not an IRA. However, the amount you contributed is
not included as income in box 1 of your W-2 form so you don't pay tax on it
for 2004. For more information, refer to Tax Topic 424, 401(k) Plans, Publication 575, Pension and Annuity Income, or Publication 560, Retirement
Plans for Small Business.