Non-Deductible IRA for Self-Employed (1099)

I have a new client that is self-employed (1099 Income) and does not have a business retirement plan (no 401k, SEP, etc…) and his spouse does not have an employer retirement plan. The client made max 2019 Roth Contributions in mid-2019 for both he and his wife and now has been told by his CPA that their MAGI is too high to make a direct Roth contribution for 2019. The CPA instructed him to re-characterize the contribution and move the money back to an IRA before they file his 2019 return and that they would treat it as a “deductible” IRA contribution on his 2019 return. The client ask the CPA if the re-characterization of the contribution could be treated as a “non-deductible” IRA contribution and his CPA told him “no it could not”. The CPA stated that since he nor his wife have access to a employer based retirement plan that their only option was conducting a “deductible” IRA contribution — they could not make a “non-deductible” IRA contribution. Is this correct? (Note: their 2019 contributions were invested in individual equities.)



  • No, CPA is incorrect. Anyone can make a non deductible TIRA contribution that has earned income. This client and his spouse are excellent candidates for a back door Roth if they respectively do not have current TIRA accounts. The process would be to recharacterize the Roth contributions as non deductible TIRA contributions, file Form 8606 to report non deductible 2019 TIRA contributions, and immediately after recharacterization convert the non deductible TIRA balance back to a Roth IRA. They end up with a Roth contribution like they originally intended, only by conversion rather than regular contributions.
  • However, if they prefer the tax benefit of a TIRA deduction, they could do as the CPA indicates, and take deductions for the original amount of the contribution after recharacterizing, even though the transferred balance is probably worth less now after the market crash. 
  • So client has a choice between the deduction or a back door Roth, although the back door is only practical for the spouse who has no existing pre tax IRA balance.


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