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You are here: Home / Roth IRA / Ask the Expert: The rules for ‘backdoor’ Roth IRAs

Ask the Expert: The rules for ‘backdoor’ Roth IRAs

July 29, 2021 by Retirement

On July 4 you wrote that the first $20,000 of an individual retirement account distribution is exempt from New York State income tax. Does that include a distribution that’s rolled over to a Roth IRA, sometimes called “a backdoor Roth conversion”?

Yes.

New Yorkers over 59½ enjoy a state tax exclusion on their first $20,000 of annual income from tax-deferred retirement accounts, regardless of what they do with the money. The distribution is still subject to federal income tax. If you transferred $30,000 from a traditional tax-deferred IRA into a Roth IRA, you’d owe federal tax on the entire $30,000; but you’d only owe New York State tax on $10,000.

The transfer is called a Roth “conversion.” A Roth IRA created with a conversion is sometimes called a “backdoor Roth IRA.” The reason: You can’t contribute directly to a Roth IRA if you’re single and have income of $140,000 or more, or if you’re married filing jointly and have income of $208,000 or more. But there are no income restrictions on Roth conversions, on how many conversions you can do, or on the dollar amount that can be converted from a traditional IRA to a Roth IRA. (By contrast, the maximum annual direct Roth contribution is $6,000 for people under 50, and $7,000 for people 50 and up.)

All withdrawals from a Roth IRA are tax-free after you’re 59½ and have owned the account for at least five years. But if the Roth was created with a conversion that you did when you were younger 59½, you’ll owe a 10% early withdrawal penalty on withdrawals taken within five years of the conversion date.

The bottom line

New Yorkers over 59½ owe no state income tax on up to $20,000 a year distributed from a traditional IRA for any reason.

More information

bit.ly/IRS2021IRAcontributions

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TO ASK THE EXPERT Send questions to act2@newsday.com. Include your name, address and phone numbers. Questions can be answered only in this column. Advice is offered as general guidance. Check with your own consultants for your specific needs.

Filed Under: Roth IRA

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