I am just starting this whole investing journey so I am trying to educate myself on these rules.

    A hypothetical: Let's say I only make 10,000 a year… and I put it ALL into my job's ROTH 401k as I earn the money (100% of each paycheck)…

    However, I also want to open a Roth Ira and put the max 7000 allowed into it (I would do this from my personal savings account since I already put 100% of my paychecks this year into my Roth 401k with my employer, so I don't have any actual "earned income" leftover after the 401k to put into the IRA)…

    IS THIS EVEN ALLOWED??

    From what I understand I can only put "earned income" per year into a Roth Ira, but if I already put all of this year's earned income into my 401k then does that mean I have no earned income left that I am LEGALLY allowed to put into a Roth Ira since that would exceed the amount of money I earned this year (10,000 + 7,000 would be 17,000 total which exceeds my yearly earned income of 10,000)….?

    Thanks in advance for anyone's advice/help!

    Question about "earned income" when it comes to having both a Roth/Traditional 401k and a Roth/Traditional IRA…
    byu/WyzeLady ininvesting



    Posted by WyzeLady

    3 Comments

    1. This isn’t answering your question, but something to be aware of. It varies 401k to 401k, but most plans won’t let you contribute 100% of your salary to the plan. Taxes need to come out of your paycheck also so every 401k that I have had limits contributions to 75% of your income.

    2. PotentPotab on

      You are right to question this. If you contribute all of your income into a 401k then you have no earned income left to put into the Roth IRA.

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