The IRS has announced cost-of-living adjustments to IRAs and employer-sponsored retirement plans for 2012, so here is what you need to know about the newly altered contribution limits and phase-outs for these plans.
401(k) & IRA yearly contribution limits. In 2012, these are the annual contribution limits for some popular retirement savings vehicles:
- 401(k)s, 403(b)s, most 457 plans, Thrift Savings Plan (TSP) – $17,000 with an additional $5,500 catch-up contribution allowed for those 50 or older. (2012 COLA: $500.)
- Traditional & Roth IRAs – $5,000 with an additional $1,000 catch-up contribution allowed for those 50 or older. (No 2012 COLA.)
- Simple IRAs – $11,500 with an additional $2,500 catch-up contribution allowed for those 50 or older. (No 2012 COLA.)
- SEP IRAs – $50,000 or 25% of an employee’s compensation, whichever is lesser. (2012 COLA: $1,000.)
- 415(b) defined benefit plans – the limitation on annual benefits under a defined benefit plan is increased to $200,000. (2012 COLA: $5,000.)
Traditional IRA phase-outs. The new MAGI limits affecting deductions for traditional IRA contributions are:
- Singles & heads of household covered by a workplace retirement plan: $58,000-68,000. (2012 COLA: $2,000.)
- Married filing jointly, with spouse making the IRA contribution covered by a workplace retirement plan: $92,000-112,000. (2012 COLA: $2,000.)
- Married filing jointly, IRA contributor not covered by a workplace retirement plan but married to someone who is: $173,000-183,000. That MAGI range is for a couple rather than an individual. (2012 COLA: $4,000.)
Roth IRA phase-outs. The MAGI limits affecting deductions for Roth IRA contributions are set as follows for 2012:
- Singles & heads of household covered by a workplace retirement plan: $110,000-125,000. (2012 COLA: $3,000.)
- Married filing jointly: $173,000-183,000. (2012 COLA: $4,000.)
- Married filing separately, with the Roth IRA contributor covered by a workplace retirement plan: $0-10,000. (No 2012 COLA.)
Lastly, a couple of notes for employers. When it comes to defining “key employees” in a top-heavy plan, the determination limit goes up $5,000 to $165,000 in 2012. The maximum taxable earnings amount for Social Security increases to $110,100 from $106,800 next year.