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Spousal IRA Contributions Thumbnail

Spousal IRA Contributions

IRA and Roth IRA contributions are only permitted when you have taxable “compensation” or earned income. Typically, whether or not a person has compensation is a relatively straightforward determination. For most individuals, compensation comes from employment, either as an employee or from self-employment income. Confirmation of compensation can be found in box 1 of the person’s W-2 form. Any amount listed there qualifies as compensation.

As is often the case with IRAs, special rules exist for spouses when it comes to compensation. A spouse with little or no compensation can make an IRA contribution based on his spouse’s compensation. If the higher-compensated spouse has enough eligible income, both spouses can make the maximum IRA contribution.

Spousal IRA Contributions

For the lower-compensated spouse, the most that can be contributed for 2026 to an IRA is the smaller of the following two amounts:

  1. $7,500 ($8,600 if age 50 or older), or
  2. The combined compensation of both spouses for the year, reduced by the higher-compensated spouse’s IRA contribution for the year.

This means that the total combined contributions that can be made to 2026 IRAs can be as much as $15,000 ($16,100 if only one of you is age 50 or older, or $17,200 if both of you are age 50 or older).

Example: Randy, age 57, is unemployed in 2026. He has no compensation. He marries his girlfriend, Rita. Rita, age 52, has $75,000 in compensation from her job in 2026. Both Rita and Randy can contribute $8,600 to their IRAs for 2026.

Rules to Keep in Mind

If you and your spouse are thinking about making spousal contributions, here are some rules to keep in mind:

  1. You may make spousal IRA contributions in some years and regular IRA contributions in others.
  2. There is no need to keep regular and spousal contributions in separate IRAs.
  3. There is no need to inform the IRA custodian that you are making a spousal contribution instead of a regular contribution because there is no special reporting required by the IRS.
  4. Spouses are not required to contribute to the same type of IRA. One may choose to contribute to a traditional IRA, and the other may contribute to a Roth IRA.
  5. Spouses are also not required to make their contributions at the same time or with the same IRA custodian.
  6. To make a spousal contribution for the year, the couple must be legally married on December 31 of that year.
  7. The couple must file a joint federal income tax return for the year.

By Sarah Brenner, JD
Director of Retirement Education
Ed Slott and Company, LLC

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Christian Cordoba, founder of California Retirement Advisors, has been a member of Ed Slott's Master Elite IRA Advisor Group since 2007. Click the title of the group or logo below to learn what that could mean for your retirement plan.

Copyright © 2026, Ed Slott and Company, LLC Reprinted from The Slott Report, 01/21/26, with permission. https://irahelp.com/spousal-ira-contributions/, Ed Slott and Company, LLC takes no responsibility for the current accuracy of this article. 
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