I’m 62, retired and want to keep saving. Is there an age limit for Roth IRAs?

I’m 62, retired and want to keep saving. Is there an age limit for Roth IRAs?

I’m 62, retired and want to keep saving. Is there an age limit for Roth IRAs?

Spending in retirement is a team sport, so saving should be too.
Spending in retirement is a team sport, so saving should be too. – Getty Images

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I am 62 and retired. I just got my first Social Security check. My wife is 53 and still works. I have all the retirement accounts — SEP IRA, 401(k), traditional IRA, Roth IRA. My question is: Can I keep contributing each year to my Roth IRA even though I am not working? I’m not considering a Roth conversion.

Retired Saver

Retirement saving for married couples is a team sport. You can keep contributing to a Roth IRA as the spouse of a working person, because the main rule for the contributions is that they have to come from earned income. There’s no age limit for this as long as somebody in the household is earning income from work.

You still have to meet the other requirements, though, especially the income phaseout that starts at $242,000 for a married couple and taps out after $252,000. You also have to have enough combined earned income to be equal to or exceeding the total contributions you both make.

The more you can save as a couple, the better, so don’t stop with just thinking about a Roth contribution for yourself and managing the many retirement accounts in your own name. You want to think globally, across both of your spreads of savings, to see if there’s more you could be doing.

It can be hard to shift to this mindset. When we save for retirement, it’s typically a solo endeavor that comes out of your paycheck and goes into an account labeled as “individual.”

But your retirement spending is joint: You’ll have one housing payment, one food bill, one set of household utilities. You’ll go on trips together and buy presents for the grandkids as a combined force, even if one of you is better at making the arrangements for that kind of thing.

When you make a retirement goal, you have to do it together. The key component will be how much income you’ll need each year to provide for your needs and maintain your lifestyle. Then you back into how much you need to save today to make sure you have that kind of cash on hand later on.

How you get there can take many roads. You worked and saved a few different ways already. Now that you are retired, you can consolidate that into two buckets if that makes it easier for you — your pretax money from your qualified accounts like the SEP IRA, traditional IRA and 401(k), and your post-tax Roth IRA.