Kansas Kid said:
one safe place said:
Kansas Kid said:
BClark said:
permabull said:
Roth IRA is a great idea but it will only work if he has earned income from working.
He has worked but not made enough to have to file a tax return.
He still can file the return and then claim the Roth IRA. I have had my kids do it after they graduated. It also made them eligible for Covid dollars (I hated all the handouts but if they were being given, I am glad my kids could collect).
He need not file a return to do the Roth IRA, only needs to have the earned income. If below the filing threshold, then don't file the return and contribute the proper amount into the Roth. There is nothing to "claim" on a tax return relative to funding a Roth IRA.
Agreed he doesn't have to file but by filing the return, it starts the statute of limitations so if he were ever challenged on the amount claimed, he has a safe harbor. I would assume his tax return would take 15-20 minutes and it would start teaching him about the process. It would also make him eligible for a stimulus check if the government did a process like 2020 with Covid relief. For those, I don't think there was any way to get the money if you hadn't filed a return.
I would do the same thing with estate taxes where you want to file the return even if you are below the threshold because you then have documentation as to the stepped up tax basis that once enough years pass, it can't be challenged by the IRS.
To each his or her own, but there is nothing "claimed" on his tax return regarding a Roth IRA. It appears nowhere on the return, nor is it disclosed within the return. Thus filing a return when none is required changes nothing with regard to the Roth contribution, and provides no safe harbor.
As to a stimulus check, he wouldn't get anything if he was a dependent on his parents return and if he doesn't make enough to have to file, he is someone's dependent. The stimulus payment that the parents get would be based on the number in the household, but the kid gets no stimulus payment. Back when that was going on, there were discussions about parents not having filed a return possibly needing to do so to get the proper stimulus payment if they had dependents the IRS did not know about.
On the estate tax return, filing a return when not required might be a good idea when there are items within the estate that, when valued, put you close, but not over, the threshold for filing. The IRS has their shot at challenging them. Once the statute expires, they do not have a shot at the estate tax return. However, the mere filing of a return does not mean the valuations used are accurate. If, ten years later, you sell an inherited asset, the IRS can ask about the cost basis you used in your individual return. This is true not only for stepped up basis assets, but for assets acquired by check some 10, or 20, or 50 years prior.