What Is a Traditional IRA?
A Traditional IRA (Individual Retirement Account) is a tax-advantaged retirement savings account that lets you save money for retirement with tax-deferred growth. That means your investment earnings aren’t taxed as long as they remain in the account — you pay taxes when you withdraw funds in retirement.
You can hold cash, stocks, bonds, mutual funds, ETFs, CDs, and other investments inside a Traditional IRA. The tax treatment of your contributions — whether they are tax deductible — depends on your income and whether you (or your spouse) are covered by a workplace retirement plan.
Traditional IRA Snapshot (2026)
-
Contributions: May be fully or partially tax-deductible, depending on income and workplace retirement plan coverage.
-
Earnings: Grow tax-deferred until withdrawal.
-
Withdrawals: Generally subject to income tax; a 10% early withdrawal penalty may apply before age 59½ unless an exception applies (e.g., first-home purchase, certain education expenses).
-
Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs): Begin at age 73 (for 2026 and later).
Who Can Contribute to a Traditional IRA?
To contribute to a Traditional IRA in 2026, you must have “earned income” — such as wages, salary, tips, bonuses, or self-employment income. Deferred compensation, interest, dividends, and rental income don’t count as earned income.
There is no age limit for contributions — you can continue contributing as long as you have earned income, thanks to changes under the SECURE Act.
A non-working spouse can also contribute to a spousal IRA if the working spouse has sufficient earned income.
2026 Traditional IRA Contribution Limits
For tax year 2026:
-
You can contribute up to $7,500 (or 100% of your earned income, if less).
-
If you are age 50 or older, you can make an additional catch-up contribution of $1,100, for a total of up to $8,600.
-
These limits apply across all your IRAs combined (Traditional + Roth).
You have until the tax-filing deadline (usually April 15, 2027) to make contributions for the 2026 tax year.
Deducting Your Traditional IRA Contributions
Anyone with earned income can contribute to a Traditional IRA, but whether you can deduct that contribution on your tax return depends on your income and workplace retirement plan status:
1. Neither Spouse Covered by a Workplace Plan
If you and your spouse are not covered by a retirement plan at work (e.g., 401(k)), you can fully deduct your Traditional IRA contribution up to the annual limit — regardless of your income.
2. You Are Covered by a Workplace Retirement Plan
If you are covered by a retirement plan at work, the Traditional IRA deduction is phased out based on your modified adjusted gross income (MAGI):
For 2026:
-
Single or Head of Household: Full deduction if MAGI ≤ $81,000; partial deduction if between $81,000 and $91,000; no deduction at MAGI ≥ $91,000.
-
Married Filing Jointly (contributor covered): Full deduction if MAGI ≤ $129,000; partial deduction if between $129,000 and $149,000; no deduction at MAGI ≥ $149,000.
-
Married Filing Separately (covered): Partial deduction if MAGI is less than $10,000; no deduction at $10,000 or more.
3. You’re Not Covered but Your Spouse Is
If you are not covered by a workplace plan but your spouse is, you can still deduct your full contribution if your joint MAGI is below a higher threshold — in 2026, the phase-out range is $242,000 to $252,000 for married filing jointly.
Key Notes
-
Contribution Limits Are Combined: You cannot exceed the annual limit by contributing to multiple IRA accounts.
-
Earned Income Requirement: Your total IRA contribution cannot exceed your earned income for the year.
-
Roth IRA Rules Differ: The ability to contribute to a Roth IRA — and the income limits for Roth contributions — are separate from Traditional IRA deductibility rules.