Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s a political term for a Roth IRA conversion.
You contribute to a traditional IRA, keep it in cash for a few weeks, then convert it to Roth. If you don’t qualify for or take the income tax deduction or have any other money in an IRA, it’s perfectly legal. It’s paying taxes now instead of later. That’s all.
But it skirts the income limits of a roth right
And the post-conversion gains are completely untaxed. So it's not paying taxes "now instead of later".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s a political term for a Roth IRA conversion.
You contribute to a traditional IRA, keep it in cash for a few weeks, then convert it to Roth. If you don’t qualify for or take the income tax deduction or have any other money in an IRA, it’s perfectly legal. It’s paying taxes now instead of later. That’s all.
But it skirts the income limits of a roth right
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s a political term for a Roth IRA conversion.
You contribute to a traditional IRA, keep it in cash for a few weeks, then convert it to Roth. If you don’t qualify for or take the income tax deduction or have any other money in an IRA, it’s perfectly legal. It’s paying taxes now instead of later. That’s all.
But it skirts the income limits of a roth right
Anonymous wrote:It’s a political term for a Roth IRA conversion.
You contribute to a traditional IRA, keep it in cash for a few weeks, then convert it to Roth. If you don’t qualify for or take the income tax deduction or have any other money in an IRA, it’s perfectly legal. It’s paying taxes now instead of later. That’s all.
Anonymous wrote:Google search? https://www.physicianonfire.com/backdoor/
Anonymous wrote:Can you convert all the time whenever you want?Or is it like a once a year or one time thing