Kiplinger.com
Tools
Columns
E-mail Alerts
Online Forum
Quizzes
Site Map
The Kiplinger Letter
Kiplinger Store
Customer Service
Corporate Sales
About Kiplinger
Give A Gift

YOUR RETIREMENT

 | 

PLAN, SAVE & MAKE YOUR MONEY LAST

Slideshow Videos Slideshow
FEATURED SLIDE SHOW
Eight Pesky Fees
A few dollars here, a few there. See which fees we'd like to toss.
KIPLINGER'S MONEY POLL
The S&P 500, at around 1250, is down 15% so far this year. Where do you see this key stock market index at year end?
1300 or higher
About where it is now
1200 or lower
Not sure
       View Results!
MONEY SMART KIDS
Kid IRA Q&A
Find out if your child must file a tax return to open an IRA, what the best investments are for the account and whether an IRA affects college financial aid.

My 15-year-old son earned about $2,000 last year working at a supermarket, and that was his only income. Does he have to file any kind of tax form to open a Roth IRA? What is the maximum he can earn before he has to file a tax return?

No, your son doesn’t have to file a specific form to contribute to a Roth IRA -- nor do you, for that matter. (For more on kids, work and taxes, see Babysitting and Taxes.)

As for filing an income-tax return, the rule is that if their only income is from a job, dependent children do not need to file a return as long as their earnings are less than the standard deduction, which is $5,350 for 2007 and $5,450 for 2008.


Best investment for a teen

What is the best way for my 17-year-old daughter to invest $10,000 if college is already taken care of: a mutual fund or an IRA?

Your question includes a couple of common misconceptions that are worth straightening out.

First, a Roth IRA would be a good place for your daughter to invest, but she can’t just plunk down $10,000. In order to contribute to a Roth IRA (or a traditional IRA), she must have earned income from a job. And contributions for 2008 are limited to $5,000 or her total earned income, whichever is less. (See Can Your Child Open A Roth IRA? for more info.)

Second, you seem to be confusing a mutual fund with an IRA. As its name states, an IRA is an "individual retirement account," not an investment in itself. Once you open an IRA -- generally with a mutual fund company, a brokerage firm or a bank -- you can put your money into many different investments, among them mutual funds.

Assuming that your daughter doesn't need her money for at least five years, a mutual fund that invests in stocks would be very appropriate for her. Most funds require a relatively small minimum investment (generally $3,000 or less) and she would be spreading her money among a wide variety of companies.

If she isn't eligible for a Roth IRA because she has no earned income, or if she would like to invest the entire $10,000, she could buy a mutual fund in a regular investment account outside an IRA.


IRAs and college aid

If my child has a Roth IRA, will it count against her when she files for financial aid for college?

Probably not. The federal formula for calculating how much a family can pay toward college expenses doesn't assess retirement accounts -- and that goes for your child’s account as well as your own.

Some colleges do include retirement assets in their financial-aid calculations. But the impact of a child's IRA is likely to be minimal (see Roth IRAs and College Aid).


MONEY SMART KIDS:
Send Janet your questions. She can't answer every one, but she'll answer as many as she can. If your question isn't published within a few weeks, scan the archives to see if Janet has covered the topic before, or start a discussion in the Kiplinger.com Community.
Name:
E-mail address:
Subject (optional):

Question/Comments:

READER COMMENTS

Post a comment
 | 
Read all comments (1)


POSTED BY: goldi (February 06, 2008 07:20 PM)
If you liked this article you probably would like a book titled "It's Your IRA!" It is available as paperback through Amazon or as (a) download...

SAVE, SHARE & DISCUSS:    |   |   |   |   |    
ADD HEADLINES:          
SPONSORED LINKS