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Brian Ruff
Brian Ruff (@guest_2131792)
August 30, 2025 00:14

Since contributions to either IRA need to be from earned income, it only makes sense to treat bonus money as gains.

Alex
Alex (@guest_2131380)
August 29, 2025 13:13

I think they’re already skirting the edge of what the IRS will allow with their current treatment of the bonus. In the backdoor roth scenario, you’re only receiving the $210 as a direct result of your traditional IRA contribution and so that money is classified as earnings on that contribution. If they gave you $210 in a roth IRA as a result of your traditional contribution, those earnings would not actually be associated with your contribution based on how funds are classified within these accounts. It would be identical in the IRS’s view to them handing you $210 and you depositing it in a roth IRA. Which, if you’re forced to do the backdoor in the first place, you obviously would be barred from doing. It would fall under your $7000 contribution limit and not lie outside it. It’s a bit confusing unless you’ve spent a lot of time looking into the classification of funds in a retirement account. Sources of funds are often ignored because they’re irrelevant to most people, but in this case they’re important. If you’ve had to set up a mega-backdoor roth as a DIYer when your plan hasn’t already made it streamlined, you’ll know how complicated this can get.

The other problem with this proposal, even if we ignore the fact that it’s illegal under the tax code, is that it’s probably not worth Robinhood’s time. You’re talking maybe a few percent of people that this would apply to and most of them would consider worrying about that $210’s tax treatment as a waste of time when they’re already able to earn so much with their time spent elsewhere. The majority of those people are also older and while not absent, they’re a minority in Robinhood’s target customer demographic. It’s just not worth the hassle, even if it could be done.

Ken Krawford
Ken Krawford (@guest_2131035)
August 29, 2025 06:30

I need to do an IRA transfer from Wells Fargo. It seems that neither RH or WeBull get high grades for customer service. Since the transfer bonus is the same, what’s your opinion for who’s the better company to transfer to?

AlertTip
AlertTip (@guest_2131112)
August 29, 2025 08:22

As a customer of both, Robinhood is much easier to use, and while it’s not Schwab/Vanguard level of customer service, the service is much better than WeBull.

Justin Root of Good
Justin Root of Good (@guest_2131299)
August 29, 2025 11:34

+1 to Robinhood over Webull. Robinhood is okay (moved $2M there) but Webull absolutely sucked and I couldn’t transfer anything in the end.

Ken Krawford
Ken Krawford (@guest_2131869)
August 30, 2025 04:39

Thanks for the feedback, Very helpful & appreciated.

Christian
Christian (@guest_2130944)
August 29, 2025 01:21

Dumb question but I’ll ask anyway: Are there protections like FDIC coverage with Robinhood? I’ve heard a little about them but not much.

JD
JD (@guest_2130956)
August 29, 2025 02:07

Yes, SIPC insurance is like FDIC, but for brokerages:

https://www.sipc.org/for-investors/what-sipc-protects

A M
A M (@guest_2130740)
August 28, 2025 17:05

I believe Sofi was the same way when I transferred and got a bonus

A M
A M (@guest_2132266)
August 30, 2025 16:58

Also the matches for recurring contributions are treated the same way

A thread: https://www.reddit.com/r/sofi/comments/1mzbcnt/sofi_matched_1_of_my_max_ira_and_put_me_over/

Kevin
Kevin (@guest_2130709)
August 28, 2025 16:21

Yup I just did this at Webull since their transfer match is 3% vs contribution match at 3.5%. It’s a no brainer to do the Roth conversion elsewhere and then transfer into Webull as Roth money for the match.

Mark
Mark (@guest_2130700)
August 28, 2025 16:00

This isn’t special. All IRA bonuses everywhere work this way (bonus goes into the IRA account).

Anton
Anton (@guest_2130692)
August 28, 2025 15:55

Last time I did backdoor conversion on Fidelity and then transferred Roth to Robinhood for a full 2% non-taxable bonus.
What I’m curious about is to which extend this is legal from IRS perspective. What if Robinhood had an offer for a mixed transfer. Like transfer Roth and taxable account, but the whole bonus from both accounts goes into Roth. Is that legal? Where is the line on how much Robinhood can give us in tax-free money? 🙂

sg77
sg77 (@guest_2130686)
August 28, 2025 15:49

For Webull, if you have both Traditional and Roth IRAs, someone said they default to posting bonuses to the Traditional IRA, but there’s a My Rewards setting you can change, to make it put bonuses in the Roth. https://www.bogleheads.org/forum/viewtopic.php?p=8458994#p8458994

Frank
Frank (@guest_2130600)
August 28, 2025 13:54

Would love to see a tax expert’s opinion on the “it’s a gain” framework

Would seem like someone should offer a $10k deposit bonus “gain” for IRA transfers while charging a $10k fee for the account — basically lets you backdoor $10k into a ROTH by calling it a “transfer bonus”

Hell, I’d pay an $11k fee if they’d stick a $10k “gain” in my ROTH

David
David (@guest_2130636)
August 28, 2025 14:40

You sort of already have that here. In order to get the larger bonus you need to pay Robinhood for their Gold product.

Jay
Jay (@guest_2130742)
August 28, 2025 17:13

Amusing scheme to split the tax arbitrage. I suspect any bonus amount beyond a small % of your Roth balance transferred would raise some ire at IRS. That said, there is no tax return impact of gains/interest/dividends in a Roth IRA…

JD
JD (@guest_2130943)
August 29, 2025 01:19