SEP-IRA vs Solo 401k

636 Views | 2 Replies | Last: 9 days ago by aggiez03
bigtruckguy3500
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I'm looking to pick up some 1099 work, and my understanding is this will allow me to contribute more money towards a retirement account than I already do (currently Roth IRA and TSP/401k) via either a SEP-IRA or a Solo 401k.

I'm trying to decide which is better. Have been reading a bit here and there on them. Seems both have some advantages. I believe a SEP-IRA is easier to set up and run, but a Solo 401k allows Roth contributions easier?

I doubt I'll max the contributions for the next couple years, but as time goes on I might end up with majority of my income being 1099.

I currently invest with E trade, if that makes a difference.

Anyone with experience, thoughts?
AggieInHouston
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AG
Assuming you have no employees other than possibly a spouse, I'd generally look at a Solo 401(k) before a SEP IRA.

As you mentioned, a SEP is simpler, but contributions are generally limited to the employer side, which for self-employed income is roughly 20% of net profit after the self-employment tax adjustment. A Solo 401(k) can allow employee deferrals plus the employer/profit-sharing contribution, so it can be beneficial on lower or moderate 1099 income.

One caveat: the employee deferral limit is shared across plans, so any TSP/401(k) deferrals you already make reduce what you could defer into the Solo 401(k).
aggiez03
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AG
Fidelity solo 401K is free to setup and you can setup a regular 401k and a Roth 401k at the same time.

Set up an LLC and pay yourself a salary and your company can contribute 25% of gross pay to your 401k which is a business deduction off your profit. Then you can contribute up to 23k or over 30k if over 50 for your contribution. Less if you have another 401k like mentioned above.
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