reineraggie09 said:
I started my own business a couple of years ago. Unfortunately, it's gone a little too well. No longer qualify to contribute to a regular Roth. Looks like I need to start a company retirement plan. I am having some difficulty finding info. I can only find information on signing up for your company's retirement plan.
I would prefer a 401 to have the access to Roth 401. 1) How do I actually get this started? 2) Is 401k the best option? Currently I am the only full time employee, but I don't see that lasting much longer.
Thank in advance.
With no full-time W2 employees, a Solo-401(k) is a very low cost and easy solution to implement. Any of the big investment companies like Schwab, Fidelity, or Vanguard have these plans available. As long as you are the only participant, none of annual testing that burdens multi-participant plans is required. There isn't any special tax reporting required until the plan exceeds $250k.For 2024, you can defer $23,000 of salary (plus age50+ catchup of $7500). In addition your business can contribute up to 25% of your compensation (after SS and Medicare taxes). The maximum amount possible is $69,000 ($76,500 for 50+) in 2024.
You can exclude new employees that are < 21 yrs old and those with < 1 year of service. Once you have to add a non-spouse participant to the plan, the administration get more complicated and expensive. At a minimum, it sounds like you possibly could set one up for 2024 to help with this year's taxes, and probably next year even if you add an employee. You can always move to another provider if/when you need to. Others have mentioned good choices like Guideline, if/when that time comes.
A SEP IRA allows the business to contribute up to 25% of compensation (with no salary deferral), so it probably makes sense to compare and contrast the two to see which serves your needs best.