What Is a SEP IRA?
A Simplified Employee Pension IRA, or SEP IRA, is a type of traditional IRA that let's self-employed people and small-business owners save up to $57,000 in 2020 ($56,000 in 2019) toward retirement. But contribution rules mean these plans tend to be best for companies with few or no employees.A SEP IRA reads like a mess of letters, and spelling it out doesn’t necessarily help: The first part stands for simplified employee pension; the second for individual retirement account.
Translation: It’s a retirement account that offers tax breaks for business owners and self-employed individuals who put money away for the future.The “simplified” bit is no lie: A SEP IRA is a basic retirement account, much like a traditional IRA. SEP IRA contributions are tax-deductible, and investments grow tax-deferred until retirement, when distributions are taxed as income.
Who can open a SEP IRA?
Generally, SEP IRAs are best for self-employed people or small-business owners with few or no employees.Here’s why: If you have employees whom the IRS considers eligible participants in your plan, you must contribute on their behalf, and those contributions must be an equal percentage of compensation to your own. Eligible participants are employees who are 21 or older, have worked for you for three of the past five years and have earned at least $600 from you in the past year.
For example, if an employee worked for you in 2016, 2017 and 2018, you would need to make a contribution for him or her for the 2019 plan year. If you want to stash away 15% of your compensation for yourself, you must also contribute 15% of that employee’s compensation to his or her plan. Employees own and control their own accounts.
Because of that rule requiring equal contributions as a percentage of compensation, a SEP IRA is generally best for self-employed people or small-business owners with few or no employees.
How much can i contribute to a SEP IRA?
This is where the SEP IRA stands apart from a traditional IRA. A regular IRA allows you to put away $6,000 each year (that’s the annual maximum in both 2020 and 2019; it’s $7,000 if you’re 50 or older). With a SEP IRA, you could stockpile nearly 10 times that amount, or up to $57,000 in 2020 and up to $56,000 in 2019.There’s plenty of fine print, though. SEP IRA annual contribution limits cannot exceed the lesser of:
The first limit, 25% of compensation, is also the limit for how much you can contribute for each eligible employee. The amount of compensation you can use to calculate the 25% limit is limited to $285,000 in 2020, $280,000 in 2019, and $275,000 in 2018. There’s no catch-up contribution at age 50+ for SEP IRAs.You can combine a SEP IRA with a traditional or Roth IRA. If you’re an employee who is covered by a SEP IRA, employer contributions don’t reduce the amount you can contribute to an IRA for yourself, but the amount of your traditional IRA contribution that you can deduct may be reduced at certain higher income levels, due to the combination of both plans. (For more on that, see our post on IRA contribution limits.)
What are the pros and cons of a SEP IRA?
PROS
CONS
It’s easy to open a SEP IRA account online. The first step is to choose an account provider. Here are our top picks for best IRA account providers.Then, the IRS outlines three steps for setting up your SEP IRA:
How do I Invest my SEP IRA?
Once you’ve opened the account, you can choose from the investments that your account provider offers, a selection that typically includes stocks, bonds and mutual funds. (It’s possible to open an IRA at a bank, but generally you’ll be limited to investing in Certificates of Deposit, which usually offer a lower return than a diversified group of stocks and bonds.)
Once the account is open and funded, you’ll want to invest it according to your age, planned retirement age and risk tolerance. If you have a fairly strong stomach for market swings and a long time until retirement, your investment selection should sway toward stocks, specifically stock index funds, which track a segment of the market and hold a diverse mix of stocks within that segment.The less time you have until retirement — and the less patience you have for a market downturn — the more you’ll want to allocate toward bonds and bond funds. You can also buy index funds for bonds.
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