Are you a high-income small-business owner who doesn’t currently
have a tax-advantaged retirement plan set up for yourself? A Simplified
Employee Pension (SEP) may be just what you need, and now may be a great time
to establish one. A SEP has high contribution limits and is simple to set up.
Best of all, there’s still time to establish a SEP for 2017 and make contributions
to it that you can deduct on your 2017 income tax return.
2018 deadlines for 2017
A SEP can be set up as late as the due date (including
extensions) of your income tax return for the tax year for which the SEP is to
first apply. That means you can establish a SEP for 2017 in 2018 as long as you
do it before your 2017 return filing deadline. You have until the same deadline
to make 2017 contributions and still claim a potentially hefty deduction on
your 2017 return.
Generally, other types of retirement plans would have to have
been established by December 31, 2017, in order for 2017 contributions to be
made (though many of these plans do allow 2017 contributions to be made in
2018).
High contribution limits
Contributions to SEPs are discretionary. You can decide how much
to contribute each year. But be aware that, if your business has employees
other than yourself: 1) Contributions must be made for all eligible employees
using the same percentage of compensation as for yourself, and 2) employee
accounts are immediately 100% vested. The contributions go into SEP-IRAs
established for each eligible employee.
For 2017, the maximum contribution that can be made to a SEP-IRA
is 25% of compensation (or 20% of self-employed income net of the
self-employment tax deduction) of up to $270,000, subject to a contribution cap
of $54,000. (The 2018 limits are $275,000 and $55,000, respectively.)
Simple to set up
A SEP is established by completing and signing the very simple
Form 5305-SEP (“Simplified Employee Pension — Individual Retirement Accounts
Contribution Agreement”). Form 5305-SEP is not filed with the IRS, but it
should be maintained as part of the business’s permanent tax records. A copy of
Form 5305-SEP must be given to each employee covered by the SEP, along with a
disclosure statement.
Additional rules and limits do apply to SEPs, but they’re
generally much less onerous than those for other retirement plans. Contact us
to learn more about SEPs and how they might reduce your tax bill for 2017 and
beyond.
© 2018
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