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Independent contractor qualify for SEP IRA?
Does anyone know whether an independent contractor such as a real estate agent or attorney working on a contract basis (no benefits etc) is qualified to make retirement contributions to an SEP IRA (or the other self employed IRA) as opposed to a Roth or standard IRA account? Would it make a difference whether that person incorporated to work in that capacity?
My fiance and I are both attorneys. I make all my pre-tax contributions to my firms IRA. My fiance recently quit her job and is working as a contract attorney. I am wondering whether she can begin contributing to an SEP IRA so that she can contribute a great deal more than the 4 or5K shes limited to contributing via Roth IRA. Thanks for any help. |
#2
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Re: Independent contractor qualify for SEP IRA?
Yes, she should be able to put 25% of (I believe net) income away in a SEP IRA tax deferred.
Krishan |
#3
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Re: Independent contractor qualify for SEP IRA?
i thought its 25% of the gross.
would she have to take any special steps to be able to qualify for this type of contribution, i.e. incorporate? |
#4
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Re: Independent contractor qualify for SEP IRA?
[ QUOTE ]
i thought its 25% of the gross. would she have to take any special steps to be able to qualify for this type of contribution, i.e. incorporate? [/ QUOTE ] You can file as a sole proprietorship. No need to incorporate. Just file a schedule C. Some links to contribution maximums. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SEP-IRA Self-employed The contribution limit for self-employed persons is more complicated; barring limits, it is 18.587045% (approximately 18.6%) of net profit. The computation is in IRS Pub 560, section 5, Table and Worksheets for the Self-Employed, specifically Deduction Worksheet for Self-Employed. The two issues are: * FICA tax * Reduced rate [edit] FICA tax SEP contribution limits are computed, not from net profit, but from net profit adjusted for the deduction for self-employment tax (2006 Form 1040, line 27, from Schedule SE, Section A, line 6, or Section B, line 13). Barring limits, this is half the 15.3% FICA tax, levied on net earnings, which are 92.35% of net profit. Thus adjusted net profit (net profit minus deduction for self-employment tax) is 92.935225% of net profit; note that adjusted net profit is close to but slightly more than net earnings. [edit] Reduced rate The limit of 25% applies to wages, not (adjusted) net profit. In the above example, where an employee earns $40,000 and the employer contributes 25% of that, $10,000, the employee has received $50,000 total, of which 20% goes to the SEP-IRA. When a business is a sole proprietorship, the employee/owner both pays themselves wages, and makes an SEP contribution, which is limited to 25% of wages, which are profits minus SEP contribution. For a particular contribution rate CR, the reduced rate is CR/(1+CR); for a 25% contribution rate, this yields a 20% reduced rate, as in the above. [edit] Overall Thus the overall contribution limit (barring limits) is 20% of 92.935225% (which equals 18.587045%) of net profit. For example, if a sole proprietor has $50,000 net earnings from self-employment on Schedule C, then the "1/2 of self-employment tax credit", $3,532, shown on adjustments to income at the bottom of form 1040, will be deducted from the net earnings and the result is multiplied by 20% to arrive at the maximum SEP deduction, $9,293. Note that net earnings INCLUDE the proposed deduction for contributions to your own SEP-IRA. In this example, the sole proprietor has therefore $59,293 in net income before his (maximum) SEP-IRA contribution. Krishan Krishan |
#5
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Re: Independent contractor qualify for SEP IRA?
krishan,
The 18.6% rate doesn't apply once your SE-tax reached the point of only being 2.9%. At that point it is closer to 19.7%. |
#6
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Re: Independent contractor qualify for SEP IRA?
[ QUOTE ]
krishan, The 18.6% rate doesn't apply once your SE-tax reached the point of only being 2.9%. At that point it is closer to 19.7%. [/ QUOTE ] I agree. Moot point for uber-successful poker players though. [img]/images/graemlins/grin.gif[/img] Krishan |
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