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Case of the Week: 401(k) Plans for Owner-Only Businesses

Case of the Week

The ERISA consultants at the Retirement Learning Center Resource regularly receive calls from financial advisors on a broad array of technical topics related to IRAs, qualified retirement plans and other types of retirement savings plans. We bring Case of the Week to you to highlight the most relevant topics affecting your business.

A recent call with an advisor in North Carolina is representative of a common question related to owner-only businesses and retirement plans. The advisor asked: 

“Can an unincorporated, owner-only business have a 401(k) plan and, if so, are there any special considerations of which we need to be aware?”

Highlights of Discussion 

  • Yes, an unincorporated, owner-only business may have a 401(k) plan—commonly referred to as an “individual (k)” or “solo (k)” plan.  
  • Special considerations with respect to the solo (k) plan include, but would not be limited to: 
    • the deadline for establishing a 401(k) plan; 
    • the deadline for making a salary deferral election; and 
    • the owner’s compensation for contribution purposes. 
  • The deadline for establishing a 401(k) plan for any eligible business changed beginning in 2021 to the business’s tax filing deadline plus applicable extensions.[1] The prior deadline was the last day of the business’s tax year (e.g., Dec. 31 for a calendar year tax year). However, keep in mind the timing of when a salary deferral election must be made has not changed.
  • Salary deferrals can only be made on a prospective basis [Treasury Regulation (Treas. Reg.) 1.401(k)-1(a)(3)]. Therefore, the salary deferral election must be made prior to the receipt of compensation. For self-employed individuals (i.e., sole proprietors and partners), compensation is considered paid on the last day of the business owner’s taxable year. The timing is connected to when the individual’s compensation is “deemed currently available” [see Treas. Reg. § 1.401(k)-1(a)(6)(iii)]. Therefore, a self-employed person has until the end of his or her taxable year to execute a salary deferral election for the plan (e.g., Dec. 31, 2020, for the 2020 tax year). 
  • The definition of compensation for contribution purposes for an unincorporated business owner is unique [IRC 401(c)(2)(A)(I)]. It takes into consideration earned income or net profits from the business which then must be adjusted for self-employment taxes. Please refer to the worksheet for calculating compensation for and contributions to a solo (k) plan for a self-employed individual in Publication 560, Retirement Plans for Small Businesses. A business owner who wants to have a 401(k) plan should work with his or her CPA or tax advisor to determine his or her earned income and maximum contribution for plan purposes.
  • The contribution for an unincorporated business owner to a solo (k) plan with enough earned income could be as high as $57,000 (or $63,500 if he or she turned age 50 or older before the end of the year). For 2021, those limits are $58,000 and $64,500, respectively. 

EXAMPLE

Ryan is a sole proprietor who would like to set up a solo (k) plan effective for 2020. The IRS extended his tax filing deadline for 2020 to May 17, 2021, and if Ryan files for an extension, his extended tax deadline would be Oct. 15, 2021. Therefore, the latest Ryan could potentially set up a solo (k) plan for 2020 would be Oct. 15, 2021. Since Ryan is past the deadline for making a salary deferral election for 2020, however, his contribution would be limited to an employer profit sharing contribution based on his adjusted net business income for 2020. The sooner Ryan sets up the solo (k) for his business, the sooner he will be able to make employee salary deferrals for 2021. 

Conclusion

For self-employed individuals and their tax advisors, there are several special considerations with respect to setting up and contributing to solo (k) plans, including, but not limited to, the deadline for establishing a 401(k) plan, the deadline for making a salary deferral election, and the owner’s compensation for contribution purposes. 

Any information provided is for informational purposes only. It cannot be used for the purposes of avoiding penalties and taxes. Consumers should consult with their tax advisor or attorney regarding their specific situation. 

©2021, Retirement Learning Center, LLC. Used with permission.


[1] Section 201 of the Setting Every Community Up for Retirement Enhancement (SECURE) Act of 2020.

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All comments
Jeffrey Ashendorf
3 years 1 week ago
For an unincorporated business, focusing on “salary deferrals” is actually a red herring. The self-employed individual has no salary deferrals, since they have no salary to defer. They can have contributions that are treated as if they were elective deferrals, such as for purposes of ADP testing, but in a one-participant plan that is irrelevant. In fact, for the vast majority of unincorporated-business “solo 401(k)’s”, they’d be much better served by a simple discretionary profit sharing plan. As a practical matter, the whole contribution is an “elective contribution”, and there is no need to fuss with any of the 401(k) administrative rules. Even for an incorporated businesses, although a sole employee can have genuine salary-reduction contributions, all other things being equal, that actually costs more than a straight profit-sharing plan, since elective contributions remain subject to FICA taxes. So the one situation in which it is actually advantageous for a one-employee business to use a 401(k) plan as opposed to a discretionary profit sharing is where it intends to have sufficient contributions that it can make use of the exclusion of elective contributions from the 25% deduction limitation. But, given the realities of most businesses, either they can’t make use of that, or they just don’t want to.