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July 12, 2020
Question

SEP IRA Max Contributions for 2019

  • July 12, 2020
  • 1 reply
  • 0 views

Both my wife and I own our own businesses.  As yet, we haven't put any money into our SEP IRAs for 2019, so in doing taxes, I chose "Maximize Contribution to Individual IRA" to see what we could add by July 15.  TurboTax has come back with pretty high numbers that seem surprising - over 50K for me, and $32K for her.  This seems to be a combination of 20% x our self-employment earnings, plus allowable catch up of $6K ea., plus Allowable elective deferrals of $19K ea.  This seems like a lot, esp. compared to what we maximized for 2018.  Is this accurate - i.e. can we actually put that much into a SEP IRA and take that as a deduction?  TurboTax is including this total as part of Income Adjustments in Schedule 1, Line 15, which is lowering our tax significantly.  Just wondering if this is correct?  If I remove "Maximize Contribution to Individual IRA", but keep it for SEP IRA only, it is saying the max amount if $26K for me, and $7K for her.  A bit baffled.

1 reply

July 12, 2020

No, elective deferrals (including the catch up) are NOT allowed for a regular SEP (if you have an older SAR-SEP, those have different rules).  A SEP is limited to the 20% of net earning from self employment (after adjustments, it is less than 20% of your profit).

 

The "maximize" button seems to be maximizing a 401(k), which does allow elective deferrals (including the catch up).

rdg6Author
July 12, 2020

Thanks you for the response.  Does that mean I could put the maximum into the SEP, and the remainder that is being shown could go into a Traditional IRA?  Or I can only maximize the SEP?

Thank you.

July 12, 2020

A Traditional IRA is limited to $6000 each ($7000 if you are age 50 or older).  Whether or not it is deductible or not depends on what your income is (a SEP is an employer plan, so that could limit it){.

https://www.irs.gov/retirement-plans/2019-ira-deduction-limits-effect-of-modified-agi-on-deduction-if-you-are-covered-by-a-retirement-plan-at-work

 

If you are interested in larger retirement contributions for 2020, you may look into a 401(k) plan.