Skip to main content
February 24, 2024
Solved

401K contribution

  • February 24, 2024
  • 1 reply
  • 0 views

I want to contribute the maximum amount to my self employed individual 401K plan. According to IRS publication 560, it appears I can contribute $22,500 plus $7500 catch-up (I am over 50). Also an additional employer contribution- not sure what this amount is.

My total compensation was $37,012 and my net income was $23,673.

I am trying to enter these amounts into TurboTax and it appears that the maximum amount allowed is $22,000 (not $22,500) and the catchup amount is not allowed. What am I doing wrong?

Best answer by dmertz

$22,000 is the maximum permissible amount of total "additions" to the 401(k), either employee or employer.

1 reply

Employee
February 24, 2024

The maximum that you can contribute is your net profit of $23,673 minus the deductible portion of self-employment taxes, $1,673.  That leaves $22,000 as the maximum permissible 401(k) contribution which would end up being all regular employee deferral or Roth contribution.

 

The fact that it works out to such a round number, exactly $22,000, makes this sound like a homework question.

JeffDIYAuthor
February 25, 2024

Thank you for the information. I did not realize that the contribution was based of business net profits rather gross income. It is truly a coincidence that the number turned out even- I even made a slight adjustment to the profit to double check. The round $22,000 number through me off track- thinking the program had the wrong parameters.

My follow up question is- can I make an additional employer contribution. If so- how much is allowed?

dmertzAnswer
Employee
February 25, 2024

$22,000 is the maximum permissible amount of total "additions" to the 401(k), either employee or employer.