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March 12, 2023
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I'm a self-employed sole proprietor, calculating my allowable SEP IRA contribution for 2022. How much ca I really contribute?

  • March 12, 2023
  • 2 replies
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I've never had a SEP IRA before. I read once place that I can contribute up to 25% of my modified adjusted gross income for 2022 to a SEP RIA. Another place, I read it's only 20%. I am not sure whether I can contribute 25% as my own employer, and another 20% as my own employee, or what. What percentage actually applies to me? Percentage of what? MAGI?
Best answer by MAK70

You can contribute up to 25%.

 

When figuring the contribution for your own SEP-IRA, compensation is your net earnings from self-employment, less the following deductions:

  • one-half of your self-employment tax and
  • contributions to your own SEP-IRA.

See SEP Contribution Limits (including grandfathered SARSEPs)

2 replies

MAK70Answer
March 12, 2023

You can contribute up to 25%.

 

When figuring the contribution for your own SEP-IRA, compensation is your net earnings from self-employment, less the following deductions:

  • one-half of your self-employment tax and
  • contributions to your own SEP-IRA.

See SEP Contribution Limits (including grandfathered SARSEPs)

geercomAuthor
March 12, 2023

Thank you. I also have a traditional IRA. Is it true that if I have a traditional IRA, I can't contribute to a SEP IRA? Or what are the contribution and tax deduction restrictions in this case?

March 12, 2023

You can contribute to both but since you won’t get a deduction for your traditional IRA contribution you might want to consider a ROTH.  The contribution limit for SEP and IRA are independent of another so one doesn’t affect the other. 

March 12, 2023

You contribute as an employer. That’s important to recognize because that means you have an employer requirement plan and can’t get a deduction if you contribute to a traditional IRA. TurboTax will calculate the maximum allowed SEP contribution for you.