When planning for retirement you should
fully fund the tax-deductible and tax-deferred savings plans that
are available to you as an individual and through your employer. First on
the list should be plans where the employer makes contributions and/or
matches your contributions. Next should be any IRA’s that you qualify
for. As you climb the investment pyramid, it becomes increasingly important
to seek help from an expert.
Definitions
- Roth Accounts: Designated Roth contributions are elective contributions that, unlike
pre-tax elective contributions, are currently includible in gross income. However,
the investments grow tax free and earnings may be withdrawn tax free after age 59 1/2 as
long as the account has been open 5 years, or if you are disabled or after death.
See
IRS Roth Account Brochure PDF.
- Simple Plans (simple IRA, simple 401k): Are plans for the small business owners
with 100 or fewer employees with no other retirement plans in place. See
Simple
IRA or Simple
401(k)
The following is a summary of retirement plans:
-
401(k) - A section 401(k) plan is a type of tax-qualified deferred
compensation plan for businesses in which an employee can elect to have the
employer contribute a portion of his or her cash wages to the plan on a
pre-tax basis. These deferred wages (commonly referred to as elective
deferrals) are not subject to income tax withholding at the time of
deferral, and they are not reflected on your Form 1040 since they were
not included in the taxable wages on your Form W2. However, they are
included as wages subject to social security, Medicare, and federal
unemployment taxes.
See 401(k)
-
The maximum employee contribution is $15,500 for 2008 and the Cost of
Living Adjustment (COLA) for 2009 is $16,500. The maximum Employee plus
Employer contribution is the lesser of 25% of compensation or $46,000
in 2008 and the COLA for 2009 is $49,000.
- The maximum compensation that can be considered is $230,000 in 2008 and the COLA for 2009 is $245,000.
-
Catch-up - if the employee is aged 50 and older, an additional
"catch-up" contribution is allowed. The additional contribution amount
is $5,000 for 2008 and the COLA for 2009 is $5,500.
- Withdrawals of contributions and earnings are subject to federal and
most state income taxes.
-
Simple 401(k) - A section Simple 401(k) plan is a type of
tax-qualified deferred compensation plan for small businesses with less
than 100 employees in which an employee can elect to have the employer
contribute a portion of his or her cash wages to the plan on a pre-tax
basis. These deferred wages (commonly referred to as elective deferrals)
are not subject to income tax withholding at the time of deferral, and
they are not reflected on your Form 1040 since they were not included in
the taxable wages on your Form W2. However, they are included as wages
subject to social security, Medicare, and federal unemployment taxes.
Under a SIMPLE 401(k) Plan, an employee can elect to defer some
compensation, but unlike a regular 401 (k) plan, the employer must make
either a matching contribution up to 3% of each employee's pay, or a
non-elective contribution of 2% of each eligible employee's pay.
See Simple 401K
- The maximum employee contribution is $10,500 for 2008 and the COLA for 2009 is $11,500.
-
The maximum Employee plus Employer contribution is the lesser of 25% of
compensation or $46,000 in 2008 and the COLA for 2009 is $49,000.
- The maximum compensation that can be considered is $230,000 in 2008 and the COLA for 2009 is $245,000.
-
Catch-up - if the employee is aged 50 and older, an additional
"catch-up" contribution is allowed. The additional contribution amount
is $2,500 for 2008 and the COLA for 2009 is $2,500 (no Increase).
- Withdrawals of contributions and earnings are subject to federal and most
state income taxes.
-
Roth 401(k) - Business retirement account made with after tax dollars.
- The maximum employee contribution is $15,500 for 2008 and the COLA for 2009 is $16,500.
-
The maximum Employee plus Employer contribution is the lesser of 25% of
compensation or $46,000 in 2008 and the COLA for 2009 is $49,000. The
maximum compensation that can be considered is $230,000 in 2008 and the
COLA for 2009 is $245,000.
- Catch-up - if the
employee is aged 50 and older, an additional "catch-up" contribution is
allowed. The additional contribution amount is $5,000 2008 and the COLA
for 2009 is $5,500.
- The investments grow tax free and earnings may be withdrawn tax free
after 59 ½ as long as the account has been open 5 years, or if you are
disabled or after death. See
IRS Roth Account Brochure PDF.
-
403(b) - is sponsored by tax-exempt institutions such as Public
Schools, Colleges or Universities or Charitable entities tax-exempt under
section 501(c)(3) of the Code. Basically, 403(b) plans are similar to
401(k) plans. Just as with a 401(k) plan, a 403(b) plan lets employees
defer some of their salary. In this case, their deferred money goes to a
403(b) plan sponsored by the employer. This deferred money generally does
not get taxed by the federal government or by most state governments until
distributed.
- The maximum employee contribution is $15,500 for 2008 and the COLA for 2009 is $16,500.
-
The maximum Employee plus Employer contribution is the lesser of 100%
of compensation or $46,000 in 2008 and the COLA for 2009 is $49,000.
- The maximum compensation that can be considered is $230,000 in 2008 and the COLA for 2009 is $245,000.
-
There is also a "lifetime catch-up provision" available only to
employees with 15 or more years of service with a qualified
organization. This provision may allow you to increase your salary
deferral contributions above your basic salary deferral limit by up to
$3,000 per year, up to a lifetime limit of $15,000. To qualify, you
must be a long-term employee who has contributed on average less than
$5,000 a year to your 403(b) plan. The 403(b) Lifetime Catch-up is
called the "15-year rule" in IRS Publication 571.
See IRS Publication 571.
-
SEP-IRA - Under a SEP, the employer makes contributions to traditional
IRAs (SEP-IRAs) set up for each eligible employee. A SEP is funded solely
by employer contributions. Each employee is always 100% vested in (or, has
ownership of) all money in his or her SEP-IRA. See
IRS Publication.
- To establish a SEP
- The business can be any size
- Adopt
Form 5305-SEP, a SEP prototype or an
individually designed plan document.
- Cannot have any other retirement plan (except another SEP) if
the model Form 5305-SEP is used to establish the SEP.
- Total contributions to each employee's SEP-IRA cannot exceed the
lesser of $46,000 for 2008 and the COLA for 2009 is $49,000, or 25% of pay.
-
Simple-IRA - is a tax-deferred retirement plan provided by sole
proprietors or small businesses (fewer than 100 employees) who do not
maintain or contribute to any other retirement plan. See
IRS Publication. If a SIMPLE IRA plan is adopted, employees can elect
to defer part of their salary. Each employee is immediately 100% vested
in (or "owns") all contributions to his or her SIMPLE IRA. Contribution
limits are:
-
Employee - $10,500 in 2008 and the COLA for 2009 is $11,500. If the
employee is age 50 or over, a "catch-up" contribution is also allowed.
This additional catch-up contribution amount is: 2008 and 2009 - $2,500.
- Employer - Generally, a dollar-for-dollar match up to 3% of pay or a 2% non-elective contribution for each eligible employee.
-
Keogh - A Keogh plan is a tax-deferred retirement plan designed to
help self-employed workers or individuals who earn self-employed income
establish a retirement savings program. There are two different types of
Keogh plans, the Profit Sharing
(see IRS
Publication) and the Money
Purchase plan
(see IRS
Publication). Under Keogh regulations, the Money
Purchase contribution is mandatory; you must make the same percentage
contribution each year, whether you have profits or not. The Profit
Sharing contribution can change each year. Individuals can contribute to
both types of plans in the same year.
- The contribution limits are the lesser of 25% of compensation or $46,000 in 2008 and the COLA for 2009 is $49,000.
-
Traditional IRA
- Individual Retirement Account, is a tax-deferred investment and
savings account that acts as a personal retirement fund for people with
employment income. The maximum contribution is $5000 annually in 2008
and 2009 with an additional $1000 if over 50 years old. There are two
primary types of IRAs: Regular and Spousal. Regular IRAs are designed
for individuals with earned income, while Spousal IRAs are designed for
married couples in which only one of the spouses has earned income. You
have the option of investing in a wide variety of investments. (
See IRS Publication 590).
For Regular and Spousal IRAs:
Your contribution is fully tax-deductible if:
- Neither you nor your spouse participated in a company-sponsored
retirement plan.
-
You contributed to a company-sponsored retirement plan: are single and
earned less than $53,000 in 2008 and $55,000 in 2009 or married and
filing jointly and had a joint income of less than $85,00 in 2008 and
$89,000 in 2009.
Your contribution is partially tax-deductible if:
- You contributed to a company-sponsored retirement plan: are single and
earned $53,000-$63,000 in 2008 and $55,000-$65,000 in 2009 or married
and filing jointly and had a joint income of $85,000-$105,000 in 2008 and $89,000-$109,000 in 2009.
Your contribution is not tax-deductible if:
- You contributed to a company-sponsored retirement plan: either
single and earned more than $63,000 in 2008 and $65,000 in 2009 or
married and filing jointly and had a joint income of more than
$105,000 in 2008 and $109,000 in 2009.
-
Roth IRA - is an individual retirement account with a maximum contribution
of:
- For 2008 and beyond the maximum contribution is $5,000 with
additional $1,000 contribution.
- Contributions to a Roth IRA are not tax-deductible.
However, the
investments grow tax free and earnings may be withdrawn tax free after
59 ½ as long as the account has been open 5 years.
- Eligibility for contributions to a Roth IRA is phased out for married
couples filing jointly with an AGI between $159,000 and $169,000 for 2008, $166,000 and $176,000 for 2009 and
single individuals with an AGI between $101,000 and 116,000 for 2008, $105,000 and $120,000 for 2009.
- See
IRS Publication 590
To obtain a more detailed explanation of the various retirement plans, you can visit the irs website at
www.irs.gov.