Just confirming. I have not had this in a while. A self employed person can contribute to a Simple IRA with catch up provision in the amount of $16,500 for 2021. Are they also allowed to contribute 3% of their Schedule C earnings?
This article covers it:
https://www.irs.gov/retirement-plans/simple-ira-tips-for-the-sole-proprietor
You are asking about the 3% that is "employer" match.
The thing I wanted to confirm is that the $16,500(which includes catch up) is not the maximum that can be deducted on the tax return. You can take the $16,500 plus the 3% matching?
What is confusing me is that there is an employer contribution mentioned(the 3%), but the employer is the sole proprietor contributing the $16,500.
Follow that link, read that article, especially follow the math at the part for, "Your total plan contribution is $5,200."
Got it. I wish they would give an example of someone who maxes it out. That would make it much clearer, in my opinion.
Did you search the web? I used google:
sole proprietorship simple ira
and got...
https://www.hurdlr.com/deductions/simple-ira-tax-limits
"However, unlike a traditional IRA, the contribution and deduction limit for a SIMPLE IRA is higher, generally $14,000 (in 2022), plus an additional employer contribution."
...
"Lombardi is a 45-year-old sole proprietor real estate agent who has been in business for four years. During the year he earned $95,000 of commission income from his sole proprietorship and reported $87,373 ($95,000 x 92.35%) on line 4 of his Schedule SE. Lombardi chose to make the maximum elective deferral of $14,000 plus an employer match of 3% of his compensation, or $2,621 ($87,373 x 3%) into his SIMPLE IRA. When he prepares his taxes, he would deduct $16,621 (elective deferral plus employer match) on line 28 of his Form 1040."
Perfect. I did search google, but didnt find that. Thank you.
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