How Much Can You Contribute to a SIMPLE IRA for 2018?

How Much Can You Contribute to a SIMPLE IRA for 2018_

Source: Kiplinger

This article was originally published on Kiplinger – https://www.kiplinger.com

 

The amount of workers at small businesses can contribute to a SIMPLE IRA for 2018 is unchanged from 2017, but there are ways to boost retirement savings.

A Savings Incentive Match Plan for Employees IRA, or SIMPLE IRA for short, is a retirement plan designed for small businesses with 100 or fewer employees. Though a SIMPLE IRA is an easier and less expensive plan for employers to set up than a traditional 401(k) plan, the amount a worker can save in a SIMPLE IRA is less than a 401(k), too.

2018 SIMPLE IRA Contribution Limits

For 2018, the annual contribution limit for SIMPLE IRAs remains at $12,500, the same as 2017. Workers age 50 or older can make additional catch-up contributions of $3,000, for a total of $15,500. By comparison, workers younger than 50 can salt away as much as $18,500 in a traditional 401(k) for 2018, plus another $6,000 if they’re 50-plus.

SEE ALSO: How Much Can You Contribute to a 401(k) for 2018?

Employee contributions to a SIMPLE IRA are made on a pretax basis, which lowers taxable income. The invested money grows tax-sheltered until you withdraw it, at which time the distributions will be taxed as ordinary income. If you pull money out before age 59½, you face a 10% early-withdrawal penalty on top of taxes. The withdrawal penalty increases to 25% for SIMPLE IRAs if money is pulled out within two years of signing up for the plan.

Unlike some other retirement plans, a SIMPLE IRA doesn’t offer a Roth option, which would allow workers to invest after-tax dollars in the plan and not to be taxed on withdrawals later in retirement.

 

 

Employer Contributions to SIMPLE IRAs

Good news for workers participating in a SIMPLE IRA: Employers must make some form of a contribution to employees’ accounts. An employer can choose to either make a dollar-for-dollar match of up to 3% of a worker’s pay or contribute a flat 2% of compensation, whether the employee contributes or not.

Most employers choose the dollar-for-dollar match of up to 3%, says Ronald Oldano, a certified financial planner and private wealth adviser in Orlando, Fla. However, if an employer has a bad year financially, there’s some wiggle room to lower the employer match to 1% or 2% for two years of a rolling five-year period. For example, a company just starting a SIMPLE IRA can elect to match 1% or 2% of each employee’s salary for the first two calendar years of the plan, but then must ramp up its match to 3% for the next three years. Once that five-year period is over, the employer can again lower its matching contribution.

If your employer is like most and matches dollar-for-dollar up to 3% of pay, make sure you’re contributing at least enough to qualify for the full match.

Also, remember to pick your investments wisely. SIMPLE IRAs can hold a basket of investments, from stocks and bonds to mutual funds and exchange-traded funds. The best investment is one that fits your long-term goals at the right price.

 

 

How SIMPLE IRA Savers Can Build a Bigger Nest Egg

If you’re already stashing away the maximum contribution allowed in your SIMPLE IRA — $12,500 for employees younger than 50 or $15,500 for 50-plus workers — but want to save even more for retirement, consider opening a separate traditional IRA or Roth IRA, suggests Clark Randall, a certified financial planner and founder of Financial Enlightenment, in Dallas.

For 2018, individuals younger than 50 can contribute up to $5,500 to a traditional IRA or Roth IRA. Retirement savers age 50 and up can make an additional $1,000 catch-up contribution. Roth IRAs have income limits. The maximum amount you can contribute to a Roth IRA for 2018 begins to phase out once modified adjusted gross income hits $120,000 for singles ($189,000 if married filing jointly). There’s no tax deduction for Roth IRA contributions. Contributions to a traditional IRA for 2018 are fully tax-deductible as long as income doesn’t exceed $63,000 for singles ($101,000 for joint filers).

SEE ALSO: 13 States That Tax Social Security Retirement Benefits