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Updated January 2026 — 2026 contribution limits

Retirement Accounts for Self-Employed Workers 2026: Complete Comparison

Self-employed workers have access to some of the most powerful retirement accounts available — often with higher contribution limits than employees can access through a workplace plan. This guide compares the SEP-IRA, Solo 401(k), and SIMPLE IRA to help you choose the right account for your situation.

Feature SEP-IRA Solo 401(k) SIMPLE IRA
2026 Employee Limit N/A (employer only) $23,500 $16,500
2026 Total Limit $70,000 $70,000 $16,500 + match
Catch-up (age 50+) None +$7,500 +$3,500
Deadline to Open Tax filing deadline December 31 October 1
Employees Allowed Yes No (except spouse) Yes (up to 100)
Roth Option No Yes No
Complexity Simple Moderate Moderate

SEP-IRA (Simplified Employee Pension)

The SEP-IRA is the most popular retirement account among self-employed workers and small business owners — and for good reason. It is easy to set up, has high contribution limits, and offers complete flexibility on when and how much you contribute.

2026 Limit
$70,000
or 25% of net SE income
Catch-up (50+)
None
No catch-up provision
Deadline
Tax Filing
Incl. extensions (Oct 15)

Key SEP-IRA Rules

  • Contribution limit: The lesser of $70,000 (2026) or 25% of your net self-employment compensation.
  • Net SE compensation: For sole proprietors, this is not simply 25% of Schedule C profit. After the SE tax adjustment, your effective contribution rate is approximately 18.59% of net profit.
  • No Roth option: All SEP-IRA contributions are pre-tax (traditional). Roth SEP-IRAs exist in law but are rarely offered by custodians.
  • Employees: If you have eligible employees, you must contribute the same percentage of compensation for them as you contribute for yourself.
  • Setup simplicity: Open at any major brokerage with just your SSN (for sole proprietors) or EIN. Fill out Form 5305-SEP — keep it for records, do not file with IRS.
  • Deadline: You can open AND contribute up until your tax filing deadline, including extensions (up to October 15 with extension).
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Quick Estimate: Multiply your net Schedule C profit by 18.59% to estimate your maximum SEP-IRA contribution. (For example: $100,000 net profit × 18.59% ≈ $18,590 max contribution.) For a precise calculation, see our SEP-IRA 2026 Guide.

Solo 401(k) — Best for High Earners

The Solo 401(k) — also called a one-participant 401(k) or individual 401(k) — is the most powerful retirement account for self-employed individuals, particularly for those who want to maximize retirement savings at lower income levels.

Employee Contribution (2026)
$23,500
+ $7,500 catch-up if age 50+
+ $11,250 extra catch-up if age 60–63
Employer Contribution (2026)
25%
of net SE compensation as employer contributions, up to $70,000 total

How the Two-Part Contribution Works

The Solo 401(k) allows you to contribute in two capacities — as both employee and employer of your own business:

Example — $60,000 net profit, age 45:
Employee contribution: $23,500 (up to full employee limit)
Employer contribution: $60,000 × 18.59% ≈ $11,154
Total Solo 401(k): $34,654
A SEP-IRA would only allow ~$11,154 at this income level.

Key Solo 401(k) Rules

  • No employees: You must have no employees other than yourself (and your spouse). If you hire even one employee, you lose eligibility for the Solo 401(k).
  • Roth option: Many Solo 401(k) plans offer a Roth option — contributions go in after-tax, but grow tax-free and are withdrawn tax-free in retirement.
  • Deadline to open: The plan must be established by December 31 of the tax year (unlike SEP-IRA). Contributions can be made until the filing deadline.
  • Form 5500-EZ: Required annually once plan assets exceed $250,000.
  • Loan provision: Some Solo 401(k) plans allow loans against the balance — not available with IRAs.

SIMPLE IRA

The SIMPLE IRA (Savings Incentive Match Plan for Employees) is designed for small businesses with up to 100 employees. It is a good option if you have employees and want a straightforward plan that does not require the administrative complexity of a full 401(k).

Employee Limit
$16,500
+$3,500 catch-up (50+)
Employer Match
3%
of compensation required
Setup Deadline
Oct 1
of the tax year

Key SIMPLE IRA Rules

  • Eligibility: Businesses with 100 or fewer employees who earned at least $5,000 in any two prior years.
  • Mandatory employer match: You must match up to 3% of each eligible employee's compensation, or make a 2% non-elective contribution for all eligible employees.
  • Lower limits: The $16,500 employee limit is lower than the Solo 401(k) employee limit of $23,500.
  • Early withdrawal penalty: Withdrawals within the first 2 years of participation are subject to a 25% penalty (versus 10% for other IRAs).
  • No Roth option: SIMPLE IRAs are traditional (pre-tax) only.
  • Must be established by October 1 of the year it takes effect.

Comparison: Which Account Is Right for You?

Use this decision guide to determine the best retirement account for your situation:

The SEP-IRA is the easiest to open and maintain. No plan documents, no annual filings under $250,000, and you can open it as late as October 15 (with extension) for the prior tax year. Best for solo freelancers who want to start saving without administrative overhead.

At income levels below ~$140,000, the Solo 401(k) allows much higher contributions than the SEP-IRA because of the employee contribution component ($23,500). At higher income levels (above ~$280,000), both plans allow similar total contributions. The Solo 401(k) is almost always the better choice for someone earning $50,000–$200,000 who wants to maximize retirement savings.

The Solo 401(k) requires that you have no employees (other than a spouse). If you have staff, the SEP-IRA is the simplest option — but you must contribute the same percentage for all eligible employees. The SIMPLE IRA is a good structured option for small teams, with mandatory employer matching built in as a benefit for employees.

If you prefer after-tax Roth contributions (tax-free growth and withdrawals in retirement), only the Solo 401(k) offers this option among the three plans discussed here. SEP-IRAs and SIMPLE IRAs are traditional (pre-tax) only. You can also open a separate Roth IRA alongside any of these plans, subject to income limits.

Break-Even Comparison: Solo 401(k) vs SEP-IRA

Net Profit SEP-IRA Max Solo 401(k) Max Solo 401(k) Advantage
$30,000 $5,577 $26,082 +$20,505
$60,000 $11,154 $34,654 +$23,500
$100,000 $18,590 $42,090 +$23,500
$200,000 $37,180 $60,680 +$23,500
$376,000+ $70,000 $70,000 Equal at max

Estimates use 2026 limits. Solo 401(k) includes full $23,500 employee contribution plus employer contribution of ~18.59% of net profit. Actual amounts may vary based on exact SE income calculations.

Tax Benefits of Self-Employed Retirement Accounts

Self-employed retirement accounts offer significant tax advantages that can dramatically reduce your current tax bill while building wealth for retirement.

Traditional Contributions (Pre-Tax)
  • Deducted from your income in the contribution year
  • Reduces both federal and state income tax
  • Investments grow tax-deferred
  • Withdrawals in retirement taxed as ordinary income
  • Best when current tax rate > expected retirement rate
Roth Contributions (After-Tax — Solo 401(k) only)
  • No deduction in contribution year
  • Investments grow completely tax-free
  • Qualified withdrawals are 100% tax-free
  • No Required Minimum Distributions in Roth 401(k)s
  • Best when current rate < expected retirement rate
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Important: Retirement contributions reduce your income tax but do not reduce your self-employment tax. SE tax is calculated on your net Schedule C profit before retirement deductions.

Real Savings Example

Net Schedule C profit $80,000
Solo 401(k) employee contribution − $20,000
Taxable income reduction $20,000
Federal income tax saved (22% bracket) $4,400
State income tax saved (est. 5%) $1,000
Total immediate tax savings $5,400

How to Open a Self-Employed Retirement Account

Opening a self-employed retirement account is straightforward at any major brokerage. All the following offer free accounts with no ongoing account fees:

Brokerage SEP-IRA Solo 401(k) SIMPLE IRA
Fidelity ✅ Free ✅ Free ✅ Free
Vanguard ✅ Free ✅ Free ✅ Free
Schwab ✅ Free ✅ Free ✅ Free
TD Ameritrade ✅ Free ✅ Free ✅ Free

What You Need

  • SEP-IRA: SSN (sole proprietor) or EIN. Complete Form 5305-SEP (the plan document — keep it, do not file with the IRS). Fund the account by your tax filing deadline.
  • Solo 401(k): EIN required (sole proprietors can apply for an EIN free at IRS.gov). The brokerage will provide plan documents. Must be set up by December 31 of the tax year.
  • SIMPLE IRA: EIN required. Use IRS Form 5304-SIMPLE or 5305-SIMPLE. Must notify employees and establish by October 1 of the tax year.
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Frequently Asked Questions

Generally no — not for the same self-employment income. The total contributions across all defined contribution plans for a single business cannot exceed the $70,000 annual limit. However, if you have two separate businesses, you may potentially maintain both. This situation is complex and depends on whether the businesses are related. Consult a CPA or retirement specialist before attempting this.

No. Contributions to a SEP-IRA, Solo 401(k), or SIMPLE IRA reduce your federal (and usually state) income tax only. They do not reduce your self-employment tax. SE tax is calculated on your net Schedule C profit before retirement deductions are applied. The retirement deduction goes on Schedule 1, reducing your AGI and taxable income — but it does not change your SE tax calculation.

For the 2026 tax year, you can open a SEP-IRA and make contributions up until your tax filing deadline for that return: April 15, 2027 for most taxpayers. If you file an extension, you get until October 15, 2027. This is the most flexible deadline among self-employed retirement accounts — you can wait until you know your final profit for the year before deciding how much to contribute.

Yes, if your spouse earns compensation from your business (i.e., they perform services and are paid). In that case, both you and your spouse can each make employee contributions ($23,500 each in 2026, plus catch-up if applicable) plus employer contributions based on each person's compensation. This can effectively double the household contribution to the plan — a significant advantage for spouse-owned businesses.

Excess contributions are subject to a 6% excise tax each year until corrected. To fix the problem, you must withdraw the excess contributions (plus any earnings on them) before your tax filing deadline. If you discover an over-contribution after filing, contact your plan custodian immediately — they can walk you through the correction process. Avoid this by calculating your exact limit before contributing, especially for SEP-IRA where the calculation is tied to net SE income.

Educational Use Only: This guide provides general information about retirement account options for self-employed workers in 2026. Contribution limits and rules change annually. Consult a qualified CPA, financial advisor, or tax professional before making retirement account decisions.