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36 tagged with "Retirement Plans"

Explore retirement plan options, contribution limits, and strategies for business owners

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SECURE 2.0 Mandatory Auto-Enrollment in 2026: A Compliance Playbook for New 401(k) and 403(b) Plans
·mike

SECURE 2.0 Mandatory Auto-Enrollment in 2026: A Compliance Playbook for New 401(k) and 403(b) Plans

SECURE 2.0 requires new 401(k) and 403(b) plans established after December 29, 2022 to adopt an Eligible Automatic Contribution Arrangement with a 3% default deferral, 1% annual escalation up to a 10–15% cap, QDIA investment, and 90-day permissible withdrawal — with plan document amendments due by December 31, 2026.

retirement-plans
compliance
payroll
employee-benefits
+4
ESOP Repurchase Obligation Accounting: The Hidden Balance Sheet Liability That Sinks Mature ESOPs
·mike

ESOP Repurchase Obligation Accounting: The Hidden Balance Sheet Liability That Sinks Mature ESOPs

A practical guide to ESOP repurchase obligation accounting for closely held companies — how ASC 480-10-S99 classifies redeemable shares as temporary equity, how to fund the obligation with sinking funds, COLI, recycling, and redemption, and the bookkeeping habits that keep plan-year valuations defensible.

accounting
equity-instruments
bookkeeping
retirement-plans
+4
State Auto-IRA Mandates in 2026: CalSavers, Illinois Secure Choice, and OregonSaves Compliance Guide
·mike

State Auto-IRA Mandates in 2026: CalSavers, Illinois Secure Choice, and OregonSaves Compliance Guide

Twenty-two states now require small employers to offer retirement savings or face penalties up to $750 per employee. A practical guide to CalSavers, Illinois Secure Choice, OregonSaves, headcount thresholds, registration deadlines, exemption rules, and the compliance traps that trigger non-compliance notices in 2026.

compliance
payroll
small-business
retirement-savings
+3
Section 414 Controlled Group and Affiliated Service Group Rules: How Multiple Businesses Can Sabotage Your 401(k)
·mike

Section 414 Controlled Group and Affiliated Service Group Rules: How Multiple Businesses Can Sabotage Your 401(k)

Section 414(b), (c), and (m) treat related businesses as one employer for retirement-plan testing. This guide explains controlled-group and affiliated-service-group rules, the spousal and minor-child attribution traps, and the steps multi-business owners should take before opening a 401(k).

retirement-plans
solo-401k
tax-compliance
small-business
+4
The Section 45E Credit: How Small Employers Can Run a New 401(k) at Near-Zero Cost
·mike

The Section 45E Credit: How Small Employers Can Run a New 401(k) at Near-Zero Cost

A new 401(k) can be nearly free for small employers — Section 45E reimburses up to 100% of startup costs for three years plus $1,000 per employee in contribution credits for five years. Here is who qualifies and how to claim it on Form 8881.

tax-credits
retirement-plans
small-business
employee-benefits
+3
Section 45E After SECURE 2.0: How Small Employers Recoup 100% of Pension Plan Startup Costs on Form 8881
·mike

Section 45E After SECURE 2.0: How Small Employers Recoup 100% of Pension Plan Startup Costs on Form 8881

SECURE 2.0 turned Section 45E into a 100% refund of pension plan startup costs—up to $5,000 per year for three years—for employers with 50 or fewer employees, stacked with a per-employee contribution credit worth up to $1,000 and a $500 auto-enrollment credit, all claimed on Form 8881.

tax-credits
retirement-plans
small-business
tax-planning
+4
VEBAs Under Section 501(c)(9): Pre-Funding Employee Benefits Without Tripping Section 419 or 4976
·mike

VEBAs Under Section 501(c)(9): Pre-Funding Employee Benefits Without Tripping Section 419 or 4976

A Voluntary Employees' Beneficiary Association under Section 501(c)(9) lets small and mid-sized employers pre-fund retiree medical, severance, and other welfare benefits tax-free — but Section 419 deduction caps, the 100% Section 4976 excise tax on disqualified benefits, and listed-transaction rules in Notices 95-34 and 2007-83 punish mistakes. Here is how a single-employer VEBA actually works, what it can fund, and the three IRS exams it has to pass every year.

employee-benefits
tax-planning
tax-compliance
small-business
+4
Section 4975 Prohibited Transactions: How Self-Directed IRA and Solo 401(k) Owners Avoid the Disqualified Person Trap
·mike

Section 4975 Prohibited Transactions: How Self-Directed IRA and Solo 401(k) Owners Avoid the Disqualified Person Trap

Section 4975 of the Internal Revenue Code defines disqualified persons and the six categories of forbidden transactions with self-directed IRAs and Solo 401(k)s. Violations trigger a 15 percent annual excise tax — and, for IRAs, deemed distribution of the entire account back to January 1.

ira
solo-401k
retirement-plans
tax-compliance
+3
Solo 401(k) vs. SEP-IRA in 2026: Picking the Self-Employed Retirement Plan That Actually Shelters the Most Income
·mike

Solo 401(k) vs. SEP-IRA in 2026: Picking the Self-Employed Retirement Plan That Actually Shelters the Most Income

A 2026 comparison of solo 401(k) and SEP-IRA plans for the self-employed, with contribution math at $60K, $120K, and $300K of net income, SECURE 2.0 Roth catch-up and super catch-up rules, setup deadlines, and a decision framework for picking the plan that shelters the most income.

solo-401k
sep-ira
retirement-plans
retirement-savings
+4
The Mega Backdoor Roth Playbook: How High Earners Can Funnel an Extra $47,500 Into Tax-Free Retirement Accounts in 2026
·mike

The Mega Backdoor Roth Playbook: How High Earners Can Funnel an Extra $47,500 Into Tax-Free Retirement Accounts in 2026

The mega backdoor Roth routes up to $47,500 of after-tax 401(k) contributions into a Roth bucket for 2026, on top of the standard $24,500 employee deferral, by converting after-tax dollars through an in-plan Roth conversion or in-service distribution to a Roth IRA. The IRS Section 415(c) total cap of $72,000 ($80,000 if age 50+) covers contributions from all sources combined, and converting promptly keeps the taxable earnings drag near zero.

retirement-plans
retirement-savings
tax-planning
personal-finance
+4
Pooled Employer Plans (PEPs): How Small Businesses Share a 401(k) and Cut Costs Under SECURE Act 2.0
·mike

Pooled Employer Plans (PEPs): How Small Businesses Share a 401(k) and Cut Costs Under SECURE Act 2.0

Pooled Employer Plans let unrelated small businesses share a single 401(k) under SECURE Act 2.0, cutting all-in fees from roughly 0.80% to 0.35% and shifting plan-document, investment, and Form 5500 duties to a Pooled Plan Provider while leaving employers with a narrow duty to prudently select and monitor the PPP.

retirement-plans
small-business
tax-credits
fiduciary
+4
Section 457(b) and 457(f) Deferred Compensation Plans: How Nonprofit, Government, and School Employees Stack Pre-Tax Savings on Top of a 403(b) or 401(k)
·mike

Section 457(b) and 457(f) Deferred Compensation Plans: How Nonprofit, Government, and School Employees Stack Pre-Tax Savings on Top of a 403(b) or 401(k)

A detailed 2026 guide to Section 457(b) and 457(f) deferred compensation plans — how public-sector and nonprofit employees can stack a 457(b) on top of a 403(b) or 401(k) for up to $65,000 in deferrals, when the special three-year catch-up reaches $49,000, and how 457(f) vesting can trigger a tax bomb under Section 409A.

retirement-plans
retirement-savings
tax-planning
executive-compensation
+4
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