Self-employed professionals in 2026 have three main retirement options: Solo 401(k), SEP-IRA, and Traditional/Roth IRA. The Solo 401(k) allows the highest total contribution because it lets you contribute as both employee and employer; the SEP-IRA is simplest to set up but caps total at employer contributions only; the Traditional/Roth IRA has the lowest limits but pairs with the others. For most solo founders with steady income above $80,000, the Solo 401(k) is the highest-leverage choice. Always verify current contribution limits with the IRS; the figures below are directional for 2026 planning.
Self-employed retirement planning is structurally different from W-2 retirement planning. You don't have an employer match or a default 401(k) plan; you choose the vehicle, you fund both sides of the contribution, and you absorb the administrative responsibility. The flip side is leverage: the contribution limits available to self-employed professionals are significantly higher than what W-2 employees can access.
This pillar covers the three retirement vehicles that matter for self-employed income in 2026, the tax implications of each, and how to layer them strategically.
The Solo 401(k): the highest-leverage option
A Solo 401(k) is a 401(k) plan designed for a single owner-employee (and optionally a spouse). It lets you contribute as both employee and employer:
- Employee elective deferral (2026): up to approximately $23,500 of your net self-employment earnings, or 100% of earned income if lower. An additional catch-up contribution of approximately $7,500 if you are 50 or older.
- Employer profit-sharing contribution (2026): up to 25% of net self-employment earnings (calculated after subtracting half of self-employment tax).
- Combined total cap (2026): approximately $70,000 (under 50) or $77,500 (50+).
The Solo 401(k) supports both pre-tax (Traditional) and after-tax (Roth) employee contributions, plus pre-tax employer contributions. You can also borrow against your Solo 401(k) balance (up to 50% of balance or $50,000, whichever is less). Most major brokerages offer Solo 401(k) plans with low or no administrative fees.
The catch: a Solo 401(k) requires zero W-2 employees other than yourself and your spouse. If you hire a single full-time non-spouse employee, you lose eligibility for the Solo 401(k) and must convert to a traditional 401(k) plan with full ERISA compliance.
The SEP-IRA: simplest setup, lower ceiling for the same income
The Simplified Employee Pension IRA (SEP-IRA) is the easiest self-employed retirement vehicle to set up. You can establish and fund a SEP-IRA up to the tax filing deadline (with extensions, October 15). The contribution limit is straightforward:
- Up to 25% of net self-employment earnings (after subtracting half of self-employment tax).
- Combined cap of approximately $70,000 (2026), same as the Solo 401(k) total cap.
For the same net self-employment income, a SEP-IRA usually contributes less than a Solo 401(k) because it only has the employer side. To max a SEP-IRA at $70,000, you'd need ~$280,000 in net self-employment income. To max a Solo 401(k) at $70,000, you'd need roughly $186,000 in net self-employment income (because the $23,500 employee deferral is on top of the 25% employer side).
Pick the SEP-IRA if you want minimal setup, no annual filing requirement (Solo 401(k) plans with balances over $250,000 must file Form 5500-EZ), or if you have current or expected non-spouse employees (SEP-IRA requires you to contribute the same percentage to all eligible employees).
The Traditional and Roth IRA: small but always useful
Every self-employed professional should fund a Traditional or Roth IRA in addition to their primary retirement vehicle. Limits for 2026:
- Up to approximately $7,000 (under 50) or $8,000 (50+) per year.
- Traditional IRA contributions are deductible if you don't have a workplace retirement plan covering you; deduction phases out at higher incomes if you do.
- Roth IRA contributions are not deductible but withdrawals in retirement are tax-free. Phase-outs apply at incomes above approximately $150,000 (single) or $236,000 (married filing jointly) for 2026.
For high-income self-employed professionals, the backdoor Roth IRA strategy (non-deductible Traditional IRA contribution converted to Roth) bypasses the Roth income phase-out. This requires no other pre-tax IRA balances to work cleanly (the pro-rata rule applies).
The Roth Solo 401(k): the under-used optimization
Most Solo 401(k) providers now offer a Roth version for the employee elective deferral side. You can split your $23,500 employee contribution between Traditional (pre-tax) and Roth (after-tax) in any proportion. Roth makes sense if you expect to be in the same or a higher tax bracket in retirement than today.
For solo founders in their 20s or 30s with growing income trajectories, Roth contributions today are often more valuable than the equivalent tax deduction today because the bracket spread compounds over decades. For older solo founders near peak earnings, Traditional usually wins.
Stacking the vehicles for maximum tax-advantaged savings
The most aggressive self-employed retirement strategy for high earners stacks multiple vehicles:
- Max the Solo 401(k) employee deferral ($23,500 in 2026), split Traditional/Roth based on bracket.
- Max the Solo 401(k) employer profit-sharing contribution (up to 25% of net SE earnings, with the combined total capped at $70,000).
- Max a Traditional IRA ($7,000) or do a backdoor Roth if income exceeds Roth limits.
- If you have a high-deductible health plan, max your HSA ($4,300 individual / $8,550 family for 2026, plus $1,000 catch-up at 55+). HSAs are triple tax-advantaged and act as a retirement vehicle after 65.
The total tax-advantaged savings opportunity for a high-earning solo founder in 2026 can exceed $85,000 between these vehicles. The deduction value alone (Traditional contributions only) often exceeds $20,000 in federal tax savings.
When the cash flow doesn't support maxing
Most self-employed professionals don't have $70,000 to put into retirement in any given year. The pragmatic approach:
- Target 20% of net self-employment income going to retirement, allocated across vehicles based on tax situation.
- If choosing one: start with the Roth IRA (no required minimum distributions, withdrawals flexible) or the Traditional IRA (immediate tax deduction).
- Add a SEP-IRA once income reaches $75,000+ (the 25% employer side adds meaningfully).
- Upgrade to Solo 401(k) once income exceeds $150,000 (employee deferral plus employer side becomes worthwhile).
The mistake to avoid: not contributing because you can't max. Even $200/month into a Roth IRA started at 30 compounds to over $500,000 by 65 at historical market returns.
The HSA as a stealth retirement vehicle for self-employed
For self-employed professionals enrolled in a High Deductible Health Plan (HDHP), the Health Savings Account is one of the most powerful and most under-used retirement vehicles. The HSA has triple tax advantages: contributions are deductible, growth is tax-free, and withdrawals for qualified medical expenses are tax-free at any age. After age 65, withdrawals for non-medical expenses are taxed as ordinary income (similar to a Traditional IRA) with no penalty.
2026 HSA contribution limits: $4,300 (individual HDHP coverage) or $8,550 (family HDHP coverage), with an additional $1,000 catch-up at age 55+. The HSA is the only retirement-adjacent vehicle that gets the deduction AND the tax-free growth AND tax-free withdrawals.
The strategy that compounds dramatically: max the HSA each year and pay current medical expenses out of pocket rather than using HSA funds. Save the receipts. In retirement, withdraw HSA funds reimbursing yourself for those decades-old medical expenses (no statute of limitations on this), pulling tax-free dollars from an account that grew tax-free for 30+ years. For solo founders in their 30s and 40s with HDHP coverage, this strategy can build $200,000-$500,000 in tax-free retirement funds.
Defined benefit plans for high-earning solo founders
Above approximately $300,000 net self-employment income, a Defined Benefit (DB) plan can allow contributions far exceeding the $70,000 Solo 401(k) cap. DB plans target a specific retirement benefit and calculate the annual contribution required to fund it. For solo founders in their 50s with consistent high income, annual deductible contributions can exceed $200,000.
The trade-offs are real: DB plans require an actuary, annual filings, and a commitment to fund the plan even in down years (with some flexibility). Setup costs are typically $2,000-$5,000 plus $1,500-$3,000 annual administration. The plan is harder to unwind than a Solo 401(k) once established.
DB plans make sense for solo founders with: net SE income consistently above $300,000 for at least 3-5 years, a desire to maximize current-year tax deductions, and a planned retirement window within 5-15 years. Below that income or with less stability, the Solo 401(k) is usually the better vehicle.
Common mistakes that wreck self-employed retirement plans
Four patterns we see repeatedly:
- Treating retirement contributions as discretionary. Solo founders skip retirement contributions in lean years to preserve cash. The math: a $10,000 contribution skipped at age 35 costs approximately $107,000 of retirement value at 65 (assuming 7% real returns over 30 years). Treat retirement as a fixed monthly bill, not a year-end residual.
- Picking the wrong vehicle for the income level. Choosing a SEP-IRA at $200,000+ net SE income leaves five-figure annual contribution capacity on the table that a Solo 401(k) would capture. Choosing a Solo 401(k) at $40,000 income wastes the administrative overhead.
- Forgetting the spouse. A spouse working in the business can be paid a reasonable W-2 salary and make their own Solo 401(k) contributions, effectively doubling the household's tax-advantaged savings capacity.
- Mixing personal and business retirement. Some solo founders contribute to retirement vehicles from personal funds while leaving business cash idle. The deduction is the same but the cash flow gymnastics create unnecessary complexity. Fund retirement directly from business cash flow.
Coordinating retirement contributions with quarterly taxes
Retirement contributions reduce your taxable self-employment income, which reduces your quarterly estimated tax obligation. The interaction matters for cash flow planning.
The practical pattern: estimate your retirement contributions in January for the upcoming year, then back into your quarterly estimated tax payments using net-of-retirement income. If you target $50,000 in Solo 401(k) contributions on $200,000 net SE income, your quarterly estimates can be calculated on $150,000 of taxable income (rough cut). This reduces the cash sent to the IRS each quarter and leaves more in the operating account for the actual retirement contributions.
The risk: if you commit to $50,000 in retirement contributions but only fund $20,000, you'll underpay quarterly estimates and face penalties. The retirement contribution commitment must be realistic and made.
Required Minimum Distributions and self-employed retirement
Traditional IRAs, Solo 401(k)s (Traditional side), and SEP-IRAs are all subject to Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs) starting at age 73 per SECURE 2.0 Act; the start age may increase to 75 in future years for younger cohorts. Roth IRAs have no RMDs during the owner's lifetime. Roth Solo 401(k) contributions used to have RMDs but were exempted by SECURE 2.0 effective 2024.
The RMD calculation: account balance on December 31 of the prior year divided by the IRS life expectancy table factor for your age. At 73 the factor is roughly 26.5, meaning the first RMD is approximately 3.8% of the balance. The factor decreases each year, increasing the required percentage.
The penalty for missing an RMD was reduced by SECURE 2.0 from 50% of the missed amount to 25% (or 10% if corrected within two years). Still meaningful; do not miss an RMD.
For self-employed retirees: the RMD must be calculated and taken from each account separately, except that multiple Traditional IRAs can be aggregated for the RMD calculation (you can take the combined RMD from any one of them). Solo 401(k) RMDs cannot be aggregated with IRA RMDs.
For solo founders with substantial investment portfolios outside retirement accounts, a Securities-Backed Line of Credit (SBLOC) can provide flexible liquidity without selling assets and triggering taxable gains. See SBLOC rates by broker 2026 on our sister site Clarivian for current rates across major US brokers, or pledged asset line of credit 2026 for a deeper explanation of how SBLOC structures work.
FAQ
What's the Solo 401(k) contribution limit for 2026?
For 2026 the Solo 401(k) total limit is approximately $70,000 (under 50) or $77,500 (50+), split between an employee elective deferral (up to ~$23,500 in 2026) and an employer profit-sharing contribution of 25% of net self-employment earnings. Verify exact limits at irs.gov; the IRS adjusts these annually for inflation.
Can I have both a Solo 401(k) and an IRA?
Yes. They are separate retirement vehicles with separate limits. Many self-employed professionals max the Solo 401(k) and also contribute to a Traditional or Roth IRA.
When is the deadline to open and fund a Solo 401(k)?
You can fund a Solo 401(k) up to the tax filing deadline (April 15) of the following year, plus extensions. The plan typically must be ESTABLISHED by December 31 of the contribution year, though the SECURE Act expanded this for some structures. Verify with your plan provider.
SEP-IRA vs Solo 401(k): which should I choose?
Choose Solo 401(k) for highest contribution limit, Roth options, or loan access. Choose SEP-IRA for simplest setup or if you have non-spouse employees you'd need to cover.
Sources to verify
Self-employed retirement plan rules change annually. Verify the following before relying on specific dollar amounts: IRS Solo 401(k) overview for current contribution limits, IRS SEP-IRA overview for SEP-IRA rules, IRS IRA contribution limits for Traditional and Roth IRA caps, IRS Publication 560 Retirement Plans for Small Business for the comprehensive reference, and DOL retirement plan startup credit guidance for tax credits on plan setup costs.
Disclaimer
This guide provides general information about self-employed retirement planning for educational purposes. Contribution limits, eligibility thresholds, and tax treatment change frequently as the IRS adjusts for inflation and Congress amends retirement legislation. The dollar amounts referenced here reflect 2026 projections; verify all figures with the IRS or a qualified tax professional before making contribution decisions. The interaction between retirement contributions, self-employment tax, the QBI deduction, and state tax rules creates planning complexity that justifies professional CPA consultation for high earners.