S Corp SEP IRA Contribution Max for Self Employed Financial Advisor

I’ve been told by a CPA that the max SEP contribution for a Financial Advisor (S Corp election) is 25% of W-2 wages (“reasonable compensation” PLUS 25% of the net business income (Box one of the K-1), and that this is because the 1099 he receives is in the name of the Financial Advisor himself, not the business name. Does this seem right?



First, an S-Corp’s 2% shareholder-employee is not self-employed. They are a 2% shareholder-employee of a one person S-Corp.
The maximum SEP IRA employer contribution is always 25% of compensation.
Compensation would be either
25% of an S-Corp’s 2% shareholder-employee’s W-2 Box 1 wages. Distributions can never be considered compensation.
20% of a self-employed individual’s self-employed earned income (net earnings from self-employment) = business profit – 1/2 SE tax.
The fact that the 1099 is in the name of the individual and not the S-Corp presents its own problems. That would indicate the payments were also made to the individual. How did the money get into S-Corp financial accounts in the first place?
Was the S-Corp adopted by the individual or the S-Corp? If the latter, the SEP IRA contributions must be made from the S-Corp’s financial accounts. Was this done?

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