IRA/SEP

Hello-

Client made a Traditional IRA contribution last year. They are also wanting to set up a new SEP for 2023 and make a contribution. I believe I was told on here that they wouldn’t be considered covered by a retirement plan for 2023 in this situation. Their tax preparer disagrees.

If they are just wanting to follow what their tax preparer says, what are their options?

  1. They could skip the SEP and just max out the Traditional.
  2. They could recharacterize the Traditional IRA to Roth and then make SEP.
  3. They could report the Traditional IRA as nondeductible.
  4. They could undo the Traditional IRA contribution and earnings as excess.
  5. I know employees can make IRA contributions to a SEP but can SEP contributions be made to a Traditional IRA? In other words, could he just say those contributions were SEP contributions and not touch them? SEP wasn’t set up at time of making contribution.
  6. Tax preparer mentioned something about recharacterizing the Traditional IRA contribution to a SEP? Is that actually an option?

Thank you!

 



Tax preparer should pull up Notice 87-16. A SEP IRA falls under the Defined Contribution plan rules, therefore if no SEP contribution was actually made in 2023, taxpayer is not an active participant in 2023.
Options 1-4 are all possible if client chooses to take such actions, but 3 is not advisable if 2 can be done.
Q 5 may be possible, but most IRA custodians will not recode a TIRA contribution as a SEP contribution.
No. Contributions cannot be recharacterized between SEP (an employer contribution) and a TIRA (a personal contribution). Client’s custodian should confirm that.

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