Roth IRAs and 401ks for Small Business
Owners
Choosing Roth IRAs or 401k plans is often
required for not only employees thinking about retirement
planning, but also for small business owners setting up
retirement plans for themselves, whether or not they have
employees. If the latter situation sounds like you, then you'll
very likely have many questions pertaining to what the IRS Code
allows and restricts for your type of business.
The benefits to be had by choosing the right
plan for your business are very attractive, so this is not a
decision to be taken lightly. Consider for a moment that a
small business retirement plan, now more than ever, is the best
way to defer large amounts of tax-deductible savings.
Thanks to the Economic Growth and Tax Relief
Reconciliation Act of 2001 (EGTRRA), self-employed taxpayers
now have never-before-seen incentives to save for retirement.
Quite literally, now is the best time in the U.S. for almost a
century for the average employee to start saving money.
Converting taxes into assets, deferring tax
payments, and generating large amounts of retirement income are
all easier to do now, and more effective too.
A small business retirement plan is directly
related to benefits available to the owner of the business. For
small business owners in search of large tax breaks, it doesn't
get any better than this, because the greater the owners' share
of the overall plan, the greater the interest will
be.
Before the new tax laws were passed,
restrictions on owners benefits in small plans often resulted
in even fewer benefits for the employees. But the new laws are
much more fair. They put the tools in place to enlarge the
owners' benefits and still create a workable plan for the
employees.
The new tax law creates a many opportunities
with more than 60 new provisions to encourage your small
business retirement plans' growth. Variations from plan to plan
allow for opportunities to suit small retail owners,
independent contractors, sole-practitioner professionals...
Virtually every type of small business imaginable.
The fact is that there are too many
investment vehicles to even be named in an article, much less
described. Even for a specific segment like Small business
owners. Keeping up with the plan changes like the EGTRRA act
will put you far ahead of the game when it comes time to
choose.
For the latest plan changes, and of course
descriptions of each plan type suitable for small business
owners, visit the Roth IRA information website at:
http://www.roth-iras.info/ to learn more about your Small
Business Roth IRA and 401k options.
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