AbraCalc

SEP-IRA for a $300,000 Earner — Maximum Contribution

A physician or attorney earning $300,000 can shelter the maximum allowable amount in a SEP-IRA, subject to the IRS annual dollar cap.

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How to use this tool

  1. Enter your eligible compensation (W-2 wages or net self-employment income).
  2. Set your contribution rate, up to the 25% maximum.
  3. Read your allowed contribution after the IRS caps are applied.
  4. Compare the uncapped figure to see when a limit reduces your contribution.

For high earners above roughly $265,000, the SEP-IRA hits its dollar cap before the 25% rate fully applies, so the calculator shows the effective limit.

Frequently asked questions

How much can I contribute to a SEP-IRA?
Up to 25% of compensation, capped at $69,000 for 2024. Compensation counted is itself capped at $345,000, so the dollar limit binds at higher incomes.
Why is my effective rate below 25%?
Once your compensation exceeds about $276,000, the $69,000 dollar cap kicks in before the full 25% is reached, so the contribution as a share of total pay drops below 25%.
Is the SEP-IRA contribution tax-deductible?
Yes. SEP-IRA contributions are made by the employer and are tax-deductible business expenses; the funds grow tax-deferred until withdrawal in retirement.
Does this work for the self-employed?
This tool models the capped-compensation case. Unincorporated self-employed filers use a roughly 20% effective rate on net income after the self-employment-tax deduction; consult IRS Publication 560.