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Updated over 4 years ago on . Most recent reply

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Sai Li
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Can a W2 contractor contribute to Solo 401K?

Sai Li
Posted

I am an IT contractor, I get paid via an agency company as a W2 employee. The agency company pays no benefits.

Can I open a Solo 401K account and contribute to it?  

If not, what's the best way to minimize my income tax?

thx

Sai

Most Popular Reply

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George Blower
  • Retirement Accounts Attorney
  • Southfield, MI
1,212
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George Blower
  • Retirement Accounts Attorney
  • Southfield, MI
Replied

@Sai Li


1. First, you must be eligible to set up a Solo 401k. In order to be eligible, you must be self-employed (e.g. providing goods and/or services through your personal effort), reporting self-employment activity on your taxes (e.g. Schedule C if you a sole proprietor) & you do not have any full-time w-2 employees (i.e. working 1000 hours or more per year OR starting in 2021 500 hours per year for 3 consecutive years) working for your self-employed business or otherwise.

2. If you are self-employed with no full-time employees, you can set up a Solo 401k through a 401k provider which allows for investing in real estate. In that case, you can simply have the account at a bank or brokerage where you will have direct checkbook control.

3. All of the income and expenses will need to flow in and out of the retirement account.

4. If you will you debt to acquire the real estate, it must be non-recourse financing. See more at the following link: https://www.biggerpockets.com/blogs/9552/70408-ira...

5. You can't live on the property or otherwise use it for personal use.

6. You can't work on the property as it must be a passive investment (e.g. you must hire someone to fix the toilet and can't pay the expense with non-retirement funds).

7. You must purchase/sell real estate from/to an unrelated person and the real estate can't be titled in your name personally (e.g. in the case of the 401k, it would be titled in the name of the 401k and you would sign as trustee of the 401k).

8. You should verify that you are eligible to transfer the funds from your existing retirement account (e.g. if the funds are in your current employer 401k, you will likely not be able to transfer until you quit your job).

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