🏦 Retirement

Solo 401(k) vs SEP-IRA: Which Saves More on Freelancer Taxes in 2026?

📅 Updated June 2026⏱ 7 min read🏷 retirement, Solo 401k, SEP-IRA, tax deduction

Retirement accounts are the single biggest tax lever available to freelancers. The right account lets you reduce your taxable income by tens of thousands of dollars per year — legally. But the Solo 401(k) and SEP-IRA have very different limits depending on your income. Here's exactly which one wins, at which income level.

The Quick Comparison

Why Solo 401(k) Wins at Most Income Levels

The key difference is how contributions are calculated:

SEP-IRA: Employer contributions only — capped at 25% of net self-employment income (after the SE tax deduction). On $50,000 net income, that's approximately $9,293.

Solo 401(k): Has two contribution buckets — (1) an employee elective deferral up to $23,500, plus (2) employer profit-sharing contributions up to 25% of net SE income. Combined, total cannot exceed $70,000.

This means at lower income levels, the Solo 401(k)'s employee contribution makes it far more powerful.

Side-by-Side Limits by Income Level (2026)

Net Self-Employment IncomeSEP-IRA MaxSolo 401(k) MaxWinner
$30,000$5,576$23,500Solo 401(k) — 4.2x more
$50,000$9,293$27,793Solo 401(k) — 3x more
$75,000$13,939$37,439Solo 401(k) — 2.7x more
$100,000$18,587$42,087Solo 401(k) — 2.3x more
$150,000$27,881$51,381Solo 401(k) — 1.8x more
$232,000+$69,000$70,000Roughly equal

* Solo 401(k) employee contribution is $23,500 for 2026. Employer portion is 20% of net SE profit after the SE deduction (effective rate). Figures are approximate — verify with your plan provider.

Real Tax Savings: What These Contributions Actually Save You

Let's take a freelancer earning $80,000 net income in the 22% federal bracket, plus ~5% state tax = 27% combined marginal rate.

ScenarioContributionTax Saved
No retirement account$0$0
SEP-IRA (25% of net income)~$14,900~$4,023
Solo 401(k) — employee only$23,500~$6,345
Solo 401(k) — employee + employer~$38,400~$10,368

By maxing a Solo 401(k) instead of a SEP-IRA at this income level, the freelancer saves an extra $6,345 per year in taxes — while putting the same difference into their own retirement account.

When SEP-IRA Actually Wins

Despite losing on contribution limits at most income levels, SEP-IRA has real advantages in specific situations:

The Roth Solo 401(k) Option

Many plan providers now offer a Roth version of the Solo 401(k). The Roth election applies to the employee contribution portion only:

For most freelancers currently in the 22% bracket who expect to be in a higher bracket in retirement (or if tax rates rise), the Roth is worth considering for at least part of your contribution. SEP-IRA has no Roth option.

✅ Bottom line recommendation:

Open a Solo 401(k) if you're a solo freelancer with no employees and you want to maximize tax deductions. It nearly always wins on contribution limits. Use SEP-IRA if you need the simplicity, the late-opening flexibility, or if you have employees.

Where to Open Each Account

ProviderSolo 401(k)SEP-IRANotes
Fidelity✅ Free✅ FreeBest for beginners. No fees, good funds.
Vanguard✅ Free✅ FreeBest index funds. Strong for long-term.
Charles Schwab✅ Free✅ FreeEasy app. Good customer service.
TD Ameritrade / Schwab✅ Free✅ FreeGood tools and research.
Betterment❌ No Solo 401k✅ YesGood if you want automated investing.

📊 Quick Decision Guide

Solo freelancer, income under $200K
→ Solo 401(k)
Need to open account after Dec 31
→ SEP-IRA
Have employees
→ SEP-IRA or SIMPLE IRA
Want Roth option
→ Solo 401(k)

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For informational purposes only — not financial or tax advice. Contribution limits and rules change annually. Verify current limits at irs.gov and consult a CPA or financial advisor for your situation.