For the purpose of retirement contributions, the tax code considers a sole proprietor to be both employer and employee.
Your SIMPLE IRA contribution is limited to your net earnings from self-employment. For the purposes of a SIMPLE IRA contribution, your net earnings from self-employment are the amount shown on line 4 of short Schedule SE or line 6 of long Schedule SE. In this case, that means that your net earnings for the purpose of a SIMPLE IRA contribution are limited to $8,128.
A sole proprietor can elect to defer up to 100% of their income up to a maximum of $12,500 or $15,500 for those age 50 or older
Also, a sole proprietorship can not, under any circumstances have an employee who is also the owner of that business. You can not and will not ever issue yourself a W-2, 1099-MISC or any other type of tax reporting document. That's be cause your sole proprietorship, which is reported on SCH C as a part of your personal tax return, is considered a disregarded entity by the IRS.
<a rel="nofollow" target="_blank" href="http://www.soleproprietorship.co/simpleira.html">http://www.soleproprietorship.co/simpleira.html</a>
For an IRA contribution. If you only have self-employment income you can only contribute up to your net profit reduced by the deduction allowed for one-half of your self-employment taxes. See IRS publication 590 <a rel="nofollow" target="_blank" href="http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p590a.pdf">http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p590a.pdf</a>
So check 1040 line 27. You have to deduct that amount from your Schedule C Net Profit. That will give you the allowed contribution for the 1099Misc income.
So on a Net Profit of 8,801 you can contribute up to $8,179
Thank you, Carl. I believe I misspoke by calling myself an "employee." I don't issue myself any docs like W-2s or 1099-MISCs.
But am I nevertheless correct to list my employee contribution portion on line 28 of my 1040?
Wow, thank you Volvo Girl. I thought I'd poured over IRS doc about this I could find...but that's why you're the pro.
VolvoGirl, net earnings for the purpose of a SIMPLE IRA contribution are calculated differently. See page 5 of IRS Pub 560.
Well I gave you the link for a regular IRA. I see for a Simple IRA plan you need publication 560 <a rel="nofollow" target="_blank" href="https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p560.pdf">https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p560.pdf</a> I don't know exactly how that works. I don't see about it being up to your net profit like the regular IRA.
For the purpose of retirement contributions, the tax code considers a sole proprietor to be both employer and employee.
Your SIMPLE IRA contribution is limited to your net earnings from self-employment. For the purposes of a SIMPLE IRA contribution, your net earnings from self-employment are the amount shown on line 4 of short Schedule SE or line 6 of long Schedule SE. In this case, that means that your net earnings for the purpose of a SIMPLE IRA contribution are limited to $8,128.
In looking at this again, I think that $8,128 is the maximum elective deferral. It appears that you might also be permitted a matching contribution of 3% of compensation (compensation being equal to net earnings). That would be $8,128 * 0.03 = $244. Added to the $8,128 of elective deferrals, that would total $8,372. You might want to check with your SIMPLE IRA custodian on this.
Schwab's calculator for this seems to confirm this:
<a rel="nofollow" target="_blank" href="https://client.schwab.com/secure/file/P-8689676/MKT85883.pdf">https://client.schwab.com/secure/file/P-8689676/MKT85883.pdf</a>