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Self-employed? Consider a solo 401(k)
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Even if you already put the maximum allowable into your employer-sponsored retirement plan (a smart move, particularly if your employer matches your contributions), you can still set up a solo 401(k) and shelter a chunk of your sideline income. Under this scenario, you're allowed the company contribution of your self-employment money, up to 20 percent or 25 percent if your business is incorporated.

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Hatching real estate nest eggs
The benefits don't end with the dollars that you can keep out of Internal Revenue Service hands. The same tax act that created individual 401(k)s also expanded the types of investments into which people can put this retirement money.

Real estate is one of the most popular alternatives for solo 401(k)s. Virtually any kind of real estate investment is fair game: condos, single family rentals, mobile homes, raw land and second mortgages are all possibilities.

The biggest caveat is that neither you nor any of your immediate family -- children, parents or spouses (siblings are absent from this list) -- can live in the property. It must be treated as a business investment, all expenses have to come out of the 401(k) funds and all profits must go back into it.

In order for this to work, you have to have enough money available in the 401(k). Your annual contributions alone may not be enough, but to accumulate the requisite investment cash you also can combine other retirement accounts into your individual 401(k); this includes money from 401(k)s you had with former employers, other IRAs and Keoghs.

Your solo 401(k) also can borrow money, but you may have trouble finding a lender willing to make this kind of transaction because the law says that the 401(k) -- not you -- is the borrower. That prevents the bank from getting any kind of personal guarantee of payment.

If you put your plan into real estate, it's important to ensure that there will be sufficient cash flow, says Debra Greenstein, president and CEO of Entrust Administration, a company that manages these kinds of plans. "People sometimes forget that beside insurance and taxes, you have to worry about fixing the boiler when it breaks or losing a tenant and going vacant for a couple of months."

But in this day of small returns on stocks and bonds and historic returns on real estate, such an investment can be very profitable. And if set up and managed properly, it can allow you to buy a retirement home, profit from it as an investment and then take it as a distribution when you actually retire and want to live in it.

You will have to pay taxes on the gain, but the 401(k) is entitled to the same expense deductions available to any other owner, and Greenstein says careful management can mitigate the tax bite.

 
 
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