lydia33 Posted April 4, 2008 Report Posted April 4, 2008 Taxpayer (dentist) has sep for employees and self. Two different investment firms involved. The amount he has to pay on the employee plans for management fees is deductible. Are the fees he pays for his retirement plan deductible? Quote
Booger Posted April 4, 2008 Report Posted April 4, 2008 If an individual's IRA advisory fee is a miscellaneous itemized deduction (2% of AGI), why wouldn't the SEP fee have the same treatment? Booger Quote
joelgilb Posted April 4, 2008 Report Posted April 4, 2008 If an individual's IRA advisory fee is a miscellaneous itemized deduction (2% of AGI), why wouldn't the SEP fee have the same treatment? Booger You Picked another one BOOGER! Yes they are misc itemized deductions just like advisory fees. Joel Quote
lydia33 Posted April 4, 2008 Author Report Posted April 4, 2008 These are management fees. Charges for maintianing the accounts. Quote
indyscott Posted April 5, 2008 Report Posted April 5, 2008 Fees that are assessed for managing the entire SEP plan I would treat as ordinary business expense, part of the employee benefits expense. Quote
Randall Posted April 5, 2008 Report Posted April 5, 2008 If the individual account fees are deducted from the IRA account, no deduction. They have to be paid with money from outside the IRA. I agree on the plan fees paid by the employer, business deduction. Quote
Lion EA Posted April 5, 2008 Report Posted April 5, 2008 Even if only participant is the owner/sole proprietor? Quote
indyscott Posted April 5, 2008 Report Posted April 5, 2008 If not for the business activity of the sole proprietor there would be no SEP fees, so why would the fees not be an ordinary business deduction. The owner could hire an employee who would have to be advised of the existence of the SEP plan, and possibly participate. Quote
lydia33 Posted April 6, 2008 Author Report Posted April 6, 2008 The amounts are paid seperate from the actualy contriburtion for the IRA's. I can not find anywhere in the code this addresses or in any books, from schools, etc. I do not want to make a wrong deduction, but it does look like they would be decuctibale as a bussiness expense. Quote
jainen Posted April 6, 2008 Report Posted April 6, 2008 >>If not for the business activity of the sole proprietor there would be no SEP fees<< The same could be said of a traditional IRA, in that it must be based on earnings. But that doesn't make it a business asset, and it doesn't make the maintenance fees a business expense. The rules are different for the owner and the employees. When the owner pays for the underlings, it goes on Schedule C like other compensation costs. When he pays for himself, it goes on Schedule A like other investment costs. Quote
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