Purpose Driven Finances

Your Retirement Plan: Small Business Structures—SEP, SIMPLE, and the Solo 401(k)


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Air Date: April 18, 2026

🔑 KEY TAKEAWAYS

Participation Is Not Protection

With markets near all-time highs and inflation pressure persisting, simply being invested is not a strategy—positioning is.

Structure Locks In Flexibility

The retirement plan you choose determines your contribution limits, tax options, and adaptability for years to come.

Convenience Creates Long-Term Cost

Most business owners choose what’s easiest. That decision often limits growth, tax efficiency, and flexibility later.

Solo 401(k) = Control

For high-income solo earners, the Solo 401(k) offers the highest contribution potential and the most flexibility across tax strategy and long-term planning.

SEP and SIMPLE = Simplicity, Not Optimization

These structures can work—but they often introduce constraints that become costly as income or team size grows.

đź§­ EPISODE OVERVIEW

Small business owners don’t just earn income—they design their financial system.

And most get one critical decision wrong:

They choose a retirement plan based on convenience.

In this episode of Purpose Driven Finances, we reframe that decision for what it actually is:

A structural choice that determines what’s possible in your financial future.

We begin with the current environment.

Markets are pushing all-time highs, but underlying signals—rising oil, persistent inflation, and slowing growth—tell a different story. This is not a “set-it-and-forget-it” environment. It’s one that requires discipline, structure, and positioning aligned with changing conditions.

From there, we break down the three primary retirement plan structures for small business owners:

  • SEP IRA — simple to set up, but limited in flexibility and tax coordination
  • SIMPLE IRA — structured for small teams, but constrained by lower limits and mandatory contributions
  • Solo 401(k) — the most flexible and powerful option for high-income solo earners

But the real focus isn’t the plans themselves.

It’s how each one impacts:

• Contribution capacity

• Tax strategy

• Long-term adaptability

Because your business is a tool.

And your retirement plan should be designed with the same level of precision.

âť“ FAQ SECTION

What is the best retirement plan for a one-person business?

For most high-income solo earners, the Solo 401(k) offers the highest level of control. It allows both employee and employer contributions, provides a Roth option, and enables more advanced tax coordination.

When does a SEP IRA become a problem?

A SEP works well early, but becomes restrictive as income rises or employees are added. Required equal contributions can significantly increase business overhead.

Who should use a SIMPLE IRA?

SIMPLE IRAs are best for small teams that need structure without the complexity of a 401(k). The trade-off is lower contribution limits and less flexibility.

When is a Solo 401(k) NOT appropriate?

If you have full-time employees (outside of a spouse) or inconsistent income, a Solo 401(k) may not be the right structure. The added complexity must be justified by the benefit.

Why does plan structure matter so much?

Because structure determines what decisions are available later. Contribution limits, tax treatment, and flexibility are all dictated by the plan—not your intentions.

Allan Malina is a fiduciary financial advisor and the founder of Servus Capital Management. He specializes in helping small business owners, retirees, and professionals across Central Virginia move from financial uncertainty to disciplined, purpose-driven financial systems.

As the host of Purpose Driven Finances on WLNI 105.9 (Lynchburg, VA) and the Purpose Driven Podcast, Allan translates complex economic conditions into clear, actionable strategies for long-term stewardship.

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