Thanks for the valuable info
To clarify- I can open a solo 401k and put in upto my max (18k) and that will reduce my overall tax burden. So if I put in 10k now, I only have to show the remainder of locums earnings as taxable?
My residency/fellowship retirement accounts were tax deferred (401k) , how can I rollover to Roth without paying the due taxes?
Agree with you- am looking at CPA’s near me but hard to figure out who is good. Will ask some work colleagues. Do you contract clients online?
Also is there a solo 401k you recommend?
Thanks again
You can contribute a maximum $18k employee contributions to all of your retirement plans (401k, 403b) combined. So, if you contribute $10k at your new job, you will be able to contribute only $8k to your solo-k. You can also contribute 20% of net profits from locums to your solo-k. That is considered the employer contribution. iow, you are both employee and employer when you are self-employed.
You need to consider your employer match, also. You want to contribute enough to the 401k at your new job to get the maximum employer match for 2017, assuming there is a match for the 1st year (often not).
You cannot move your fellowship 401k to a Roth w/o paying taxes (called a "conversion"), but you should consider doing, as this is your last year in a relatively low tax bracket. Again, tax planning can help. If you do not want to or cannot afford the taxes, then you can r/o all or part of your 401k to your new solo-k. Keep in mind, however, that you have until next Oct 15 to "recharacterize" any Roth conversions, so I would convert all and then recharacterize if you can't pay the tax bill or if the market dips after you convert.
You should set up your solo-k with a custodian that will accept incoming rollovers and offers a Roth component. We custody with TDAmeritrade.
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