The clock is ticking on 2025. Your retirement is one year closer, and you still have time before December 31 to lock in powerful 2025 year-end retirement deductions.
With a few intentional moves, you can:
Below are five opportunities to review before December 31. The limits and thresholds here reflect the IRS’s 2025 inflation adjustments.
First question: do you already have a retirement plan in place for your business for 2025?
If not, and you have cash available to contribute, you still have time to put a plan in place and claim a 2025 tax deduction.
For most defined contribution plans (such as 401(k) plans), if you are an owner-employee, you wear two hats: you are both the employee and the employer, whether you operate as a corporation or as a sole proprietorship. That’s a good thing — it means you can make:
allowing you to put a substantial amount away for retirement while reducing your taxable income.
Your specific plan document controls the deadlines for employee and employer contributions that will count for 2025, so you need to know exactly what your plan allows.
Assume:
To get a 2025 deduction:
For 2025, the IRS increased the 401(k) salary deferral limit to $23,500 for employee elective deferrals. Depending on your age, you may also qualify for catch-up contributions.
For 2025, the employee deferral limits look like this:
In addition to those employee deferrals, your S corporation can make an employer contribution of up to 25% of your compensation. That employer contribution can generally be made any time up to the S corporation tax return due date (for example, March 15, 2026, or September 15, 2026 with extensions).
Between you and your S corporation, the maximum total contribution to your 401(k) or similar account for 2025 is:
If you’re a solo owner-operator (incorporated or not), a properly structured solo 401(k) can be one of the most powerful retirement tax tools you have.
If both of these are true:
then SECURE 2.0 made the “start-up” tax credit much more generous for you.
By establishing a new qualified retirement plan — such as a profit-sharing plan, a 401(k), a defined benefit pension plan, a SIMPLE IRA, or a SEP — your business may qualify for a non-refundable tax credit equal to the greater of:
For employers with 50 or fewer employees, the credit can cover 100% of qualified start-up costs. For employers with 51–100 employees, it generally covers 50% of those qualified costs. Qualified start-up costs include:
The credit can apply in the year the plan starts and the next two tax years — up to $5,000 per year, or $15,000 total. Any remaining costs above the credit can generally be deducted as ordinary and necessary business expenses.
To qualify, in the year before the credit begins:
You can find the IRS summary of this credit under the Retirement Plans Startup Costs Tax Credit guidance and in the instructions to Form 8881.
There is also a technical correction that now allows employers joining certain multi-employer plans to qualify for the start-up credit, even if the plan itself has existed for more than three years.
SECURE 2.0 also created a separate credit for the employer contributions you make on behalf of your employees. This small employer pension contribution tax credit is effective for 2023 and later years.
In general:
After the first year, the dollar cap remains at $1,000 per employee, but the percentage of employer contributions that qualify for the credit phases down:
You do not get this credit for contributions to a defined benefit plan or for employee elective deferrals.
If you have between 51 and 100 employees, the credit is reduced by 2% for each employee over 50. If you have more than 100 employees, you don’t qualify for this particular credit. You also don’t get the credit for any employee whose 2025 wages exceed the applicable IRS wage cap for the year.
The mechanics of this credit — along with the start-up and auto-enrollment credits — are built into IRS Form 8881 instructions.
Suppose you establish a retirement plan this year and contribute $1,000 to each of your 30 employees’ retirement accounts. Your small employer contribution credit could be:
$30,000 credit = $1,000 × 30 employees
subject to the employee-count and wage limitations above.
SECURE 2.0 added another non-refundable credit: up to $500 per year for three years, beginning with the first taxable year in which you, as an eligible small employer, include an automatic contribution arrangement in a qualified plan (such as a 401(k) or SIMPLE IRA).
Many new 401(k) and 403(b) plans established in 2025 or later are required to include automatic enrollment, but the credit can still apply if you are an eligible small employer and your plan meets the rules.
Key points:
To qualify as an eligible small employer for this credit, you generally must have had no more than 100 employees during the preceding year who each earned at least $5,000 in compensation. The IRS explains how this works in more detail in the Form 8881 instructions.
Solo business owner-operators with no employees do not qualify for this automatic enrollment credit because they are treated as highly compensated employees and they have no other employees.
Finally, consider whether converting some or all of your traditional IRA or 401(k) balance to a Roth IRA makes sense for you.
A Roth conversion is a taxable event now, but it can lead to much more flexible and potentially tax-free withdrawals later. If your investments perform well inside the Roth and you don’t need the money in the short term, the long-term benefits can be substantial.
Before you convert, you need to know:
It’s usually a bad idea to tap your existing traditional retirement accounts to pay the tax on the conversion. Doing so can generate extra tax and penalties on the withdrawal itself. You want outside cash available if you decide to convert.
Here’s how to turn all of this into concrete action before December 31:
Remember: if you pull money out of retirement accounts too early or in the wrong way, you can face avoidable penalties and taxes.
If you’re a business owner, you don’t have to guess your way through plan choices, contribution limits, and SECURE 2.0 credits.
Schedule a Free Tax Strategy Session and we’ll walk through: