The SIMPLE IRA is the easiest retirement plan for small businesses to set up and maintain. If your employer offers one — or you’re a small business owner considering one — here’s everything you need to know.

2026 SIMPLE IRA Contribution Limits

Category 2026 Limit
Employee contribution $16,500
Catch-up (age 50+) $3,500
Total (50+) $20,000
Employer match Up to 3% of compensation
Employer non-elective 2% of compensation (up to $350,000)

Historical SIMPLE IRA Limits

Year Employee Limit Catch-Up (50+)
2026 $16,500 $3,500
2025 $16,500 $3,500
2024 $16,000 $3,500
2023 $15,500 $3,500
2022 $14,000 $3,000
2021 $13,500 $3,000

How Employer Contributions Work

Employers must choose one of two contribution options each year:

Option 1: Matching Contributions (Most Common)

Dollar-for-dollar match of employee contributions up to 3% of compensation.

Employee Salary Employee Contributes (6%) Employer Match (3%) Total Annual Savings
$40,000 $2,400 $1,200 $3,600
$60,000 $3,600 $1,800 $5,400
$80,000 $4,800 $2,400 $7,200
$100,000 $6,000 $3,000 $9,000

Employers can reduce the match to as low as 1% in 2 out of every 5 years.

Option 2: 2% Non-Elective Contribution

Employer contributes 2% of each eligible employee’s pay, regardless of whether they contribute.

Employee Salary Employer Contribution (2%)
$40,000 $800
$60,000 $1,200
$80,000 $1,600
$100,000 $2,000

Maximum compensation considered: $350,000 (so max 2% contribution = $7,000).

SIMPLE IRA vs. Other Retirement Plans

Feature SIMPLE IRA 401(k) SEP IRA Solo 401(k)
Employee limit (2026) $16,500 $23,500 N/A $23,500
Catch-up (50+) $3,500 $7,500 N/A $7,500
Employer contribution Required (match or 2%) Optional Up to 25% of comp Up to 25% of comp
Max total contribution ~$30,000 $70,000 $70,000 $70,000
Eligible employers ≤100 employees Any size Any size Self-employed only
Admin complexity Very low High Low Moderate
Annual filing None Form 5500 None 5500-EZ (if >$250K)
Setup deadline October 1 Year-end Tax filing deadline Year-end
Roth option No Yes No Yes

Key SIMPLE IRA Rules

Eligibility

Requirement Detail
Business size 100 or fewer employees
Other plans Cannot maintain another retirement plan
Employee eligibility Earned $5,000+ in any 2 prior years AND expects $5,000+ this year
Employer deadline Must set up by October 1 for current year

Withdrawals

Situation Tax Treatment Penalty
After age 59½ Taxed as ordinary income None
Before 59½ (after 2 years in plan) Taxed as ordinary income 10% early withdrawal penalty
Before 59½ (within first 2 years) Taxed as ordinary income 25% early withdrawal penalty
Rollover to IRA (after 2 years) No tax None
Rollover to IRA (within 2 years) No tax Only to another SIMPLE IRA

Important: The 25% penalty (instead of 10%) during the first 2 years is a unique and harsh SIMPLE IRA rule. Avoid withdrawals in the first 2 years.

Required Minimum Distributions

Like traditional IRAs, SIMPLE IRAs require RMDs starting at age 73.

Advantages of a SIMPLE IRA

  1. Easy to set up and maintain — less paperwork than a 401(k)
  2. No annual filing — no Form 5500 required
  3. Guaranteed employer contribution — employees always get match or 2%
  4. Immediate vesting — all contributions (employee and employer) are immediately yours
  5. Lower costs — no discrimination testing, simpler administration

Disadvantages

  1. Lower contribution limits than 401(k) ($16,500 vs. $23,500)
  2. No Roth option — all contributions are pre-tax
  3. No loans — unlike 401(k)s, SIMPLE IRAs don’t allow plan loans
  4. 25% early withdrawal penalty in first 2 years
  5. Required employer contributions — employer must contribute every year
  6. October 1 setup deadline — can’t establish mid-year for current tax year

Who Should Use a SIMPLE IRA?

Business Type SIMPLE IRA Good Fit? Better Alternative
Small business (5-50 employees) Yes Consider 401(k) if higher limits needed
Solo freelancer Maybe Solo 401(k) (higher limits + Roth)
Business wanting simplicity Yes
High-earning self-employed No SEP IRA (up to $70K)
Business wanting Roth option No 401(k) with Roth

Key Takeaways

  1. $16,500 employee limit ($20,000 if 50+) — lower than 401(k) but still significant
  2. Employer must contribute — either match up to 3% or flat 2% for all eligible employees
  3. Easiest plan to maintain — no annual filing, no discrimination testing
  4. Watch the 2-year rule — 25% penalty on early withdrawals in the first 2 years
  5. Immediate vesting on all contributions — you own 100% from day one
  6. Can be combined with a Roth IRA for additional tax-free savings

For more IRA guidance, see SEP IRA contribution limits and IRA contribution limits. Return to the IRA hub.

WealthVieu
Written by WealthVieu

WealthVieu researches and writes data-driven personal finance guides using primary sources including the IRS, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Federal Reserve, and Census Bureau.

The content on Wealthvieu is for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial, tax, or investment advice. Consult a qualified professional before making financial decisions. Full disclaimer · Editorial policy