HomeBlogUncategorizedRetirement Planning Without Employer Benefits | HL Hunt Financial

Retirement Planning Without Employer Benefits | HL Hunt Financial

Retirement Planning Without Employer Benefits | HL Hunt Financial

Retirement Planning Without Employer Benefits

A comprehensive guide for freelancers, gig workers, and self-employed individuals building retirement security on their own

No 401(k) match. No pension. No employer contributions. If you're self-employed, freelancing, or working in the gig economy, retirement planning is entirely on your shoulders. While this might seem daunting, you actually have access to powerful retirement savings options—often with higher contribution limits than traditional employees. This guide will show you exactly how to build a secure retirement without employer benefits.

36%
of U.S. workers are in the gig economy
$0
saved for retirement by 33% of gig workers
$66K
max annual contribution to Solo 401(k) in 2025

Why Traditional Advice Doesn't Work for You

Most retirement advice assumes you have access to an employer-sponsored 401(k) with matching contributions. But when you're self-employed, the rules are different:

  • No Automatic Deductions: You have to manually transfer money to retirement accounts, requiring discipline and planning.
  • Irregular Income: Your income fluctuates, making it harder to commit to consistent contributions.
  • No Free Money: There's no employer match to incentivize saving—every dollar comes from your pocket.
  • Tax Complexity: You're responsible for understanding tax implications and making strategic decisions.
  • Higher Contribution Limits: The upside—you can often save MORE than traditional employees.

Your Retirement Account Options

As a self-employed individual, you have access to several powerful retirement accounts. Here's a comprehensive breakdown of each option:

Choosing the Right Account(s)

Most self-employed individuals should use a combination of accounts to maximize tax benefits and flexibility. Here's how to decide:

Your Situation Recommended Strategy Why
High income ($100K+), consistent Solo 401(k) + Roth IRA (backdoor if needed) Maximize tax-deferred savings with highest limits, plus tax-free Roth growth
Moderate income ($50-100K), variable SEP IRA + Roth IRA Flexibility to adjust contributions, simpler administration, tax diversification
Lower income (under $50K) Roth IRA first, then Traditional IRA Lower tax bracket now means Roth is more valuable; simpler to manage
Just starting out Roth IRA with automatic contributions Build the habit, tax-free growth, can access contributions if needed
Planning early retirement Roth IRA + Taxable brokerage Roth conversion ladder strategy, taxable for pre-59.5 access
Have employees SIMPLE IRA or 401(k) Required to offer benefits to employees; choose based on admin capacity

Contribution Calculation Example

Scenario: You're self-employed with $100,000 net self-employment income

Solo 401(k) Calculation:

  • Employee contribution: $23,000 (2025 limit)
  • Employer contribution: $100,000 × 20% = $20,000
  • Total contribution: $43,000

Tax Savings: At 24% tax bracket, this saves you $10,320 in taxes this year while building retirement wealth.

The Self-Employed Retirement Strategy

Without automatic payroll deductions, you need a systematic approach to retirement saving. Here's a proven strategy:

The 4-Step System

  • Step 1: Pay Yourself First — Set aside 20-25% of gross income immediately when paid. This covers retirement (15-20%) and taxes (25-30%).
  • Step 2: Automate Transfers — Schedule automatic transfers to retirement accounts on the 1st and 15th of each month, matching your typical payment schedule.
  • Step 3: Adjust Quarterly — Review income and contributions quarterly. Increase or decrease based on actual earnings to stay on track.
  • Step 4: Year-End Catch-Up — In December, calculate if you're on track to max out contributions. Make additional contributions before December 31st if needed.

Managing Irregular Income

The biggest challenge for self-employed retirement planning is inconsistent cash flow. Here's how to handle it:

⚠️ Don't Make This Mistake

Many self-employed individuals wait until tax time to think about retirement contributions. This is a mistake for two reasons:

  • You miss out on months of investment growth
  • You may not have the cash available to make a large lump sum contribution

Solution: Contribute throughout the year, even if it's small amounts. You can always adjust later, but you can't go back in time to invest earlier.

Tax Strategies for Self-Employed Retirement

One advantage of self-employment is greater control over your tax situation. Use these strategies to maximize retirement savings while minimizing taxes:

1. The Mega Backdoor Roth

If you have a Solo 401(k) that allows after-tax contributions and in-plan Roth conversions, you can contribute up to $66,000 total ($23,000 traditional + $43,000 after-tax converted to Roth). This creates massive tax-free growth potential.

2. Strategic Roth Conversions

In low-income years, convert traditional IRA money to Roth IRA. You'll pay taxes at a lower rate now for tax-free withdrawals later. Especially powerful if you have a year with unusually low income.

3. Deduct Health Insurance

Self-employed individuals can deduct health insurance premiums above-the-line, reducing adjusted gross income. This can help you stay under Roth IRA income limits or reduce taxes on retirement contributions.

4. Qualified Business Income Deduction

The QBI deduction allows you to deduct up to 20% of qualified business income. This effectively reduces your tax rate, making traditional (tax-deferred) retirement contributions even more valuable.

Investment Strategy for Self-Employed Retirement

Once you've chosen accounts and started contributing, you need an investment strategy. Here's what works for most self-employed individuals:

The Simple, Effective Portfolio

For most people, a three-fund portfolio is optimal:

  • 60-70%: Total U.S. Stock Market Index Fund (VTI, VTSAX)
  • 20-30%: Total International Stock Market Index Fund (VXUS, VTIAX)
  • 10-20%: Total Bond Market Index Fund (BND, VBTLX)

Adjust bond allocation based on age and risk tolerance. Younger = more stocks. Closer to retirement = more bonds.

Age-Based Allocation Guide

Age Range Stock Allocation Bond Allocation Rationale
20s-30s 90-100% 0-10% Maximum growth potential, decades to recover from downturns
40s 80-90% 10-20% Still growth-focused but adding stability
50s 70-80% 20-30% Balancing growth with protection as retirement approaches
60s 50-70% 30-50% Preserving wealth while maintaining some growth
70s+ 40-60% 40-60% Income and preservation focused, but still need growth for longevity

Avoid These Investment Mistakes

  • Being too conservative: Keeping retirement money in savings accounts or CDs means you'll likely run out of money in retirement due to inflation.
  • Trying to time the market: Missing just the 10 best days in the market over 20 years reduces returns by 50%. Stay invested.
  • Paying high fees: A 1% fee difference costs you hundreds of thousands over decades. Use low-cost index funds (under 0.20% expense ratio).
  • Panic selling: Market drops are normal. Selling during downturns locks in losses. Stay the course.

How Much Do You Need to Save?

The standard advice is to save 15-20% of gross income for retirement. But as a self-employed individual without employer contributions, you might need to save more:

Retirement Savings Targets

Current Age Savings Rate Needed To Retire At
25 15% 65
30 18% 65
35 23% 65
40 29% 65
45 38% 65
50 51% 65

Assumes 8% average annual return, retiring at 65, and needing 80% of pre-retirement income.

The 4% Rule

A common retirement planning guideline: you can safely withdraw 4% of your retirement portfolio annually without running out of money. This means you need 25x your annual expenses saved.

Example: If you need $60,000/year in retirement, you need $1.5 million saved ($60,000 × 25 = $1,500,000).

Your Action Plan

Retirement planning without employer benefits requires more initiative, but it's absolutely achievable. Here's your step-by-step action plan:

30-Day Retirement Kickstart

  • Week 1: Calculate your net self-employment income and determine which retirement account(s) are best for your situation.
  • Week 2: Open your chosen retirement account(s) at a low-cost brokerage (Vanguard, Fidelity, Schwab).
  • Week 3: Set up automatic monthly contributions—even if it's just $100 to start. Choose your investments (target-date fund or three-fund portfolio).
  • Week 4: Create a system to set aside retirement savings from each payment you receive. Review and adjust quarterly.

Remember: You Have Advantages Too

Yes, you don't have employer matching or automatic contributions. But you have benefits traditional employees don't:

  • ✓ Higher contribution limits (up to $66,000 vs. $23,000 for employees)
  • ✓ More account options and flexibility
  • ✓ Greater control over investment choices
  • ✓ Ability to adjust contributions based on income
  • ✓ Tax deductions that reduce your current tax burden

The key is taking action. Start small if you need to, but start now. Your future self will thank you for every dollar you invest today. Retirement security is possible without employer benefits—it just requires intentionality and consistency.