Traditional 401(k) Plans for Small Businesses

When They’re the Best Fit and Why to Choose Them Over Other Retirement Plans
Overview: What is a Traditional 401(k) Plan?
A Traditional 401(k) is an employer-sponsored retirement plan that allows employees to contribute pre-tax income toward retirement savings. Contributions reduce the employee’s taxable income for the year, and investment growth is tax-deferred until withdrawal—usually after age 59½. Employers can choose to make matching or non-elective contributions, and the plan can be customized with vesting schedules, eligibility rules, and optional profit-sharing features.
Key features:
- 2025 Employee Contribution Limit: $23,000 ($30,500 with age 50+ catch-up)
- Employer Contribution Limit: Up to a combined total of $69,000 per participant ($76,500 with catch-up)
- Tax Treatment: Pre-tax contributions, taxable distributions at retirement
- Flexibility: Employer can set eligibility, matching rates, and vesting
- Testing Requirements: Subject to nondiscrimination testing unless structured as a Safe Harbor plan
When a Traditional 401(k) is Best for Small Businesses

Choosing the right retirement plan depends on financial, employment, and incorporation conditions. A Traditional 401(k) plan is usually the best fit for small businesses when these conditions apply:
1. Financial Conditions
- Higher contribution goals: Owner and key employees want to save more than SIMPLE IRA or SEP IRA limits allow.
- Variable profits: The business may have fluctuating revenue but still wants a scalable plan—employer contributions can be adjusted yearly.
- Desire for tax deferral: Owners want to maximize pre-tax savings to reduce current taxable income.
- Ability to handle plan costs: Willing to invest in plan administration ($1,000–$5,000/year) and compliance testing for greater flexibility.
2. Employment Conditions
- Mixed workforce profile: A combination of higher-earning owners/key staff and lower-earning employees—plan can be designed with matching or vesting to encourage retention.
- Lower turnover: If turnover is low, employer contributions can be more meaningful without frequent payouts to departing employees.
- Recruitment tool needed: Offering a competitive retirement plan to attract and retain skilled talent in competitive industries (professional services, healthcare, tech, etc.).
3. Incorporation & Business Structure Conditions
- Corporations and LLCs taxed as corporations: Especially S-Corps and C-Corps where owners receive W-2 wages, allowing both employee deferrals and employer contributions.
- Partnerships with steady revenue: Partners can defer income and reduce immediate tax liabilities.
- Businesses with predictable compliance resources: Able to maintain IRS reporting, nondiscrimination testing, and plan documentation.
Why Choose a Traditional 401(k) Over Other Small Business Plans
| Plan Type | Contribution Limits (2025) | Flexibility | Employer Costs | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Traditional 401(k) | $69,000 ($76,500 with catch-up) combined | Highly customizable | Medium to high | Businesses seeking higher limits and flexible plan design |
| Safe Harbor 401(k) | Same as Traditional | Predictable match, avoids testing | Medium | Employers who want to skip compliance testing but commit to set match |
| SIMPLE IRA | $16,000 ($19,500 with catch-up) | Limited | Low | Small firms with ≤100 employees wanting minimal admin |
| SEP IRA | $69,000 (employer-only) | Simple | Low | Owner-only or firms wanting equal % for all employees |
| Solo 401(k) | Same as Traditional | High for 1-person firms | Low to medium | Owner-only businesses with no employees |
Advantages over other plans:
- Higher savings potential than SIMPLE IRA or SEP IRA for employees making both deferrals and receiving employer contributions.
- Custom match structures to incentivize retention and reward performance.
- Vesting schedules to reduce immediate turnover payouts.
- Ability to add Roth 401(k) feature for after-tax contributions within the same plan.
- Optional profit-sharing to reward employees in good years without permanent obligations.

Example Scenarios Where a Traditional 401(k) is Best
- Professional Services Firm (S-Corp, 12 employees)
- Owner wants to defer $23,000 + $10,000 in employer contributions.
- Staff is mid-career with low turnover.
- Needs competitive benefit to attract talent.
→ Traditional 401(k) provides high contribution room and flexible match design.
- Manufacturing LLC with Steady Profits (25 employees)
- Owner wants flexibility to adjust employer match in lean years.
- Plans to add profit-sharing in strong years.
- Willing to pay for plan administration.
→ Traditional 401(k) offers scalability without permanent Safe Harbor obligations.
📊 Retirement Plan Decision Chart for Small Businesses
| Factor | Traditional 401(k) | Safe Harbor 401(k) | SIMPLE IRA | SEP IRA |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 Contribution Limits | $69,000 total ($76,500 with catch-up) | $69,000 total ($76,500 with catch-up) | $16,000 ($19,500 with catch-up) | $69,000 (employer-only) |
| Employee Deferrals | Yes, up to $23,000 ($30,500 with catch-up) | Yes, same as Traditional | Yes, up to $16,000 ($19,500 with catch-up) | No employee deferrals — employer only |
| Employer Contribution Rules | Flexible: match, non-elective, or profit-sharing | Fixed: 3% match or 4% nonelective | Mandatory: 3% match or 2% nonelective | Same % for all employees |
| Vesting Schedule | Customizable (0–6 years) | Immediate vesting on Safe Harbor contributions | Immediate vesting | Immediate vesting |
| Nondiscrimination Testing | Required annually | Not required if Safe Harbor rules followed | Not required | Not required |
| Administrative Costs | Medium to High | Medium | Low | Low |
| Best For | Businesses wanting high limits + full flexibility | Employers who want testing relief + high limits | Small firms (≤100 employees) wanting low cost + simplicity | Owner-only or businesses willing to give same % to all |
| Drawbacks | More admin + testing | Locked into match/nonelective every year | Low savings limit | Can be expensive if many employees |
| Incorporation Fit | S-Corp, C-Corp, LLC, Partnership | S-Corp, C-Corp, LLC, Partnership | S-Corp, C-Corp, LLC, Partnership | Any business type |
| When to Choose | Want to save big, customize match, adjust annually | Want max owner savings + avoid testing | Want minimal admin + predictable costs | High-profit owner-only or very small staff |
Bottom Line
A Traditional 401(k) is the best choice for a small business when the owner values:
- High contribution limits
- Customizable match and vesting schedules
- Flexibility to adjust employer contributions annually
- A recruitment and retention tool for skilled employees
It’s not the simplest or cheapest plan to run, but it provides unmatched flexibility and the potential for both owners and employees to build substantial retirement savings—especially in businesses with steady revenue, a stable workforce, and the ability to manage administrative requirements.
Need help getting started? Explore how Emergent Financial Group partners with Retirement Plan providers to bring you flexible, tax-smart options tailored for your business.
Please don’t hesitate to contact us here.
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