Can You Rollover a Roth IRA as a Self-Employed Person?
A self-employed person operates a business without an employer β including sole proprietors, independent contractors, freelancers, gig economy workers, and single-member LLC owners. Self-employed individuals have unique retirement plan access: they can sponsor their own retirement plans (SEP IRA, SIMPLE IRA, Solo 401(k)) with contribution limits that significantly exceed those available to employed workers. Ensure you understand exactly how your Roth IRA conforms to your sector's distinct rules before performing a rollover.
1Expert Sector Analysis
A customized perspective for Self-Employed Persons. Self-employed individuals have the most flexible rollover landscape of any employment type β they can receive rollovers into their business plans, roll assets between different plan types as their business needs evolve, and use the Solo 401(k) as a clearinghouse that enables the Backdoor Roth strategy for high-income years. But this flexibility comes with responsibility: the self-employed person is simultaneously the plan sponsor, the plan administrator, and the plan participant β any compliance failure falls entirely on them.
The Roth IRA is handled very differently across sectors. The most valuable rollover strategy for high-income self-employed individuals is the Solo 401(k) as a pro-rata rule cleaner. By rolling traditional IRA assets into a Solo 401(k) that accepts IRA rollovers, the IRA balance drops to zero β enabling the Backdoor Roth strategy for that year and future years. This is one of the highest-value single-year tax planning moves available to high-earning self-employed individuals.
Self-employed individuals in the 55β70 age range face a unique retirement planning challenge: unlike private sector employees with defined plan sponsor relationships, self-employed workers must actively manage both the accumulation (contribution decisions) and the distribution (rollover and withdrawal sequencing) of their retirement assets without the framework of an employer HR department or plan administrator. The complexity of self-employed retirement planning β multiple plan types, variable income, pro-rata rule management β makes professional guidance particularly valuable.
2Roth IRA Eligibility & Governing Rules
Rules you must follow to successfully roll over as a Self-Employed Person.
Rollover Trigger
When to Act
Direct Rollover
IRS Allowed
Direct Roth IRA contributions are subject to income limits ($161,000β$176,000 for single filers; $240,000+ for married filing jointly in 2026). However, rollovers TO a Roth IRA (Roth conversions) from qualified plans and traditional IRAs have no income limit. High-income individuals who cannot contribute directly to a Roth IRA can still accumulate Roth assets through the conversion process.
3Tax & Penalty Implications
How the IRS views your rollover based on your employment status.
- Tax Treatment: Rolling a SEP IRA or Solo 401(k) to a traditional IRA: non-taxable. Rolling to a Roth IRA: fully taxable Roth conversion. SEP IRA contributions are deductible on Schedule C (as a business expense) or Schedule 1 (above-the-line deduction). Solo 401(k) employee deferrals reduce W-2 equivalent net self-employment income.
- Early Withdrawal Penalty context: Standard 10% early withdrawal penalty before age 59Β½ for SEP IRA and Solo 401(k) distributions. The age-55 rule does not apply to self-employed plans in the same way as employer plans β because there is no 'separation from service' from a business you own. Standard 59Β½ threshold and SEPP/72(t) arrangements are the primary pre-59Β½ access mechanisms.
- General Roth IRA penalty rules: Contributions can be withdrawn at any time, tax-free and penalty-free. Earnings withdrawn before age 59Β½ AND before the 5-year holding period are subject to income tax plus the 10% penalty.
4Costly Mistakes to Avoid
Mistakes specific to evaluating a rollover from a Roth IRA as a Self-Employed Person.
Not rolling a SEP IRA into a Solo 401(k) before attempting a Backdoor Roth conversion
High-income self-employed individuals who want to execute a Backdoor Roth IRA contribution often discover that the pro-rata rule applies to their large SEP IRA balance β making the Roth conversion partially taxable. The solution is to roll the SEP IRA assets into a Solo 401(k) plan that accepts incoming rollovers before year-end. With the IRA balance at zero, the Backdoor Roth non-deductible contribution converts entirely tax-free. Missing this sequencing means paying unnecessary taxes on the Roth conversion for years or decades.
Making a SIMPLE IRA rollover within the first 2 years of plan establishment
A self-employed person who established a SIMPLE IRA to provide retirement benefits to employees, then decides to switch to a Solo 401(k) within the first 2 years of the SIMPLE IRA's existence, cannot roll the SIMPLE IRA assets to the Solo 401(k) or to a traditional IRA during that 2-year period. Any transfer to a non-SIMPLE account triggers the 25% early withdrawal penalty. The SIMPLE IRA must be maintained for 2 years before the switch can occur. Plan the retirement plan type change with this timeline in mind.
Confusing the two separate Roth IRA 5-year rules
Rule 1 (earnings): To take a tax-free qualified distribution of earnings, the Roth IRA must have been open for at least 5 years AND you must be age 59Β½ or older. Rule 2 (conversions): Converted amounts held in a Roth IRA are subject to a separate 5-year holding period β withdrawing converted amounts within 5 years of conversion triggers the 10% penalty (even if you are over 59Β½). These two rules operate independently and on different clocks.
5Frequently Asked Questions
Can a self-employed person roll over a SEP IRA to a Solo 401(k)?
Yes β SEP IRA assets can be rolled into a Solo 401(k) plan if the Solo 401(k)'s plan document accepts incoming IRA rollovers (most do). This non-taxable direct rollover is particularly valuable for self-employed individuals who want to: (1) consolidate accounts; (2) enable the Backdoor Roth strategy by reducing their traditional IRA balance to zero; or (3) access the Solo 401(k)'s loan feature or Roth option.
Can a self-employed person contribute to a SEP IRA and a Solo 401(k) in the same year?
Generally no β the combined contribution to both plans in the same year is subject to the IRC Section 415(c) combined annual limit ($70,000 in 2026). Most self-employed individuals choose one plan type per year. The Solo 401(k) is preferred when the owner wants to maximize contributions through the employee deferral component ($23,500 in 2026 + catch-up); the SEP IRA is simpler to administer and allows contribution decisions until the tax filing deadline including extensions.
Can I roll over a traditional IRA to a Roth IRA?
Yes β this is called a Roth conversion. The converted amount is included in your ordinary income for the year of conversion, but there is no 10% early withdrawal penalty on the conversion itself (though the converted amount is not available penalty-free for 5 years). There is no income limit on Roth conversions.