Which of your clients complain about paying $40,000 or much more to the IRS? See how much you can save them and turn that pain into a gain for your clients and you.
Talk to them now -- before they contribute to a SEP or 401(k) for 2008 -- about setting up a Defined Benefit pension plan for 2008. Contributing to another plan may make it impossible to get much larger tax deductions for 2008.
In 2007, first year contributions to a OnePersonPlus DB plan averaged $120,000 -- which was entirely deductible against 2007 earned income. On average, these contributions will continue for 9.7 years that's more than a $1Million in new money.

OnePersonPlus plans work best for owners of 1-5 person companies, who are age 45 to 70. Learn more about who's eligible.
Three Typical Clients Recognize Them?
Independent Consultant Wants Maximum Deduction
James, Management Consultant, age 52, annual W-2 income of $300,000 -- looking for a way to reduce taxes and increase his retirement assets significantly.
Solution: A OnePersonPlus pension plan for 10 years
- Annual Contribution: $125,300
- Annual Tax Savings at 38%: $47,614
- Accumulation at Retirement: $2,131,000
- Annual DB Benefit in Retirement: $185,000
Adding a 401(k), James could contribute an additional $34,300 for a total deduction for 2008 of $159,600, more than 3 times what he could put into a SEP or 401(k) alone.
Medical Couple Maximizes Contributions to Build Portfolio
Christine, age 58, and Bill, age 60, are married, each earning $230,000 a year from their anesthesiology practice.
Solution: A OnePersonPlus until Retirement
- Annual Contribution for Christine: $140,100
- Annual Contribution for Bill: $157,700
- Combined Annual Tax Savings at 38%: $113,164
- Advisor creates conservative portfolio. Christine's builds to $1,398,000 over the next 7 years when she turns 65 and Bill's totals $998,000 in just 5 years when he reaches 65.
- Projected combined annual benefit: $222,000 or they can roll the lump sum into IRAs.
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Spouse's Income Creates Retirement Wealth
Teresa, age 60 is a sole proprietor earning $70,000 each year after paying self-employment taxes. She's married to a high-income earning executive, and they both plan to retire in five years. They don't need Teresa's income to maintain their lifestyle. They want to defer current taxes as much as possible.
Solution: A OnePersonPlus for 5 Years Saves 100% of Earned Income
- Annual Contribution: $70,000
- Annual Tax Savings at 38%: $26,600
- DB Accumulation at Retirement: $443,000
- Annual DB Benefit in Retirement: $41,049
While the pain of paying too much in taxes for 2007 is still fresh, your high income clients professionals, consultants, small business owners and the self-employed will welcome a solution that lets them shelter more of their income in 2008 through large annual contributions.
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