Sam's List Editorial | 2026-06-06
How a Business Owner Turned a 75K Tax Liability Into a Retirement Asset At 54, running a professional services business that earns $600,000 a year, and facing a 75,000 estimated tax bill — that combination is not unusual for successful business owners in the United States. What is unusual is someone doing something about it in a structured, coordinated way before the check clears. This is the case of a business owner who used a cash balance pension plan — coordinated between a financial advisor and a CPA — to convert a substantial tax liability into a retirement asset. And then did it again the next year, and the year after that. The Client: 54 Years Old, $600K Income, Under $500K in Retirement Savings The owner ran a professional services S-corp. Revenue was solid and consistent — $600,000 per year in taxable income. The business was mature, well-managed, and generating predictable cash flow. The retirement picture told a different story. The owner had been maximizing a SEP-IRA for several years. The annual SEP-IRA limit at this income level was $70,000. Combined with earlier contributions, total liquid retirement assets were under $500,000. For someone with five to six years until a target retirement age of 60, that number created a gap. The income was there. The wealth accumulation hadn't kept pace. The estimated federal and state tax liability: 75,000 per year. Bull Oak was engaged to build a financial plan that addressed both the retirement gap and the tax picture simultaneously. The first question they asked — one that the client's prior CPA had not raised — was whether a cash balance pension plan had ever been modeled. It hadn't. What a Cash Balance Plan Is and Why Age 54 Is the Right Time A cash balance plan is a type of defined benefit pension plan. Unlike a 401(k) or SEP-IRA, which are defined contribution plans, a cash balance plan defines the benefit the owner will receive at retirement — and requires annual contributions to fund that benefit. The IRS allows substantially higher annual contributions to defined benefit plans than to defined contribution plans, precisely because the plan is obligated to deliver a specific retirement benefit. For a business owner at age 54, the contribution limits approach 00,000 or more per year depending on the actuarial calculation (the exact figure is determined by an actuary and depends on age, salary, and target benefit). This is the strategic window. The older you are, the larger the permissible annual contribution, because there are fewer years for the contributions to compound before you reach...