How I Set Up My Self-Directed 401(k) (And Why You Might Want One Too)
Hey fam ๐Ÿ‘‹
I wanted to drop a quick blog post that might be a game-changer for your future self. As both a CPA and a real estate agent, Iโ€™ve always looked for ways to legally grow wealth and protect it. One of the best tools Iโ€™ve found? A Self-Directed 401(k).
It sounds fancy (and maybe a little intimidating), but I promise itโ€™s simpler than it looks โ€” and it can open up a world of opportunities to invest your retirement dollars in the things you understand bestโ€ฆ like real estate.
Let me walk you through how I set mine up, what it lets me do, and how you can get started too.
Step-by-Step: How I Opened My Self-Directed 401(k)
Hereโ€™s the quick breakdown of how I set mine up:
  1. Own an LLC or business โœ… You need to have some kind of self-employment income โ€” in our case, real estate commissions work perfectly. My real estate LLC was already in place, so I was good to go.
2. Choose a 401(k) plan provider that allows self-directionโœ… I went with The Entrust Group. They specialize in self-directed retirement accounts and offer Solo 401(k) plans with a lot of flexibility. Great service, super responsive.
3. Create your plan documentsโœ… This includes the plan adoption agreement, trust agreement, and some other legal docs that make your plan official and IRS-compliant. Your plan provider can provide these.
4. Get a new EIN (Employer Identification Number) for your 401(k)โœ… You canโ€™t use your business EIN for this โ€” the 401(k) trust needs its own. Youโ€™ll apply for it via the IRS website. Takes just a few minutes.
5. Open a bank or brokerage account for the 401(k) trustโœ… Once your plan and EIN are set up, you can open an account in the name of the 401(k) trust. From there, you can start contributing funds and investing.
Why I Love My Self-Directed 401(k)
Now hereโ€™s the fun part. With a self-directed 401(k), youโ€™re no longer stuck picking between mutual funds A, B, or C.
You can invest in:
โœ… Real estate (residential, commercial, land)
โœ… Private lending (become the bank โ€” offer loans to investors)
โœ… Tax liens & deeds
โœ… Private equity
โœ… Life insurance policies (within certain rules)
โœ… Even crypto or startups (if thatโ€™s your thing)
Iโ€™m all about control and diversification, and this plan gives me both. Instead of watching my retirement grow at 5-7% annually, I can invest in deals I personally source and believe in โ€” often at double-digit returns.
And since Iโ€™m the trustee of my own plan (with Entrust as the third-party administrator), I have checkbook control. That means I can make investment decisions without waiting on anyoneโ€™s approval.
Pro CPA Tip ๐Ÿ’ก
Thereโ€™s also a massive tax advantage here. As of 2025, you can contribute:
  • Up to $23,000 as an employee (or $30,500 if you're 50+)
  • Up to 25% of your business income as an employer (up to a $66,000 total cap)
Thatโ€™s money you can deduct from your business income โ€” reducing your taxes and growing your retirement account in investments you control.
Want Help Setting This Up?
If youโ€™re part of this Skool community, I already know you're building something long-term. If youโ€™ve got self-employment income (even part-time), youโ€™re likely eligible to set up one of these plans too.
Iโ€™m happy to help walk you through it โ€” just shoot me a DM or drop a comment inside the group. Iโ€™ll share my documents, vendor contacts, and help you avoid rookie mistakes.
Letโ€™s get you set up to retire on your terms.
โ€“ Bracey Alexander, CPA | Real Estate Agent | Wealth Builder
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Bracey Alexander
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How I Set Up My Self-Directed 401(k) (And Why You Might Want One Too)
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