The SIMPLE IRA's most dangerous feature isn't its lower contribution limits — it's a 25% early withdrawal penalty in the first two years of participation, 2.5 times the standard rate. There is no hardship exception and no undoing it. The plan persists largely because of administrator fee arbitrage, not plan merit. Neal McSpadden has never recommended a SIMPLE IRA or SIMPLE 401(k) to a client.


"I've never recommended a SIMPLE IRA or a SIMPLE 401(k) to a client. When I lay out the math, I've never had a case where a SIMPLE was a better plan than a full 401(k)."

— Neal McSpadden, Founder, Tax Sherpa


Key Takeaways


The 2-Year Trap: What Most Articles Bury

Most articles about SIMPLE IRAs describe the 25% early withdrawal penalty in a single sentence buried somewhere in section four. That is a disservice to anyone actually evaluating the plan.

Here is what the rule actually means in practice: if you contribute to a SIMPLE IRA today, and you need to access those funds — for any reason — within the next two years, you will owe a 25% additional tax on top of ordinary income tax. Not 10%. Not 15%. Twenty-five percent. That is 2.5 times the standard early distribution penalty that applies to every other retirement account.

The 2-year period begins on the date of your first contribution, not the date you opened the account or signed plan documents. For employees, the clock often starts before they even notice — many employees are auto-enrolled and may not realize they have a running 2-year window until they try to do something with the account.

What You Cannot Do During the 2 Years