Dentistry pays well and starts late. Between four years of dental school, potential residency, and often $300,000-plus in student debt, most dentists don’t hitDentistry pays well and starts late. Between four years of dental school, potential residency, and often $300,000-plus in student debt, most dentists don’t hit

Dentists Retire Rich or Stay Chained to the Chair at 68, Here’s the Cash-Balance Plan That Shelters Six Figures a Year

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Dentistry pays well and starts late. Between four years of dental school, potential residency, and often $300,000-plus in student debt, most dentists don’t hit peak earnings until their late 30s. That compressed runway is why a maxed-out 401(k) alone rarely gets a practice owner to the retirement they want by their mid-60s. The tool that changes the math is a cash-balance plan, a defined benefit vehicle that lets high-earning owners shelter well into six figures a year on top of a 401(k).

Why Dentists Are the Textbook Candidate

Cash-balance plans reward exactly the profile most practice owners fit: high, stable income; a small W-2 staff; and a late start to serious retirement saving. The IRS lets contributions rise sharply with age because the plan is targeting a defined benefit at retirement, not a flat annual deposit. A dentist in their 50s can often contribution-fund a cash-balance plan at multiples of the standard 401(k) elective deferral limit, all pre-tax.

The macro backdrop makes the shelter more urgent. The national personal savings rate sits at 3.9% in the first quarter of 2026, down from 6.2% in the first quarter of 2024. Core PCE inflation is running at a 90.9th-percentile level over the trailing 12 months, and the Social Security COLA is unlikely to keep pace with the actual cost of a dentist-tier retirement.

How the Cash-Balance Plan Actually Works

Each participant has a hypothetical account credited with two things annually: a pay credit (a percentage of compensation or a flat dollar amount set by the plan document) and an interest credit. The interest credit is usually tied to a safe harbor rate, most commonly the 30-year Treasury yield or a fixed rate. With the 30-year Treasury at 4.99% and the 10-year at 4.48% as of July 6, 2026, crediting rates are meaningfully higher than they were during the 2020-2022 window, which improves both the accrual and the deductibility math.

Because it is a defined benefit plan, contributions are actuarially determined every year. That structure is intentional: the actuary calibrates the deposit to the target benefit, which is how a 55-year-old owner can legally shelter far more than the DC-plan universe allows. Verify the current-year 415(b) benefit limit and 401(a)(17) compensation cap with your actuary before finalizing plan design.

The Stack That Buries the Tax Bill

The real power move is stacking. A practice owner typically pairs:

  • A 401(k) with employee elective deferrals (plus catch-up if age 50 or older).
  • An employer profit-sharing contribution, often designed with new comparability to skew allocations toward the owner.
  • A cash-balance plan layered on top, sized by the actuary to the owner’s target retirement benefit.

Combined, the deductible contribution for a high-earning dentist in their 50s can push into the mid-six figures in a single tax year. At a marginal federal rate that tops out at 37% for individual filers with incomes over $640,600 in 2026, the deduction value alone can dwarf the plan’s administrative cost.

The Trade-Offs You Actually Sign Up For

Cash-balance plans are not free money. Three constraints matter:

  1. Staff coverage. Non-owner employees must receive a meaningful benefit, typically a pay credit in the 5% to 7.5% range plus safe-harbor 401(k) contributions. If you employ several hygienists and assistants, model the staff cost before you fall in love with the deduction.
  2. Commitment. The IRS expects the plan to be permanent. Skipping contributions in a lean year is possible but constrained; terminating within a few years invites scrutiny.
  3. Actuarial and administrative overhead. Expect a third-party administrator and enrolled actuary fee that runs several thousand dollars annually.

What About Associate Dentists?

W-2 associates don’t sponsor the plan, but they can push their employer to add one, or negotiate participation. 1099 associates and locum dentists can open their own solo cash-balance plan alongside a solo 401(k) once income is stable and high enough to justify the actuarial cost, generally north of the mid-$300,000s in net self-employment income.

The dentist who retires rich instead of drilling molars at 68 usually made one decision in their 40s or 50s: stop treating the 401(k) as the ceiling.

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The post Dentists Retire Rich or Stay Chained to the Chair at 68, Here’s the Cash-Balance Plan That Shelters Six Figures a Year appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..

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